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David Bailey

Read through the most famous quotes from David Bailey




I don't think it matters where I came from any more.


— David Bailey


#came #i #i came #matters #more

I don't think my work does reflect my nationality - I don't like the idea of nationalism.


— David Bailey


#i #idea #like #nationalism #nationality

I guess I'm the last of the Cockneys.


— David Bailey


#i #last

I had a terrible time with feminists in the Seventies. They hated me, those women. I think they hated everything.


— David Bailey


#feminists #had #hated #i #i think

I hate being so nostalgic about the Sixties.


— David Bailey


#being #hate #i #nostalgic #sixties

I hate men who are in touch with their feminine side.


— David Bailey


#hate #i #men #side #their

I have always wanted to live in the present and never the past.


— David Bailey


#i #live #never #past #present

I have never met an ugly woman.


— David Bailey


#met #never #ugly #woman

I just thought it was magic that you could stick a bit of paper in some coffee-type liquid and a picture comes out.


— David Bailey


#comes #could #i #just #liquid

A positive attitude can really make dreams come true - it did for me.


— David Bailey


#come #did #dreams #make #me






About David Bailey

David Bailey Quotes




Did you know about David Bailey?

In 1972 rock musician Alice Cooper was photographed by Bailey for Vogue magazine almost naked apart from a snake. Cooper used Bailey the following year to shoot for the groups chart topping 'Billion Dollar Babies' album with one billion dollars and a baby wearing mascara being shot under armed guard. Artists by David Bailey.

In 2012 the BBC made a film of the story of his 1962 New York photoshoot with Jean Shrimpton. Along with Terence Donovan and Brian Duffy he captured and helped create the 'Swinging London' of the 1960s. Born in East London he became a photographic assistant at the John French studio then photographer for John Cole's Studio Five before being contracted as a fashion photographer for British Vogue magazine in 1960.

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