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Scroll down below to explore the latest posts from our daily collecting guide, Peter's quotes, notes and reflections from forty years of collecting and dealing in photography. Started during lockdown and continued by popular demand for over three years now, daily posts are sent by email to our mailing list subscribers, with live works for sale and related works to explore, as well as advance previews of exhibitions and events.

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  • #1192 - Dan Budnik

    #1192 - Dan Budnik

    Martin Luther King, Jr. March on Washington, Minutes After Delivering "I Have A Dream" Speech., April 28, 1963

    "We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice."

     

    ~ Martin Luther King Jr.
    Washington National Cathedral, March 31, 1968

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  • #1191 - Michael Kenna

    #1191 - Michael Kenna

    Arigato Sugimoto-San, Calais, France, 1998

    “This photograph of sand, sea and sky was made one early, cloudy morning on a beach in Calais, France. The exposure was probably about twenty minutes, judging by the movement of water and clouds. Over the years, my vision has been influenced by countless other photographers and I have often viewed my subject matter from the privileged shoulders of giants. I have long admired Hiroshi Sugimoto’s time exposure photographs of seafronts and theater screens. Even while making this image, I knew that it was heavily inspired by Sugimoto’s work. In Japanese, “Arigato" means “Thank you”, and “San" is an honorific word used after somebody’s name as a token of respect and esteem. Hence, Thank you Mr. Sugimoto!”

     

    ~ Michael Kenna 

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  • #1190 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    #1190 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    Valencia Spain, 1933 (Printed 1970's)

    “I believe that, through the act of living, the discovery of oneself is made concurrently with the discovery of the world around us”

     

    ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
    (1908-2004)

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  • #1188 - Wolfgang Suschitzky

    #1188 - Wolfgang Suschitzky

    Amsterdam, Prisengracht, 1934

    “Photography is a combination of the right choice of detail, the elimination of all that is inessential and the right moment that makes the picture”

     

    ~ Wolfgang Suschitzky

    (1912-2016)
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  • #1187 - Louis Stettner

    #1187 - Louis Stettner

    Lower Manhattan, 2003

    “When I take pictures, I let reality decide what to do. I only take one when I’m deeply moved by what I see”

     

    ~ Louis Stettner (1922-2016)

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  • #1186 - Mariana Yampolsky

    #1186 - Mariana Yampolsky

    Head Covering Huipil, Pinotepa Nacional, Oaxaca, 1962

    “When you take a photograph, you are selecting an instant of life. It is like a personal discovery that I want to show everybody else, not as an achievement of mine but as something I want to share because I feel it is important”

     

    ~ Mariana Yampolsky

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  • #1184 - Cig Harvey

    #1184 - Cig Harvey

    Clive Blossom, Rockport, Maine, 2021

    “It is a scientistic fact that color affects the body"

     

    ~ Cig Harvey

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  • #1183 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    #1183 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    View from Notre Dame, Paris, France, 1955

    “Photography is nothing. It’s life that interests me"

     

    ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson

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  • #1182 - Luis González Palma

    #1182 - Luis González Palma

    El Gordo [the cap], 1990

    “The Culture in which one lives, especially during childhood affects the entire way one perceives what we call reality. Our perception and our being in the world are bound up with the way we lived when we were children. No one leaves childhood unharmed. It is something we must deal with for the rest of our lives. And I think art is indeed a way of doing so. It allows us to revisit and re-interpret the pain and trauma of the past. In my case having lived in a country ravaged by more than 30 years of armed conflict this approach is particularly meaningful. The subjects of fear, loneliness, emptiness and absence are deeply embedded in my work”

     

    ~ Luis Gonzalez Palma

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  • #1181 - Mick Rock

    #1181 - Mick Rock

    David Bowie, Retirement Gig, Hammersmith, Odeon, 1973, printed later

    “I do not use the word “genius” lightly but if David Bowie is not a genius, then there is no such thing”

     

    ~ Mick Rock

     

    “As an adolescent, I was painfully shy, withdrawn. I didn’t really have the nerve to sing my songs on stage and nobody else was doing them. I decided to do them in disguise so that I didn’t have to actually go through the humiliation of going on stage and being myself”

     

    ~ David Bowie

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  • #1180 - Sebastião Salgado

    #1180 - Sebastião Salgado

    A meeting of a religious community in Base, on the road to Attilo, Chimborazo. Ecuador, 1982

    “Photography is much more than just taking pictures – it is a way of life. What you feel, what you want to express, is your ideology and your ethics. It’s a language that allows you to travel over the wave of history.”

