Top 75 Quotes & Sayings by William Klein

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French photographer William Klein.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
William Klein

William Klein is an American-born French photographer and filmmaker noted for his ironic approach to both media and his extensive use of unusual photographic techniques in the context of photojournalism and fashion photography. He was ranked 25th on Professional Photographer's list of 100 most influential photographers.

People didn't object to me taking their photo. It was something everybody thought was their due: to be King for a Day, win the lottery and be photographed.
Fashion was more of a sideline for me. I did it for the money.
French photography was basically poetic, and mine was vulgar and brash and violent, except that there's never any violence in the photographs: it's only in the photographic style.
When I was a kid in New York, long before saturation sports coverage, the world heavyweight championship was, with the baseball World Series, the great national event. — © William Klein
When I was a kid in New York, long before saturation sports coverage, the world heavyweight championship was, with the baseball World Series, the great national event.
In fashion, you have assistants, flashes; you can make sets. There are people running around doing things for you. But I can take it or leave it.
I'm known for fashion photographs, but fashion photographs were mostly a joke for me. In 'Vogue,' girls were playing at being duchesses, but they were actually from Flatbush, Brooklyn. They would play duchesses, and I would play Cecil Beaton.
The kinetic quality of New York, the kids, dirt, madness - I tried to find a photographic style that would come close to it. So I cropped, blurred, played with the negatives.
If I look back, I think most of the things I did - the films, the books, the collaborations with these magazines - were mostly by accident.
You do things for yourself, and you do things for other people, and you hope that these things coincide.
I find it satisfying that what I've done in photography has had so much influence in how people take photographs and what they look at and how they look at things.
My complaint is that Americans drive me crazy, and the politics drive me crazy.
Fashion had no interest for me. I would take photographs in the studio. I would go back home, and my wife would say, 'What is the fashion like for this season?' And I would say, 'I have no idea.'
I was a very clumsy Jewish kid.
I had no real respect for good technique because I didn't know what it was. I was self-taught, so that stuff didn't matter to me.
I think that Damien Hirst putting a shark in a bath of formaldehyde is nothing. — © William Klein
I think that Damien Hirst putting a shark in a bath of formaldehyde is nothing.
I was 24 years old at the time. I had no real notion of what photography was about. I had no training. By accident, I put a negative in an enlarger, and you can do many things with that negative.
I like festivals of all kinds: in 1969, I made a film about the first Pan-African festival in Algiers, which celebrated the countries that had been liberated 10 years earlier. There was a tremendous feeling of kinship.
I did a film on Muhammad Ali before he was champion. I was there when he became champion in 1964. I was happy to be able to document the development of a real American hero.
I discovered that I could do whatever I wanted with a negative in a darkroom and an enlarger.
My way of living and working is that I'll do my thing. I went from one thing to another. That annoyed people. They didn't know how to categorize me.
I had an experience that was kind of backward. Instead of thinking that photography was a step down, it brought me a step up, to transpose and modify things.
I grew up in Manhattan. For Manhattanites, Brooklyn was the sticks, a second-rate civilization. My friends and I, we were so snobby. Living in the Bronx or Brooklyn was incredible... for me, that was like a foreign country.
I think it's obscene. I don't know how you support the monarchy. How can you do that?
I was making a film on Muhammad Ali in 1964, and I went to Miami to film everything around the fight for the world championship with Sonny Liston. I had the good luck of flying down to Miami, and there was one empty seat, and the guy sitting next to this empty seat was Malcolm X.
Why did I take fashion photographs? I thought it was fun. And there was a lot of money.
I grew up in New York, in a rough neighborhood where our biggest concern was not getting beat up. I was always far from the center of the Big Apple.
This is supposed to be the Big Apple, with neighborhoods where the houses are all good-looking and the skyscrapers and everything. But to me, New York is kind of shoddy and uncomfortable.
I always dreamt of becoming an artist in Paris. Thanks to the Army, it happened.
Being an expatriate doesn't go down well in America.
When you use film, you use accidents, but there aren't any accidents with digital photography. I don't mind that it's easy. But I do mind that there is a sort of consensus with the camera and the subject and the light, and you look at something, and you photograph it, and you get what you see.
I like film. I'm old fashioned.
I like dark humor. I think the world is very funny and tragic, and my photographs are basically dark Jewish humor.
The English are very exotic to me.
I always thought I was going to be an artist. I used to draw, and I would read Russian novels until 3 or 4 in the morning.
I thought it would be good not to hide the fact that you're taking a photograph, and have people react and come in close and also make a commentary on what's being photographed: 'This is a photo, this is my point of view.'
Photography led me to experiment in graphic work and, actually, painting.
The best critics of America are Americans.
I didn't really know who Cassius Clay was. I just wanted to show America through a heavyweight championship fight. Ever since my childhood, I'd been fascinated by the way the whole country becomes polarised around this event.
In America, kids would go to college and get out and buy a second-hand car and go across the country and discover America. I never did that; I went from New York to Paris, and New York was my America.
Leger was not only the first artist I ever met but also the first pop artist, and he blew our minds. — © William Klein
Leger was not only the first artist I ever met but also the first pop artist, and he blew our minds.
I'm an outsider, I guess.
The digital camera takes photographs in practically no light: it will dig out the least bit of light available. I was amazed to see the results of photographs that I wouldn't take ordinarily. That's the advantage of digital photography.
I wasn't part of any movement. I was working alone, following my instinct.
My grandfather and his wife came to America at the end of the 19th century from Hungary. Everyone started out on the Lower East Side. They became embourgeoise and would move to the Upper West Side. Then, if they'd make money, they'd move to Park Avenue. Their kids would become artists and move down to the Lower East Side and the Village.
Don't have rules, taboos, or limits.
My father was like Willy Loman, you know: he never really made it - and he was from a family where there were people who had made it.
If I didn't have to earn a living somehow, I would never have taken a fashion photograph in my life.
In the late Fifties and early Sixties, I used to think that most of these fashion creators weren't that great, and if the photograph was good, it was mostly thanks to the photographer.
I was fascinated by the Black Panthers because I'd been in contact with the Nation of Islam, thanks to Muhammad Ali, and their way of talking was that the whites were the devil, and they'd get rid of them once they took over.
I saw New York differently after being in Paris for a few years. — © William Klein
I saw New York differently after being in Paris for a few years.
I always dreamed of working in Paris, of going to the Coupole and slapping Picasso or Giacometti on the shoulder.
Most of the other soldiers were older than me and sent money back to their families, so they were more prudent.
If a film is a real knockout like 'Raging Bull,' it does not matter that it might not have happened like that.
I thought it would be a good idea to look at New York with this half-European, half-native eye and really do something to get back at this city that I thought really gave me a hard time when I grew up.
My father was convinced that America was the greatest place in the world. I'm afraid I didn't have the family I would have dreamed of.
When I made 'Polly Maggoo,' it was more or less the end of this collaboration with 'Vogue' because I made a caricature of the editor-in-chief and the fashion people, so they didn't really adore me.
I like the streets. I grew up in the streets.
My sister was brilliant: she was in the 25 top math students in the country. When she finished college, I said, 'Spend a couple of months here in Europe. You'll get another take on life.' She never came - married some schmuck who made clothes for fat women on Seventh Avenue.
For my first book, 'New York,' I had one camera and two lenses. It was fotografia povera.
What's very funny is when you see amateurs filming something, they do some things no professionals would dare to do. They instinctively do things that are very avant-garde and useful.
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