A Quote by Todd Haynes

I love visual mediums, and I've always painted and drawn. — © Todd Haynes
I love visual mediums, and I've always painted and drawn.
The idea of discussing psychological and philosophical ideas in a visual medium was really exciting to me. I thought I was going to go into philosophy...and suddenly I found this way to combine that with my love for visual mediums.
I love composing and writing music and dancing and performing and conceptualizing creatively for visual mediums. I love to create.
We [Rodriguez and Frank Miller] wanted to take the movies and turn them into a graphic novel, so that people wouldn't even know what they were looking at. It's still visual storytelling, but it's approached completely different. The two mediums don't have to be separate mediums. They can be one and the same.
There aren't a lot of entertainment-based mediums, the visual or recorded mediums, that empower the audience to go off the next day and create it themselves. You can't watch a movie or a show and the next day say, 'I want to make that.' You have to go to school.
I've always painted or drawn pictures or taken still photographs; now I shoot movies. It's just about making images, really.
I don't think comedians take advantage of the fact that television and film are visual mediums.
I think you're always drawn to what you love, and I'm always really drawn to things that feel really real and really true to me. I love things that make me think of things in a way I hadn't, and I love looking at people in the world in a way that I hadn't. And sometimes big, huge stories do that for me, but I think I am drawn to smaller ones.
I'm drawn to people rather than mediums - directors, writers, actors.
We all accept the visual shorthand used throughout comics: if something's farther away, it'll be drawn with a thinner, simpler line, eventually leaving out most visual information and becoming a gesture, a skeletal representation of a thing.
I love visual art. I painted for many years when I was younger. I have studied modern/contemporary Indian art a bit and am very impressed with the talent in India.
I haven't had the opportunity to study visual art, but it was always my first love when it came to artistic expression. I started drawing and experimenting with visual art when I was 5.
There are so many fantastic roles, but the ones that have always drawn me to them are the loners who, for whatever reason, never quite fit in and knew it and had to find their own way. I've always been drawn to that, for some reason. I've always been drawn to that sad, isolated place, but what it produces in behavior is something else, entirely. For whatever reason, I'm drawn to these people. Essentially, I think what draws me is that they are survivors against rather considerable odds.
I have painted and drawn bulls for some time because of their density and all the symbolism they carry.
I was a painter before I was a writer, so I was always a visual artist. And my writing, to me, was always visual.
Universities are not here to be mediums for the coercion of other people, they're here to be mediums for the free exchange of ideas.
Be drawn to the visual arts for it can expand your imagination.
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