I look at leading men because that's ultimately what I'm aspiring to do. But I also look at character actors and people that I'm just in awe by, just because I can relate to it.
I'd grown up poor; I had no idea what it was like to be comfortable.
What attracts me in photography is not so much a fine arts approach, but rather photographs as documents. . . All the ways in which human beings have documented the world in an attempt to order it, in an attempt to consume it or rule it or hang on to it in some sense.
Progress is always an exchange. We gain something, we give something else up. I'm interested in looking at some of what we are losing.
What I've always liked about photography is that it's such a direct way of showing what's on my mind. I see something. I show it to you.
Something about photography is tied to a very specific relationship with the material world. It doesn't have to be, but the way I practice it, it is. So there's an act of observation, but it's not an act of objective recording. It's about framing something and seeing it and understanding that it's relational.
When people look at a photograph, they believe it. . . My photographs crawl along that edge. I document the world, but from my own biased point of view.
The most important thing in good leadership is truly caring.
The B. C. spirit bear symbolizes the essence of the spirit of British Columbia. It is a powerful presence and a thing of wonder that lives in a magical land of beauty, grace and unbridled potential.
Unless you are in a survival situation, if you allow yourself to be creative, to be thinking, to be developing, there will be outbursts. You can say, almost beauteously, when you have less time for art, you have to select your best practice.
We know what works: freedom works. We know what's right: freedom is right. We know how to secure a more and just and prosperous life for man on earth: through free markets, free speech, free elections and the exercise of free will unhampered by the state.