I never notice a difference between photographing a man and a woman; for me, it's just somebody.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
There were some advantages to being a woman photographer. I think women have more empathy with the subject.
It is one thing to photograph people. It is another to make others care about them by revealing the core of their humanness.
You adapt to who you're photographing.
I don't make a distinction between men and women. To me they are just people.
I don't distinguish between men and women. This is irrelevant to me, and I don't think in these terms.
I love the camera; there's something very special and sensual about it, and I have a tendency to call it a he, like it was a man. But, unlike a man, a camera is accepting of everything I do.
I feel more comfortable when I'm somebody else, I think. When I'm taking a picture as myself, the whole idea of taking a headshot, to me, feels very false.
Sometimes photographing people is like pulling teeth, trying to get some sort of personality.
I'm not an ardent feminist - well, maybe I am an ardent feminist. I just roll my eyes at the way women are constantly used and how sensitive men are about photographs of themselves.
I never think of photographs as being individual. Always as a group.