Words matter. These are the best Jock Sturges Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Some of the people that I photographed as sticks became much more voluptuous, much rounder, in some cases dramatically so, and I think they’re even more beautiful.
But the truth is that Homo sapiens is a sensual species. I think all species are, to one degree or another.
If it gets to the Supreme Court, I’ll have the directors of every museum in the country as expert testimony that my work is legitimate art.
Different members of different cultures will think that some things are beautiful.
I didn’t think there was anything more or less obscene about any part of the body. Now, I recognize that there are certain postures and angles that make people see red, which are evidence of original sin or something, and I avoid that.
What pedophiles and people who have sexual desires on children lose sight of to a terrible, terrible degree – a devastating degree – is that their victims are real people who will suffer forever whatever abuses are perpetrated on them.
But empirically I’ve come to understand that my photographs really don’t do any harm.
They were without clothes before I got there, and they were without clothes when I left.
I became good at defending myself, but as far as I was concerned, that was a transient skill.
Any artist that’s involved in their work is inevitably going to have a focus in what they do.
I found myself serving a sentence of public denial from the very second the raid on my apartment happened.
It’s no small irony that the government inevitably and invariably ends up promoting precisely that which they would most like to repress.
That’s my ambition: that you look at the pictures and realize what complex, fascinating, interesting people every single one of my subjects is.
The kids really enjoy what they do. I check with them constantly to make sure that they’re really happy to be there.
If somebody’s pointing a trembling finger at your pants and saying you shouldn’t be doing that, follow that finger back, go up the arm and look at the head that’s behind it, because there’s almost always something fairly woolly in there.
The transactions between me and the people that I photograph are very, very collaborative.
When I started doing my work years ago, I had doubts as to whether the informed-consent question was answerable.
Physical beauty is such a strange thing.
As soon as you forbid something, you make it extraordinarily appealing. You also bring shame in as a phenomenon.
The truth is that from birth on we are, to one extent or another, a fairly sensual species.
I just yesterday returned from a trip where I photographed a woman with two children whom I photographed first when she was the age of the older of the two children.
Virtually always I get my best pictures when everybody thinks the shoot’s done.
There are photographs that I don’t take now that I previously would have taken without any thought at all as to any misinterpretations.
There isn’t a person alive who doesn’t like being caressed.
Before, I’d photograph anything. I didn’t think there was anything more or less obscene about any part of the body.
All my life I’ve taken photographs of people who are completely at peace being what they were in the situations I photographed them in.
Every child is going to grow up. You can see it happen in the books: They get older and older and belong to themselves to a greater and greater extent.
Now, I recognize that there are certain postures and angles that make people see red, which are evidence of original sin or something, and I avoid that. I don’t shoot that any more.
I’ve had to relearn how I work with people so that if and when I do avoid different things I don’t send any messages in doing so.
I know the families that I photograph extremely well, and I’ve known them for a very long time.
I’m guilty of extraordinary naivete, I suppose. But it’s a naivete that I really don’t want to abandon, not even now.
A virulent, aggressive minority has decided that Americans don’t know themselves what it is they should see, and need to be protected by people who are wiser than they are, even if they are only a tiny sliver of the population.
I’m an artist that’s attracted to a specific way of seeing and a way of being.
I am fascinated by the human body and all its evolutions.
We live in an age where anonymity is growing in magnitude like a bomb going off.
I will always admit immediately to what’s obvious, which is that Homo sapiens is inherently erotic or inherently sensual from birth.
The world is shrinking as we see more and more of it in the media, and the more we see of the world, the smaller we are, the more aware we are of how insignificant any one of us is.
I’d rather get back to making art than talk about it.
I don’t photograph any two people who are remotely the same.
The images I like best are parts of series that I’ve started, in some cases, with the pregnancies of the mothers of the children in question, and I continue that series right on through the birth of children to the child that resulted from that first pregnancy.