     

    ~ Sebastião Salgado

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  • #1179 - Mick Rock

    #1179 - Mick Rock

    Lou Reed, "Transformer" , 1972

    “I did not want to be somebody who lived off his reputation. I wanted to continue to be part of the modern music scene”

    ~ Mick Rock

     

    “Music should come crashing out of your speakers and grab you and the lyrics should challenge whatever preconceived notions the listener has"

    ~ Lou Reed
    (1942-2013)

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  • #1178 - Willy Ronis

    #1178 - Willy Ronis

    Marie-Anne et Vincent, Seine et Marne, 1952

    "A good picture knows how to communicate the emotion that created it."

     

    ~ Willy Ronis
    ( 1910 - 2009 )

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  • #1177 - Charles Harbutt

    #1177 - Charles Harbutt

    The Good Kiss, New Year's Eve, Times Square, NYC, 1959-60, printed later

    "Photography is a unique visual language that cannot be expressed in words. As a matter of fact, if it can be expressed in words, then it probably isn’t worth photographing."

     

    ~ Charles Harbutt

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  • #1176 - Paul Caponigro

    #1176 - Paul Caponigro

    Wild Flowers / Wet Window, Cape Cod, MA, 1958

    “At first, I looked questionably at the field weeds and stems stuck into a vase, but on further scanning of the back ground, I became enamored of the pane of glass dappled with raindrops and misty patches of light. I was taken with how beautifully dark and light were splashed throughout the image and how easily the stems and dry flowers graced the vase. Taken as a whole, this photo meets the eye as an overall texture rather than as neatly grouped elements with a frame. Were it not for some of the parts showing how crisply they can be delineated by the camera lens, I would describe this photograph as being gently impressionistic."

     

    ~ Paul Caponigro

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  • #1175 - Fred Lyon

    #1175 - Fred Lyon

    Overhead View of Ocean Beach, SF, c. 1950's

    "San Francisco is still a magical city. If I were a little tougher, I'd put aside that sentimental romanticism. But the city is the people, and that's what persists. Maybe it's a sickness we all have, but we keep attempting to recreate a lot of what attracted us here in the first place."

     

    ~ Fred Lyon 

     

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  • #1174 - Michael Kenna

    #1174 - Michael Kenna

    Mt. Kaibetsu, Koshimizu, Hokkaido, 2004 (Printed 2009)

    "Working initially in Japan and then further afield in Asia reaffirmed for me what many artists, such as Albers, Brandt and Rothko, had already taught me: it is not necessary, or even desirable, to fill a rectangle with details. This “empty” white field of snow, shaded from grey to white, invites me, and I hope other viewers, to wander into its open expanse, leaving our tracks behind, before gazing into the distance where a magical mountain appears, floating on the horizon, almost as a mirage. On the right, black trees mark the edge of a forest, suggesting a whole other point of departure. Photography records and describes, but also interprets and invites. As the world continues to spin faster and faster, providing endless distractions, I increasingly prefer to spend time away from crowds, buildings, noise and screens, out in nature. If that is not possible, I can at least look at artworks made in these places and perhaps almost get lost in my own imagination.”

     

    ~ Michael Kenna

  • #1173 - John Bulmer

    #1173 - John Bulmer

    Girl in a Red Phone Box, United Kingdom, 1966

    "They were getting ready for their annual Village Fete and the lady was calling a friend to get the recipe for some tarts to bake. Her little girl had been in a phone box and found out that if you pressed Button B then sometimes money came out (Do you remember the old UK phone boxes?). The Mother therefore told the child that she had to face outwards and keep her hands off the buttons. I heard this story more than 50 years later when I showed the pictures in Pembridge Village Hall and I met the former child. This picture was on the cover of the Sunday Times issue”

     

    ~ John Bulmer

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  • #1172 - O. Winston Link

    #1172 - O. Winston Link

    Silent Night at Seven-Mile Ford Broken By Class J 611 over Bridge 322, Virginia [NW1637], 1957

    “I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year.”

