
Top 29 Memory Photography Quotes
#1. What i like about photographs is that they capture a moment that's gone forever, impossible to reproduce.
Karl Lagerfeld
#2. Become a fountain of peace to spread the flow of joy to everyone.
Debasish Mridha
#3. Oh. I just assumed ... That because I am so absorbed by him everyone must be too.
Veronica Roth
#4. The raw materials of photography are light and time and memory.
Keith Carter
#5. Memory selects single important images, just as the camera does. In that manner both are able to isolate the highest moments of living.
Galen Rowell
#7. To me photography can be simultaneously both a record and a mirror or window of self-expression the camera is generally assumed to be unable to depict that which is not visible to the eye and yet, the photographer who wields it well can depict what lies unseen in his memory.
Eikoh Hosoe
#8. We must avoid however, snapping away, shooting quickly and without thought, overloading ourselves with unnecessary images that clutter our memory and diminish the clarity of the whole.
Henri Cartier-Bresson
#10. I was once in a long relationship with a man who ran a vintage clothes store but had been a chef, so I'd come home each night to a different three-course meal. I was quite fat, but so happy.
Paloma Faith
#11. For Love...Real Love...The Kind Of Love That Lasts Forever...
Sybil Shae
#12. Photography is like a found object. A photographer never makes an actual subject; they just steal the image from the world ... Photography is a system of saving memories. It's a time machine, in a way, to preserve the memory, to preserve time.
Hiroshi Sugimoto
#15. Good done anywhere is good done everywhere.
Maya Angelou
#16. In our ideals we unwittingly reveal our vices.
Jean Rostand
#17. If you let some time go by before considering work that you have done, you move toward a more objective position in judging it. The pleasure of the subjective, physical experience in the world is a more distant memory and less influential.
Henry Wessel Jr.
#18. Photography works hand in glove with image and memory and therefore possesses their notable epidemic power.
Georges Didi-Huberman
#19. Photography is thus brought within reach of every human being who desires to preserve a record of what he sees ... and enables the fortunate possessor to go back by the light of his own fireside to scenes which would otherwise fade from memory and be lost.
George Eastman
#20. I use zero photography. I have a photographic memory and a complete knowledge of anatomy and physiology, and an interest in grasping the moment of what is happening, not just the outside, but the inside out.
Richard MacDonald
#21. A good snapshot keeps a moment from running away.
Eudora Welty
#22. I think that, in a sense, there's something about photography in general that we could associate with memory, or the past, or childhood.
Gregory Crewdson
#23. Only powerfully conceived images have the ability to penetrate the memory, to stay there, in short to become unforgettable.
Brassai
#24. Amber starts off as sap from a tree," Joseph said in the dark. "And sometimes insects get caught in it, and over millions of years the amber turns into a gemstone, but it traps the insect inside."
"Oh."
"A photograph is sort of like that, don't you think?
Brian Selznick
#25. At age four I was a camera. I took pictures with my eyes. I framed my photo within my vision and blinked my eyes to snap the shutter of my memory. Since that time, I've been impersonating inanimate objects at every opportunity.
Sophia Amoruso
#26. To remember is to rewrite. To photograph is to replace. The only reliable memories, I suppose, are the ones that have been forgotten. They are the dark rooms of the mind. Unopened, untouched, and uncorrupted.
Abby Geni
#27. Sometimes belts are flattering, and it helps with proportions.
Olivia Palermo
#28. How does photography serve to legitimate and normalize existing power relationships? ... How is historical and social memory preserved, transformed, restricted and obliterated by photographs?
Allan Sekula
#29. Before movies, memory unspooled differently in the mind, trailing off in dust-blasted fade-out rather than spliced-together flashback; before photography, memory rippled like a reflection on water's surface, less precise but more profoundly true.
Steve Erickson
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top