When I see a white piece of paper, I feel I've got to draw. And drawing, for me, is the beginning of everything.

The whole thing about acting, the draw for me, is the opportunity to do things you don't get to do in real life.

My father was a painter and he taught art. He once said to me, 'I never knew an Indian child who could not draw.'

Sometimes I'm convinced that one day I'm going to draw the cartoon that offends everyone, and that'll be the end.

I think marriage is one of those things that writers draw on, one of those emotional reservoirs that go way back.

I've always called myself a journalist who happens to draw. If I wasn't drawing cartoons, I'd be writing stories.

I sometimes sit and draw people on the bus, or some fantasy hybrid animal. You know, wherever the hand will lead.

You don't even have to win a championship every year to draw the fans. You just have to show you're really trying.

I've put it all on the line every time, win, lose, or draw, and that's what I want to be left behind in my legacy.

Disney was not a good animator, he didn't draw well at all, but he was always a great idea man, and a good writer.

Cartoonists' dirty secret is that we tend to come up with stories that involve things that are really fun to draw.

I would draw a really sharp distinction between creating and producing. I think that they're very different things.

It's hard to draw clear lines between writing and life and I don't think it is necessary to or necessarily good to.

I had never really thought of myself as a writer; any writing I had done was just to give myself something to draw.

I'm interested in all kinds of art. I draw and paint and don't know how to play the banjo, but I do play the banjo.

I'm just trying to understand what's around me as much as anyone else is, really. To draw a bead on a moving target.

For me, drawing was an outlet. No one in school said, 'Oh, she can do sports,' or, 'She's pretty,' but I could draw.

I wear white or pale-blue shirts and black knit ties: They don't draw attention to me in any kind of peacockish way.

Take time to gather up the past so that you will be able to draw from your experience and invest them in the future.

There's no magic line between an application and an operating system that some bureaucrat in Washington should draw.

As much as I know people love the method and what you can draw out of yourself, a lot of acting is very imaginative.

When I draw the scene that I'd been dreaming about or had always wanted to draw, that is the time that I'm happiest.

As an actor, you tend to draw on your human instincts and your background, what you've gone through as an individual.

I used to draw a lot. If my mother would ask me to do something else, I'd have a hairy conniption. I'd just go crazy.

Being able to draw means being able to put things in believable space. People who don't draw very well can't do that.

I started out in Scotland, not as a footballer of any note, and I didn't play to draw the attention of people abroad.

I'm an artist and I can draw very well. I'm amazed that everybody can't draw well because I can do it so effortlessly.

On the iPhone I tended to draw with my thumb. Whereas the moment I got to the iPad, I found myself using every finger.

You have to draw on your unconscious when you make a film - you can't worry about whether it's costing a lot of money.

Genius - to know without having learned; to draw just conclusions from unknown premises; to discern the soul of things.

It's a life of five-card draw, and you know what? When God asked me - I'm fine with the card I got. I'm gonna play this.

In my era of wrestling, there were no guaranteed contracts, so it was inherent that you draw the crowd in to make money.

There is a quiet place in Hawaii where, for over thirty years, I've gone to draw inspiration and write many of my books.

I was taught to draw very well when I was in school at Boston. And I grew to enjoy drawing so much that I never stopped.

The guy who could be me, but he knows when to draw the line, is John Cena. John Cena can rock 'n' roll, let me tell you.

For me, who loves to draw and who loves to write and cannot choose between one or the other, the comic is the best form.

I really like the look of old '70s and '80s Japanese comics, so I think that style is something I will continue to draw.

I was blown away by being able to color. Then I started to draw... bringing a blank white canvas to life was fascinating.

Reading and writing are connected. I learned to read very early so I could read the comics, which I then started to draw.

You can certainly draw a picture of 2016 which makes it look like the 1930s, which, of course, is what everyone is doing.

Anyone who was tempted to draw comparisons between my father's 'Dave Robicheaux' series and my first book quickly gave up.

I rarely draw myself, in general, and if I do, I tend to do little cute manga-esque, almost bite-sized drawings of myself.

I would sometimes sit in a crowded restaurant, and say, 'You know, I'm the only person in this restaurant who can't draw.'

All writers have roots they draw from - travel, work, family. My roots are in science and it is fertile ground for fiction.

I've always been comfortable working with women and I've had two happy marriages. Draw what conclusions you like from that.

I like a lot of modern art. I like Chuck Close a lot. It doesn't necessarily directly influence the work I draw on the page.

As for waxing, I've never waxed in my life and I never would. I'm extremely Welsh, so I draw the line at removing body hair.

A man who is in control, and inside there is a frightened child - that interests me. Why? You can draw your own conclusions.

The press, the machine, the railway, the telegraph are premises whose thousand-year conclusion no one has yet dared to draw.

People take the little bit of information they're fed, and they draw a picture of who you are. Most of the time, it's wrong.

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