     

    ~ Charles Dickens (A Christmas Carol)

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  • #1171 - Alfred Eisenstaedt

    #1171 - Alfred Eisenstaedt

    Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree, NYC, 1950 (printed 1993)

    “We are only beginning to learn what to say in a photograph. The world we live in is a succession of fleeting moments, anyone of which might say something significant”

     

    ~ Alfred Eisenstaedt

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  • #1170 - Mark Steinmetz

    #1170 - Mark Steinmetz

    Deux Chevaux, Parc Monceau, Paris, 1987

    "This photo was taken in Parc Monceau, which is in a fairly wealthy part of Paris. I was staying fairly close by on the Avenue de Wagram. The Deux Chevaux is the iconic car of mid-Twentieth Century France and its familiar and unique design has always stood out to me. In the photo, I am interested in this particularly well-worn 2CV juxtaposed against the classical columns of the park's rotunda. All these years later, I'm amazed by black and white photography's ability to preserve the fading light of a fall day that took place decades ago."

     

    ~  Mark Steinmetz

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  • #1169 - Josef Sudek

    #1169 - Josef Sudek

    The Window of My Studio, C. 1940-1950

    “I believe a lot in instinct. One should never dull it by wanting to know everything. One shouldn't ask too many questions but do what one does properly, never rush, and never torment oneself.”

     

    ~ Josef Sudek

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  • #1168 - William Claxton

    #1168 - William Claxton

    Times Square, NYC, 1960, printed 1999

    "All I ask you to do is to listen with your eyes. The international language of jazz and photography need no special education or sophistication to be enjoyed."

     

    ~ William Claxton

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  • #1167 - Paul Caponigro

    #1167 - Paul Caponigro

    Glencar Falls, Sligo, Ireland 1967

    “I often see the materials of photography as being a type of terrain and I construct a landscape that I need to first explore in my mind’s eye if I am to make it manifest as an artful image in silver”

    ~ Paul Caponigro

     

    "Come away, O human child to the waters and the wild. With a faery, hand in hand, for the world's more full of weeping than you can understand."

     

    ~ W. B. Yeates (The Stolen Child)

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  • #1166 - Elliott Erwitt

    #1166 - Elliott Erwitt

    Ranch Boy with Father, 1954

    “There’s a time for photographs that say “hello”. And there’s a time to listen”

     

    ~ Elliott Erwitt
    (1928-2023)

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  • #1165 - Charles Harbutt

    #1165 - Charles Harbutt

    Flirt, Lower East Side, NY, 1960, printed later

    "A photograph is a collision between a person with a camera and reality. The photograph is typically as interesting as the collision is."

     

    ~ Charles Harbutt

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  • #1164 - Michael Kenna

    #1164 - Michael Kenna

    Empire State Building, Study 6, New York, NY, 2010

    "I was not prepared for the brutal cold which froze my bones and reduced me to an inexpressive drooling zombie by the end of the ride. To be fair, I was warned that it might get a bit chilly, photographing above Manhattan in the middle of winter, while strapped to the outside of an open helicopter. For the most part, I could not feel my finger tips, so was unsure when I had even made a photograph. And, there were the rolling waves of nausea, (which I would rather not elaborate on), as the helicopter banked and circled, with my eyes stuck to the back of the camera viewfinder. I relied on the statistical law of probability that if I kept photographing, at least one picture might turn out ok. I loved this one of the Empire State Building, the moment I saw it on the contact sheet. There are copious other images from different angles and points of view, but I think this has a certain magic. Perhaps someday I will go back into the darkroom to print one or two of the other negatives, but first, I need to get warm."

     

    ~ Michael Kenna

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  • #1163 - Bruce Davidson

    #1163 - Bruce Davidson

    Little Girl in Cemetery, Wales 1965

    “If I take a picture I have to account for it. I have opened something to someone’s reality”

     

    ~ Bruce Davidson 

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  • #1162 - Elliott Erwitt

    #1162 - Elliott Erwitt

    Valencia, Spain, 1952,printed later

    “I am a professional photographer by trade and an amateur photographer by vocation”

     

    ~ Elliott Erwitt

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  • #1160 - John Bulmer

    #1160 - John Bulmer

    Potteries, United Kingdom , 1961

    “I arrived at this location from London and had only a couple of days due to the low budget. One thing I tried to do when I arrived somewhere was to get a local map and drive to a hill or vantage point to get a sense of the place. When I got to the top I saw the view over the old pottery kilns and the man with a dog. As a newspaper photographer that I then was I always had my long lens on a camera, loaded and ready, so I was able to grab it and get this shot before he walked off"

     

