Love is often the fruit of marriage.
I wanted to become an artist because it meant endless possibilities. Art was a way of reinventing myself.
I seize all opportunities with two hands. Everything that's happened to me has taught me to live in the moment as much as possible.
I feel the art world in New York has a stronger following than Britain. If you go to a New York art district on a Saturday morning, it will be so busy with families and openings - art is much more ingrained in the culture.
Sometimes when you're looking at your own work, you can't really see, and it's only when you step back a little bit later that you think, "Oh, that's completely in line with everything else I've done".
I find that I put my body in my work when I am at a particularly difficult or joyous point because I want to feel that moment.
I love karaoke. I love maudlin country ballads. In another life I'd be Loretta Lynn.
Leading up to a live event you need to do your homework and go to bed early. Sometimes it's very tempting to go out with everybody else, They're all going to a party or going out for a nice meal and you think 'oh well I'd like to go', but sometimes you think 'no, if I'm going to be sitting in front of a camera under a light in everybody's home tomorrow I don't want big bags under my eyes and not really know what I'm talking about'.
I have an appetite for the normal in my life, as well as the abnormal.
I have for many years been puzzled by the persistence of Hugh Hefner. Why is he still here?
The heart [of my work], the quintessential, remains the questioning of photographic truth. Be careful, be critical, doubt, and filter the information you receive.