A Quote by KiKi Layne

I was artsy. — © KiKi Layne
I was artsy.
I'm not tall enough to be a model, but I wish I was 6-foot, because I love it. It's kind of artsy, and I'm artsy. And I love clothes.
Sometimes I get gigs in weird, artsy places because weird, artsy people embraced my public-access show, which I could only have done in the way I did in New York.
I am an artsy girl. It's no secret that I am artsy, you know.
The clashes of people and the clashes of cultures have assisted me in learning the openness you have to be a part of in New York. You're always meeting people who are different than you. You always have to find a way to exist in it and also find a way to be yourself. In Stockholm, I thought I was artsy, then I came to New York and was like, "there's a bunch of artsy people everywhere!" It really forced me to start looking myself and ask. "what does it mean to be me?"
I come from a very artsy family.
Everyone has their thing, and I was the weird, artsy kid.
I was in more of the artsy crowd in high school.
I was just over high school, and I was kind of artsy.
I'm just a little artsy-fartsy computer dude.
When you're the artsy, weirdo, introverted outsider growing up, you don't fit into your community.
I always assumed I'd spend my life happily performing in artsy-fartsy little theaters.
I was the artsy one, and my husband took care of all our finances. It was the Latino way - the man is in charge of the money.
I think I'm more approachable with long hair. When it's short, I come across as being artsy and weird.
There's something about the comic book genre that I think is so cool and artsy and unique. It's not like anything else.
I know that my look is more 'toothpaste model' as opposed to artsy, which sucks because I can play those roles.
I was surprised by how much I loved Portland. It is so wonderfully creative without being artsy. Great food scene.
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