    ~ John Bulmer

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  • #1159 - John Bulmer

    #1159 - John Bulmer

    “Roller Girls” 1964

    “I was driving around Yorkshire and stopped by the bridge. I pretended to be photographing the buildings and switched at the last minute to catch the girls. I met one of the ladies in the picture fifty years later when the BBC did a little film about an exhibition I had in Wakefield. She rang The BBC and said “I’m the girl in the picture”. We were both invited to the studio to meet on air”

     

    ~ John Bulmer

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  • #1158 - Josef Koudelka

    #1158 - Josef Koudelka

    Warsaw Pact, Tanks Invade Prague, 1968

    “To be born in a country which is not free means that you appreciate freedom. You don’t think of it as something automatic, and you don’t want anyone to take it from you”

     

    ~ Josef Koudelka

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  • #1157 - "An Ode to Nature" - Jeffrey Conley

    “Veil after veil of thin dusky gauze is lifted, and by degrees the forms and colours of things are restored to them, and we watch the dawn remaking the world in its antique pattern.”

     

    ~ Oscar Wilde


    "This photograph, “First Light, Oregon, 2020”, was made at a small lake in the mountains of central Oregon on a crisp late summer morning. It’s a place I go back to over and over again. Every day seems to have new secrets to reveal. I enjoy sleeping close to the water’s edge and waking very early to revel in the wonderful peace. There is something captivating to me about the way the mist gathers and rises at dawn. I find it mesmerizing."

     

    ~ Jeffrey Conley

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  • #1156 - Fred Zinnemann

    #1156 - Fred Zinnemann

    New York, 1932

    "I like people to be entertained, but I don't want it to be empty. I like to give some nourishment."

     

    ~ Fred Zinnemann
    (1907-1997)

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  • #1155 - Arnold Newman

    #1155 - Arnold Newman

    Pablo Picasso (Face), Valluris, France, 1954

    “A lot of photographers think that if they buy a better camera they’ll be able to take better photographs. A better camera won’t do a thing for you if you don’t have anything in your head or in your heart.”

     

    ~ Arnold Newman

     

    "Who sees the human face correctly: the photographer, the mirror, or the painter?"

     

    ~ Pablo Picasso

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  • #1154 - Fred Lyon

    #1154 - Fred Lyon

    Castle Street, Coit Tower, 1947

    "I see pictures I would like to take, I need another lifetime to photograph San Francisco. But my life has been so much fun I can't believe it. I keep thinking I'm being softened up for something really grim. And it hasn't happened yet."

     

    ~ Fred Lyon
    (1924 - 2022)

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  • #1153 - Michael Kenna

    #1153 - Michael Kenna

    Mamta's Lotus Flower, Ban Viengkeo, Luang Prabang, 2015 (Printed 2016)

    "I gravitate towards places where humans have been and are no more, to the edge of man’s influence, where the elements are taking over or covering man’s traces."

     

    ~ Michael Kenna

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  • #1152 - Alfred Eisenstaedt

    #1152 - Alfred Eisenstaedt

    Leonard Bernstein conducting Mahler's Resurrection (2nd) Symphony, Carnegie Hall, New York, 1960

    “Every professional should remain always in his or her heart an amateur”

     

    ~ Alfred Eisenstaedt
    (1898-1995)

     

    “I can’t live one day without hearing music, playing it, studying it or thinking about it”

     

    ~ Leonard Bernstein
    (1918-1990)

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  • #1151 - Willy Ronis

    #1151 - Willy Ronis

    La Nuit au Chalet, 1935

    "I never, ever, went out without my camera, even to buy bread."

     

    ~ Willy Ronis
    (1910 - 2009)

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  • #1150 - Ted Russell

    #1150 - Ted Russell

    Bob Dylan and James Baldwin talking at the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee's Bill of Rights Dinner, NYC, 1963

    “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

     

    ~ James Baldwin

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  • #1149 - Ansel Adams

    #1149 - Ansel Adams

    Sentinel Rock, Winter Dusk, Yosemite National Park, California, 1944 (printed 1950)

    “I knew my destiny when I first experienced Yosemite”

     

    ~ Ansel Adams
    (1902-1984)

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  • #1148 - Lillian Bassman

    #1148 - Lillian Bassman

    Fantasy On The Dance Floor: Barbara Mullen in a Christian Dior Dress, Paris. Harper's Bazaar, 1949

    "A dress is a piece of ephemeral architecture, designed to enhance the proportions of the female body. The detail is as important as the essential is."

