"Many people who excel are self-taught"
About this Quote
There is a quiet provocation tucked into Herb Ritts's plainspoken line: excellence doesn not always come with a syllabus. Coming from a photographer who helped define the polished, high-gloss look of late-20th-century celebrity imagery, "self-taught" reads less like a romantic myth and more like a practical credential. In a field where taste, timing, and access can matter as much as technique, learning outside the classroom is often the only way to keep up with the pace of the culture you're trying to capture.
Ritts's intent feels twofold. On the surface, it's encouragement: you don't need institutional permission to get good. Underneath, it's a subtle critique of gatekeeping. Photography has always had a contested status between craft and art, and formal training can function as a stamp of legitimacy. By elevating the self-taught, Ritts implies that legitimacy can be earned in the work itself: in the repetition, the failures, the obsessive attention to light and bodies and posture, the slow building of an eye.
The context matters. Ritts rose during an era when fashion and celebrity photography were becoming global visual languages, distributed through magazines, album covers, and advertising. That ecosystem rewards those who can adapt quickly, invent a signature, and translate cultural energy into images that feel inevitable. "Self-taught" becomes shorthand for resourcefulness and a certain creative stubbornness: the willingness to learn by doing, and to keep doing until your instincts become your education.
Ritts's intent feels twofold. On the surface, it's encouragement: you don't need institutional permission to get good. Underneath, it's a subtle critique of gatekeeping. Photography has always had a contested status between craft and art, and formal training can function as a stamp of legitimacy. By elevating the self-taught, Ritts implies that legitimacy can be earned in the work itself: in the repetition, the failures, the obsessive attention to light and bodies and posture, the slow building of an eye.
The context matters. Ritts rose during an era when fashion and celebrity photography were becoming global visual languages, distributed through magazines, album covers, and advertising. That ecosystem rewards those who can adapt quickly, invent a signature, and translate cultural energy into images that feel inevitable. "Self-taught" becomes shorthand for resourcefulness and a certain creative stubbornness: the willingness to learn by doing, and to keep doing until your instincts become your education.
Quote Details
| Topic | Learning |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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