It was close; but that's the way it is in war. You win or lose, live or die - and the difference is just an eyelash.
I'm known for taking pictures very close, and the older I get, the closer I get.
I love the people I photograph. I mean, they're my friends. I've never met most of them or I don't know them at all, yet through my images I live with them.
If you can smell the street by looking at the photo, it's a street photograph
I'm photographing myself out there. Not myself physically, but mentally. It's my take on the world.
Everything isn't black and white, but for me it might as well be.
I always said it kept me alive - photography - because it did. It was my catharsis.
Part of it is eight years of a black president, and white America still lost their [minds] about that. Part of it is a Republican politics of vicious, vicious partisan [stuff] that has completely poisoned what we would call the political rhetorical sphere. All of these things come together in a perfect storm.
It's the job of the young to push the societal envelope.
It shouldn't be difficult, then, to make the transposition at this point into the early Christian vision of Jesus and the Spirit and the way in which the material world is both celebrated and renewed through their work. The Jewish basis for the early Christian patterns of belief and behavior is clear. It is important that God's people are embodied, because God made this world and has no intention of abandoning it. The material of creation is a vessel made to be filled with God's new life and glory, even though the transformation may involve suffering, persecution, and martyrdom.
The hardest thing to accept as a parent is that you cannot apply the bandage before the bruise.