     

    ~ Christian Dior

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  • #1147 - Ansel Adams

    #1147 - Ansel Adams

    Vernal Fall, Yosemite Valley, California, c. 1948

    “Yosemite Valley, to me, is always a sunrise, a glitter of green and golden wonder in a vast edifice of stone and space. I know of no sculpture, painting, or music that exceeds the compelling spiritual command of the soaring shape of granite cliff and dome, of patina of light on rock and forest, and of the thunder and whispering of the falling, flowing waters.”

     

    ~ Ansel Adams
    (1902-1984)

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  • #1146 - Ormond Gigli

    #1146 - Ormond Gigli

    Models in the Windows, New York City, 1960, printed later

    "The photograph came off as planned. What had seemed to some as too dangerous or difficult to accomplish, became my fantasy fulfilled, and my most memorable self–assigned photograph."


    ~ Ormond Gigli
    (1925 - 2019)

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  • #1145 - Gianni Berengo Gardin

    #1145 - Gianni Berengo Gardin

    Tuscany, 1958 (Printed 2023)

    "My artistic eye is black and white. I'm used to seeing and visualizing in black and white and have only one way of taking pictures."

     

    ~ Gianni Berengo Gardin

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  • #1144 - Brigitte Carnochan

    #1144 - Brigitte Carnochan

    Massed Sunflowers, 2006

    "Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadow. It's what sunflowers do."

     

    ~ Helen Keller

  • #1143 - Ansel Adams

    #1143 - Ansel Adams

    Old Faithful Geyser, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, 1942 (Printed 1950)

    “It is difficult to conceive of a substance more impressively brilliant than the spurting plumes of white waters in sunlight against a deep blue sky”

     

    ~ Ansel Adams
    (1902-1984)

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  • #1142 - Kurt Markus

    #1142 - Kurt Markus

    White Horse Ranch, Fields, Oregon, 1984
    "I shoot film. I don’t think I could do work that I really believe in with the feel and the look that I want if I was shooting digitally. There’s a certain resistance that I’ve got. But the light coming through a 6×7 Pentax lens hitting on film, is something digital can’t duplicate—and I love the look of it."
     
    ~ Kurt Markus
    (1947-2022)
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  • #1141 - Cig Harvey

    #1141 - Cig Harvey

    Fir Trees, 2022

    "What I can’t believe is how much I love photography even after all these years, it’s still brand new to me even though, you know, I started working the dark room at thirteen, it’s been my only job, whether I was teaching it or making it."

     

    ~ Cig Harvey

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  • #1140 - Sebastião Salgado

    #1140 - Sebastião Salgado

    Mentawai, Indonesia, 2008

    “What I want is the world to remember the problems and the people I photograph. What I want is to create a discussion about what is happening around the world and to provoke some debate with these pictures. Nothing more than this. I don’t want people to look at them and appreciate the light and the palate of tones. I want them to look inside and see what the pictures represent, and the kind of people I photograph.”

     

    ~ Sebastião Salgado

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  • #1139 - Ezra Stoller

    #1139 - Ezra Stoller

    Salk Institute, 1977

    "I sense Light as the giver of all presences, and material as spent Light. What is made by Light casts a shadow, and the shadow belongs to Light."

     

    ~ Louis Kahn


    "The camera is a remarkable instrument. Saturate yourself with your subject, and the camera will all but take you by the hand and point the way."

     

    ~ Ezra Stoller

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  • #1138 - Michael Kenna

    #1138 - Michael Kenna

    Cherry Blossoms, Nara, Honshu, 2002
    “In Japan, cherry blossoms, also known as Sakura, are venerated throughout the country as reminders and symbols of the transience and blissful glory of life. Festivals are planned and national meteorological advisories are broadcast to predict and document the sweeping pink wave which starts on the southern island of Okinawa in late February and moves up to northern Hokkaido by early May. In 2002, I was fortunate to be in Nara, Honshu at the perfect time. After a long day of exploring, and with the light fading, I came across these lush trees along the banks of a small canal as I walked back to my hotel. I had no tripod, and to keep the camera steady I jammed it up against a roadside fence. I could hardly see anything in the viewfinder, yet it resulted in this lovely, sweeping, out of focus, foreground shape. I quite forgot about this photograph until the negatives were processed and contact sheets made. The subsequent discovery was a delightfully unexpected and wonderful surprise.”
     
