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Stephen Shore Quotes

American photographer and educator, Birth: 8-10-1947 Stephen Shore Quotes
1.
To see something spectacular and recognise it as a photographic possibility is not making a very big leap. But to see something ordinary, something you’d see every day, and recognize it as a photographic possibility - that is what I am interested in.
Stephen Shore

2.
Photographers have to impose order, bring structure to what they photograph. It is inevitable. A photograph without structure is like a sentence without grammar-it is incomprehensible, even inconceivable.
Stephen Shore

3.
I wanted to make pictures that felt natural, that felt like seeing, that didn’t feel like taking something in the world and making a piece of art out of it.
Stephen Shore

4.
If you've met one person with autism, you've met one person with autism.
Stephen Shore

5.
I think most serious photographers understand that there's this large gap between the world and how the world looks through a photograph.
Stephen Shore

Similar Authors: Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Wayne Dyer Stephen Covey Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Anne Lamott Dale Carnegie Karl Lagerfeld Ram Dass Andy Warhol Maria Montessori Alan Moore Wallace Stevens Warren Farrell Leo Buscaglia
6.
The context in which a photograph is seen affects the meaning the viewer draws from it.
Stephen Shore

7.
Photography is inherently an analytic discipline. Where a painter starts with a blank canvas and builds a picture, a photographer starts with the messiness of the world and selects a picture. A photographer standing before houses and streets and people and trees and artifacts of a culture imposes an order on the scene - simplifies the jumble by giving it structure. He or she imposes this order by choosing a vantage point, choosing a frame, choosing a moment of exposure, and by selecting a plane of focus.
Stephen Shore

8.
A photograph has edges the world does not.
Stephen Shore

Quote Topics by Stephen Shore: Photography World Art Thinking Photograph Order Artist Mean Perception Problem Looks Cameras Film Photographer Everyday Ordinary Creativity Bed Block Writing Trying Native Draws Sometimes Advantage Cost Party Special Creative Autism
9.
I discovered that this camera was the technical means in photography of communicating what the world looks like in a state of heightened awareness. And it's that awareness of really looking at the everyday world with clear and focused attention that I'm interested in.
Stephen Shore

10.
I don't have to have a single point of emphasis in the picture. It can be complex, because it's so detailed that the viewer can take time and read it, and look at something here, and look at something there, and they can pay attention to a lot more.
Stephen Shore

11.
There's something arbitrary about taking a picture. So I can stand at the edge of a highway and take one step forward and it can be a natural landscape untouched by man and I can take one step back and include a guardrail and change the meaning of the picture radically... I can take a picture of a person at one moment and make them look contemplative and photograph them two seconds later and make them look frivolous.
Stephen Shore

12.
I'm always interested in finding new aesthetic problems to deal with and challenge myself, even if the aesthetic problem is one of content.
Stephen Shore

13.
This idea of imposing an order is very interesting to me. Photography is in essence an analytic medium. … In photography, you start with the whole world and every decision you make imposes an order on it. The question is to what extent it’s an idealized order I’m imposing or is it an order that grows out of what the world looks like.
Stephen Shore

14.
With a painting, you're taking basic building blocks and making something that's more complex than what you started with. It is a synthetic process. A photograph does the opposite: It takes the world, and puts an order on it, simplifies it.
Stephen Shore

15.
A lot of the photography I'm doing and thinking about is directed at Instagram.
Stephen Shore

16.
A work can do many things at once, and it doesn't have to be just about the world, it could also be about photography, it could be about perception, it could be an exploration of the medium. It could be a document, it could be a visual poetry, and it could be a formal exploration all at the same time.
Stephen Shore

17.
The danger is that you can wind up doing tourist pictures. I want to see it fresh and see the little bits of everyday life that a native might take for granted, but that are special to the place, while at the same time, not taking a picture that would be a tourist cliché.
Stephen Shore

18.
As not a native, I have the advantage of not seeing scenes habitually. I can see things fresh.
Stephen Shore

19.
I know that people think of my work from the '70s as American, but I've been going to other places for a long time.
Stephen Shore

20.
I had a creative hot streak in the 1940s and since then I’ve been pot boiling.
Stephen Shore

21.
I think I misunderstood Instagram and just thought it was people photographing their friends, and discovered there were a number of people, a number of artists, who were taking it very seriously and doing very imaginative work with Instagram as the medium.
Stephen Shore

22.
Even in ordinary reproduction [photography] verges on facsimile.
Stephen Shore

23.
There's something essentially fictive about a photograph. That doesn't mean that if you understand that, and you understand how the world is transformed by the camera, that you can't use the limitations or the transformation to have an observation that is a very subtle perception of the world.
Stephen Shore

24.
I meet young artists and it becomes clear that with some the main motivation is getting a show in Chelsea. It strikes me that this is very different to the way it was for me, which was that I wanted to understand photography and the world and myself.
Stephen Shore

25.
I realize that as I get more experience as I get older, my perception changes and that feeds the photograph.
Stephen Shore

26.
Why can't a photograph be all four things at once? -be an art object; be a document, what ever that means exactly, but deal with content; be a formalist exploration; and operate on some, metaphor is not the right word but, resonant level.
Stephen Shore

27.
I do what feels natural, but I can't say I haven't thought about it.
Stephen Shore

28.
I have to be reminded, “’It’s your son’s birthday party. Bring a camera.’ And then, when I’m there, ‘Take a picture,’ because it doesn’t occur to me to use it as this memorializing thing.
Stephen Shore

29.
I'm not interested in doing the same kind of picture over and over again. I pose problems for myself. Sometimes they are aesthetic problems and sometimes they are logistical problems.
Stephen Shore

30.
If I only try to solve the problems I set for myself, then I'm limited by what I can conceive of. I can't solve a problem I can't conceive. But if someone else gives me a visual problem, it can be out of the whole realm of my normal practice.
Stephen Shore

31.
I don't know how much a photograph can add to a biography, the way a film or writing or narrative medium could. Because it's a frozen image.
Stephen Shore

32.
I've been the head of the photography program at Bard College for over 30 years, and I take that as seriously as I do my photography. My time is devoted to that too.
Stephen Shore

33.
A quote that I like very much comes close to explaining my attitude about taking photographs. ‘Chinese poetry rarely trespasses beyond the bounds of actuality the great Chinese poets accept the world exactly as they find it in all its terms and with profound simplicity they seldom talk about one thing in terms of another; but are able enough and sure enough as artists to make the ultimately exact terms become the beautiful terms.’
Stephen Shore

34.
Back in the 70s it cost 15-20$ a shot for the film, the processing, and the contact sheet, now it’s twice that.
Stephen Shore

35.
I was photographing every meal I ate, every person I met, every waiter or waitress who served me, every bed I slept in, every toilet I used.
Stephen Shore