Thinking Images With Quotes
Collection of top 21 famous quotes about Thinking Images With
Thinking Images With Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Thinking Images With quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
A programming language is like a natural, human language in that it favors certain methaphors, images, and ways of thinking.
— Seymour Papert
I think there's almost nothing I can't excuse except perhaps worshiping graven images. That seems to be idiotic.
— Evelyn Waugh
I love storytelling.
— Jennifer Lynch
She clung to him, song after song, staring into his eyes they way she used to stare into mine.
— Kiera Cass
You never know who will see your images hanging. And I like that. I think you never really have control over the things that you do.
— Luis Gonzalez
The images we eat are as important as the food we eat. Think of that in terms of television, and a lot of the movies we watch.
— Marion Woodman
History speaks to artists. It changes the artist's thinking and is constantly reshaping it into different and unexpected images.
— Anselm Kiefer
I think that nowadays there are more images in the world than world to be in the pictures.
— Thomas Demand
Think in terms of images and words. They can be mighty powerful when they are fitted together properly.
— Gordon Parks
Light. Light I think is knowledge. Knowledge is love. Love is freedom. Freedom is energy. Energy is all. Without light, we can't have images.
— Vittorio Storaro
The Laws of the Universe cannot be changed... However, they can be Mastered!
— George G. Edwards
Without images we can neither think nor understand anything.
— Martin Luther
After 'Bridesmaids,' women know who I am.
— Chris O'Dowd
Sometimes I closed my eyes hard to avoid thinking, but the eye of the mind refused to be closed and continued to plague me with images.
— Ishmael Beah
I came to painting through sculpture, to images through objects. I think that images sit in the middle, somewhere between objects and words.
— Michael Craig-Martin
I'm trying to trick people into thinking about the unthinkable by using pop culture images.
— John Shirley