    ~ Michael Kenna
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  • #1137 - Bob Dylan - Ken Regan

    #1137 - Bob Dylan - Ken Regan

    Bob Dylan and the band playing poker on the bus, 2001

    “I see that I could stop touring at anytime, but then I don’t feel like it right now. I’ve got no retirement plans”

     

    ~ Bob Dylan

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  • #1136 - Pentti Sammallahti

    #1136 - Pentti Sammallahti

    Kemiö, Finland (Children on Hammock), 1996

    "Get a book of great photographs and spend a week studying each shot. Every day, think about a different aspect: subject, composition, tonal range, the moment when the image was taken and how the photograph was made."

     

    ~ Pentti Sammallahti

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  • #1135 - Lillian Bassman

    #1135 - Lillian Bassman

    Wonders of Water: Model Unknown, New York, Harper's Bazaar, 1959

    "If you ever saw me on a set—not now that I'm 94, but when I photographed for real, you know, on my feet—the moment I got interested in what I was doing, my shoes went off. I would get on the paper, dance barefoot, dance for the models, move in the way I wanted them to move, really dance barefoot in front of the camera, take on the body movements that I felt would get them to move—actually to dance in front of the camera."

     

    ~ Lillian Bassman
    (1917 - 2012)

    ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
  • #1134 - Steve McCurry

    #1134 - Steve McCurry

    Floating Offerings, Varanasi, India, 1996

    “If you wait, people will forget your camera and the soul will drift up into view.”

     

    ~ Steve McCurry

    ENQUIRE ABOUT THIS WORK
  • #1133 - Bob Dylan - Danny Clinch

    #1133 - Bob Dylan - Danny Clinch

    Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, CA, 1999

    “I couldn’t believe I was going to photograph Bob Dylan. I chose the Ambassador Hotel because of the variety it gave me as a location. It also had a great history. It was where the Rat Pack used to hang out and play at its Coconut Grove Room. Also Robert Kennedy was assassinated there. Dylan was also interested in the history of the location. I think he stayed a few hours more for that reason. We also decided to create images with atmosphere and capturing special moments. We decided to find some props and someone came back with some foreign language newspapers and we thought it would be fun to go with that. I was simply amazed he even showed up !”

     

    ~ Danny Clinch

     

    “What’s money? A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and goes to bed at night and in between does what he wants to do”

     

    ~ Bob Dylan

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  • #1132 - Ansel Adams

    #1132 - Ansel Adams

    Rose and Driftwood, San Francisco , 1932

    “Adams feels deeply what he sees, he has a reverence for the earth in all its variety, delicacy and strength, but he is the absolute reverse of effusive: he sees with such austerity, even severity, that some have mistakenly called him cold. He has an incomparable technical expertness in communicating what he sees and feels, and for half a century and more he has gone on making photographs so plainly stamped with his personal artistry that they hardly need his steeple-A signature on them. They have taught thousands how to see: they have become household images, they have steadily affirmed life.”

     

    ~ Wallace Stegner

    (1909-1993)

     

    “I had a fine north-light window in my San Francisco home which gave beautiful illumination, especially on foggy days. My mother had proudly brought me a large, pale pink rose from our garden and I immediately wanted to photograph it. The north light from the window was marvelous for the translucent petals of the rosebud. I could not find an appropriate background. Everything I tried, bowls, pillows, stacked books and so on was unsatisfactory. I finally remembered a piece of weathered plywood picked up at nearby Baker Beach as wave - worn driftwood. Two pillows on a table supported the wood at the right height under the window and the rose rested comfortably upon it. The relationship of the plywood design to the petal shapes was fortunate and I lost no time completing the picture “

     

    ~ Ansel Adams
    (1902-1984)

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  • #1131 - Ezra Stoller

    #1131 - Ezra Stoller

    Fallingwater, 1971

    “Photography is space, light, texture of course but the really important element is time - that nano second when the image organizes itself on the ground glass”

     

    ~ Ezra Stoller

     


    "Fallingwater is a great blessing - one of the great blessings to be experienced here on earth, I think nothing yet ever equalled the coordination, sympathetic expression of the great principle of repose where forest and stream and rock and all the elements of structure are combined so quietly that really you listen not to any noise whatsoever although the music of the stream is there. But you listen to Fallingwater the way you listen to the quiet of the country..."


