Books speak plain when counselors blanch.
I went through a furnace and came out knowing who I am.
The way I work is mostly unconscious and instinctive.
Before I moved to Brooklyn to pursue music, I was a high school dropout and speed freak who'd been living with her dealer boyfriend in Bucks County, Pennsylvania at 16.
It is a good thing to let someone else's vision take over, and it has always been a good thing in the end.
After being in the creative, hermetic state I have been in, coming out has been painful, but it is getting easier.
I do have a lot of references coming out of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but I don't consciously think, "I'm going to put this here and this there. " It comes out of my unconscious, and I don't want it to be just retro.
Growth is the goal, and that goal is never complete—art must be in constant change.
Place and the scale of space must be measured against our bodies and their capabilities.
Yes, I am aware that I am the gayer version of Jeff Lewis.
I always want a challenge. My whole career has been based on trying to avoid female characters that don't get to do anything. And it's really hard to avoid those.