Laurel Nakadate Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Laurel Nakadate's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Artist Laurel Nakadate's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 57 quotes on this page collected since December 15, 1975! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Laurel Nakadate: Art Desire Heart Photography more...
  • Polaroid, you know, goes against everything that photography is now. You can't make multiples. Only one exists. I love that. By the way, while we've been talking I've now seen a total of three people I know walking on 8th street.

    People  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • The amazing thing is that we live our lives with the hope that things will go right, that things will happen. And all along the way, we're inspired by the unknown and the unnameable. The minute you can fully describe something it's gone.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I think it's a really good thing to put yourself in a situation where you feel really uncomfortable because I think things can come out of that discomfort.

    Interview with Scott Indrisek, believermag.com. October 1, 2006.
  • People want movies to be one thing or another; they want it be fact or fiction.

    People  
    Source: www.believermag.com
  • Discomfort and awkwardness are places where you feel things. I'm a big advocate for being happy. We can choose to live in a happy bubble. But part of being happy is understanding how sad things can be.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I shot my undergraduate work on 35mm. I love the way it looks, but I haven't shot film in a while. If you can avoid scanning, it makes your practice faster. Oh, and I shoot a lot of Polaroid, too. I have about five hundred Polaroids from my film that I hope to show soon.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • If you can see a thing you don't have anymore it's very heartbreaking. To hold onto things longer than we actually can hold onto them is a desire. Writers and artists are trying to record these things they can no longer have. We're a heartbroken lot. Taking pictures is a brave act in which you try to explain and remember a thing you can't have anymore.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • Heartbreak is when you're just far enough away from what you desire that you can feel it. Change is the Pangaea moment. I feel like I'm at this point in my life where I have created this place, this island in the ocean, and I'm happy there.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • After you die, your body is just there. Isn't it kind of embarrassing that your body is going to be there and you have no say or control over it? Somebody's going to have to deal with it. I've always respected people who kill themselves and find a way to get rid of the body. Very clean. Lost at sea. I can see why they do that. There's nothing left.

    People  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • I would always say I'm doing a video project. About dancing or birthday parties. Of course, the video becomes more than that. It goes deeper than that. But it's not a lie. It's a starting point.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I feel like the men who end up in my videos, their biggest crime is being lonely. They're not violent, they're not scary people, they're just men who keep to themselves and have a hard time being social.

    Interview with Scott Indrisek, believermag.com. October 1, 2006.
  • Sometimes it's good to get mad, sometimes it clarifies where we stand. I think that art has the ability to challenge and push, and that's great. That's better than great... it's necessary.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • Everything is mediated. Everything is influenced by its maker. And happily, right? I'm so happy everyone leaves fingerprints on things whether they like it or not. Fingerprints solve crimes. They're profound. They're your best and worst friend and you were born with them and you can't get away from them without a lot of pain and sandpaper.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I think we're put out into the world to forge relationships with people. Those can be as small as buying coffee from someone or as large as a marriage. The important thing is that we try to make connections or have experiences with other humans. Otherwise what's the point of being on this earth?

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I find some comfort in running through the worst-case scenario in my mind and seeing how it's all going to go down.

    Interview with Scott Indrisek, believermag.com. October 1, 2006.
  • I present the thing we're going to do as a simple starting point. They all know it's an art piece and that it's all going to be recorded. And I have never had an experience where one of these men tried to take advantage of the situation. If they were guilty of anything it was of being lonely. It was never that they were violent or dangerous.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I think it's a really good idea to be bumping into all kinds of people in all kinds of ways. So you make art with strangers. You give a reading. You move somewhere new and try to build a life. You grapple with humanity.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I have very little interest in endlessly telling people about my artistic process. It sounds like throwing yourself against a wall and crying. It's not interesting to most people. It's interesting to yourself. But it's your problem, not anyone else's.

    People  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • The thing about death is that it's embarrassing. No one wants to focus on it for very long. We're happy to talk about sex all day long but no one wants to talk about the moment where it all ends.

    Interview with Scott Indrisek, believermag.com. October 1, 2006.
  • I feel like I'm at a place in my life where I'm really strangely happy, and in awe of how great the world can be, and I think that's because I have gone through periods of looking at the world through a really melancholy lenses. It's all just flip sides of the same coin.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • Well, my intention is to make work about being uncomfortable. About being in a world that isn't always the world you want to be part of. I talk a lot about the free fall, the moment in the scene where gravity takes over, and the beautiful awkwardness when gravity wins. Gravity is hilarious. Gravity always wins.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • A lot of people think that my work is about mocking or making fun of things, but a lot of it is about discomfort and making myself as uncomfortable as the men feel, or putting myself in a situation where I'm revealing my loneliness as much as they're revealing theirs.

    Source: www.believermag.com
  • I won't look it in the eye. As soon as I do, I get scared. You gotta walk the plank at some point, but at first you gotta put blinders on or you'll overthink things. I think it's dangerous, by the way, to do a lot of talks about your art, to do so much talking and so little making. You get the wrong idea about yourself.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I believe that I am some sort of fiction writer and I'm using myself in my work because I'm the person I'm most convenient to use!

    Source: www.believermag.com
  • Sometimes, photographs live in our hearts as unborn ghosts and we survive not because their shadows find permanence there, but because that thing that is larger than us, larger than the things we can point to, remember and claim, escorts us from dark into light.

  • The act of recording requires you to look at and handle and touch things, so yes - art is more than just looking and recording. It's messy and time consuming and people might fall in love and get hurt.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • The act of looking is brave. Especially if you look at things you can't handle. I think that most people do not look. If you're really paying attention you could have your heart broken twelve times a day. Most of the time we aren't looking.

    Source: therumpus.net
  • I think most interesting people are socially awkward even if they're able to hide it most of the time. If Henry Darger hadn't been a shut-in would we love him so much? Any act that we do in private is amazing and profound because it is private. You don't have to worry about being socially awkward in the privacy of your own home... well, unless I show up.

    Home   Thinking   People  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • Things might not get better but they might not get worse. There's something sort of beautiful about that.

    Interview with Scott Indrisek, believermag.com. October 1, 2006.
  • Photography has saved my life, over and over again.

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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 57 quotes from the Artist Laurel Nakadate, starting from December 15, 1975! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Laurel Nakadate quotes about: Art Desire Heart Photography