    ~ Frank Lloyd Wright

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  • #1130 - Sheila Metzner

    #1130 - Sheila Metzner

    Peony., 1998, printed 2017

    "This is work. My work contains everything I love. It is all in each photograph. No darkness. No despair. No evil. No fear. Love chooses the settings. Love chooses the props. It is both the myth and the reality of my existence. My life on earth, to share. At the same time, it is a document and an homage to all that has inspired me."


    ~ Sheila Metzner

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  • #1129 - Melvin Sokolsky

    #1129 - Melvin Sokolsky

    Saint Germain Street, Paris, 1963, printed later

    "The key point is not the technique of how the image was made, but the idea and the vision."

     

    ~ Melvin Sokolsky
    (1933 - 2022)

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  • #1128 - Frank Eugene

    #1128 - Frank Eugene

    Adam and Eve, 1910

    "The very boldness with which Eugene manipulated the negative by scratching and painting forced even those with strong sympathy for the purist line of thinking like White, Day and Stieglitz to admire Eugene's particular touch...[he] created a new syntax for the photographic vocabularity, for no one before him had hand-worked negatives with such painterly intentions and a skill unsurpassed by his successors."

     

    ~ Weston Naef

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  • #1127 - Jacques Lowe

    #1127 - Jacques Lowe

    Playground, Glasgow, Scotland, 1954

    "...Jacques Lowe was monumentally self-effacing. This, I believe, is why his camera caught so much human truth. There are no orchestrated 'photo-opportunities here..."

     

    ~ Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
    American Historian and Social Critic
    (1917 - 2007)

  • #1126 - Michael Kenna

    #1126 - Michael Kenna

    Wanaka Lake Tree, Study 1, Otago, New Zealand, 2013

    "This delicate tree, sitting quietly and improbably in the cold waters of Wanaka Lake, is possibly one of the most photographed trees in New Zealand. I have had the great pleasure to visit it several times, and have usually waited in line behind bus loads of visiting tourists before being able to say hello. On this early pre-dawn morning, however, I was delighted to find myself alone, until I discovered some unexpected company in the form of birds, contentedly sleeping on the tree’s branches. My usual M.O. is to make long time exposures so that clouds and water transform into timeless and enigmatic mists. As the emerging light slowly began to appear, I made several such exposures, aware that both the branches and birds were moving. I was waiting for the birds to leave, before I could make what I considered to be a classical Kenna image, which I later printed and titled 'Wanaka Lake Tree, Study 1'.

    Several years passed and I was asked by the publisher Atelier Xavier Barral to participate in a series of books they were publishing on birds, 'Les Oiseaux'. I went through my negative files and discovered many unprinted negatives in which birds were depicted, including this image which I subsequently titled 'Wanaka Lake Tree, Study 2’.

    I have long felt that aesthetic decisions should never be dogmatic, and should always be challenged and doubted. At the time I made the photographs, I was convinced that the tree 'sans oiseaux" was the stronger image. Now I am less sure. Time has a way of playing with one’s emotions and sensibilities.
    Our views sometimes change, precisely because we are alive and changeable, which I find immensely reassuring!"

     

    ~ Michael Kenna

  • #1125 - Douglas Gilbert

    #1125 - Douglas Gilbert

    Bob Dylan, Woodstock, NY, 1964

    "Photography is a waiting game. The shutter may take only a instant, but the photographer has waited for exactly the right subject, the correct perspective, the perfect light, carefully arranging it all in the frame to be paused in time."

     

    ~ Douglas Gilbert

  • #1124 - Sheila Metzner

    #1124 - Sheila Metzner

    Brooklyn Bridge, Hokusai Series (Inspired by "Thirty-Six View of Mount Fuji") 2007, printed 2017

    "It’s something I can’t stop, a photographer doesn’t retire"


    ~ Sheila Metzner

  • #1123 - Herman Leonard

    #1123 - Herman Leonard

    Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, New York, 1948/Printed Later

    "I saw photographing jazz artists as a visual diary of what I was hearing. I wanted to preserve the mood and atmosphere as much as possible. My goal was to capture these artists at the height of their finest creative moments."

     

    ~ Herman Leonard
    (1923-2010)

  • Exhibition opening

    Exhibition opening

    Uomo, 1988, printed 1994

    EXHIBITION OPENING

     

    Sheila Metzner : Objects of Desire
    November 4th, 2023 - January 5th, 2024

  • #1122 - Arnold Newman

    #1122 - Arnold Newman

    Alfred Stieglitz & Georgia O'Keeffe, An American Place, 1944 (Printed Later)

    "All I want is to preserve that wonderful something which so purely exists between us."

     

    ~ Alfred Stieglitz
    (1918-2006)

  • #1121 - John Cohen

    #1121 - John Cohen

    Bob Dylan, New York [holding cigarette & guitar], 1962/Printed 2005

    “I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom”

     

    ~ Bob Dylan

    “Bob Dylan’s arrival in New York was like a prophecy come true. He fit the image that had already been established by Pete Seeger in his blue jeans and work shirts and by Woody Guthrie - a refugee from the dust bowl era -and his dirty rugged clothing. Dylan stepped into this legacy and played his character well with his own comedy and original insights. People remember that he was “stealing" from everybody around him, absorbing the entire scene. In the process he energized folk music, created his own songs, incorporated earlier American traditional music, shaped Rock’n’Roll and wrote some of the most moving songs of the century”

     

    ~ John Cohen
    (1932 - 2019)

     

  • #1120 - Sarah Moon

    #1120 - Sarah Moon

    A Bouche Perdue, 2000

    “I want to find an echo between myself and the world, a resonance”

     

    ~ Sarah Moon

  • #1119 - Paul Caponigro

    #1119 - Paul Caponigro

    Frosted Window, Ipswich, Massachusetts, 1960

    "There had been a raging blizzard during the night. When I awakened in my bed, I looked toward the window to see a magnificent display of frost. Nature’s storm had playfully arranged what seemed to be stationary snowflakes on the pane of glass. Looking through the window and its decoration of frosted crystals. I saw a tree trunk with its branches rhythmically and joyfully dancing as if in celebration of the visual magic that was before my eyes. It was now up to me to quickly arise and to gather my equipment and film to etch all this beauty and magic onto film and silver paper”

     

    ~Paul Caponigro

  • #1118 - Jerry Schatzberg

    #1118 - Jerry Schatzberg

    Bob Dylan, Blonde on Blonde, New York, 1966

    “At that time, whatever Dylan would send to the record companies, they would use. He picked all the inside photographs also. They were lying around my studio and he chose them."

     

    ~ Jerry Schatzberg

  • #1117 - Josef Sudek

    #1117 - Josef Sudek

    Trolley, Ujerd, 1958

    “Everything around us, dead or alive, in the eyes of a crazy photographer mysteriously takes on many variations, so that a seemingly dead object comes to life through light or by its surroundings....to capture some of this - I suppose that’s lyricism.”

    ~ Josef Sudek

  • #1116 - Sheila Metzner

    #1116 - Sheila Metzner

    Rosemary, Ungaro Hat, Couture, Vogue , 1985

    “The work is grounded. It’s solid and it hasn’t changed.. I have, but not the photographs.. I have great admiration for whoever I was, whoever the person was that did the work somehow in that time”

     

    ~ Sheila Metzner

  • #1115 - Michael Kenna

    #1115 - Michael Kenna

    Kussharo Lake, Study 6, Hokkaido, 2004

    “Nothing is ever the same twice because everything is always gone forever, and yet each moment has infinite photographic possibilities.”

    ~ Michael Kenna

  • #1114 - Kurt Markus

    #1114 - Kurt Markus

    Oro Ranch, Prescott, Arizona , 1986

    "The awful truth is that I love all of cowboying, even when everything has gone wrong and it's not looking to get any better. Sometimes I especially like it that way."

    ~ Kurt Markus

  • #1113 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    #1113 - Henri Cartier-Bresson

    Pierre Bonnard, 1944

    “For me, the camera is a sketch book, an instrument of intuition and spontaneity"

    ~ Henri Cartier Bresson

    “It is still color, it is not yet light”

    ~Pierre Bonnard

  • #1112 - Jean-Philippe Charbonnier

    #1112 - Jean-Philippe Charbonnier

    Juliette Greco and Miles Davis, 1949

    "It took me 30 years and a lot of pain to discover the truth of what Henri Cartier Bresson always said “One should only use one camera, with one lens that coincides with your angle of vision, with the same film at its normal speed. The rest is just gimmicks and hardware”

    ~ Jean-Philippe Charbonnier

    “She’s my first love”

    ~ Miles Davis

    “He’s a man I have deep love for and huge admiration”

    ~ Juliette Greco

  • #1111 - Jerry Schatzberg

    #1111 - Jerry Schatzberg

    Bob Dylan, Highway 61, 1965

    “All I can be is me - whoever that is.”

    ~ Bob Dylan

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