4.30.2012
A Flak Photo Discussion: Gerry Badger's "The Pleasures of Good Photographs"
A Flak Photo Discussion with Tom Griggs
I will be joining Flak Photo and creator Andy Adams to host an online community conversation focused on essays from Gerry Badger’s recently published "The Pleasures of Good Photographs." I will also be making posts here on fototazo exploring the main points of the conversation.
Badger is a critic, curator, and photographer who - for over 30 years - has contributed essays to periodicals and books that shape our contemporary understanding of photography. Witty, scholarly, and highly readable, the essays touch on subjects from photobooks to Photoshop, using work from dozens of photographers to investigate themes that impact all of us as makers of and thinkers about photography.
This public discussion will provide a structured setting for reading the book and exploring its ideas. It will be a forum for expanding our understanding by reading collectively, a place for asking and answering questions and looking at how the book’s themes can be applied beyond the book itself.
All are welcome to join in the conversation, which will be hosted in Flak Photo Books, a Facebook group designed to facilitate the collaborative exploration of new ideas in photography. You can confirm your participation on Flak Photo's Facebook event page.
The discussion begins Monday, May 7, 2012 with the essay, "Literate, Authoritative, Transcendent: Walker Evans's American Photographs" (page 22).
Aperture Foundation offers a 20% discount for online orders via their website for those looking for a copy.
Tags:
Flak Photo,
Gerry Badger
Microgrant Photographer 7: Mónica Lorenza Taborda
Mónica Lorenza Taborda
Location: Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia
Request: Nikkor AF-S DX 55-200mm lens
Grant Status: $275 of $275 (100%)
Donate here
Biography
Mónica Lorenza Taborda (b. 1976, Medellín) worked ten years in land registry offices with photogrammetry, maps, cadastral photography, deeds and contracts. She developed her interest in documenting the abandonment of property in rural Colombia from seeing the problem first-hand during those ten years. She began her studies in the visual arts at the Universidad de Antioquia in Medellín three years ago after re-marrying and deciding to change careers. She has shown work in the Regional Biennial of Apartado, the Casa de la Cultura in Carmen and the Casa de la Cultura in Sopetrán (all in Colombia). She and her husband Ramses have four children.
PORTFOLIO
TERRITORIOS DEL DESTIERRO
In rural Colombia, you commonly find homes abandoned due to the violence of land conflicts, harassment from guerrillas and paramilitaries and the long-standing internal problems of the country.
These photographs are a reflection of this reality in Colombia, they are ruins found in the Department (or State) of Antioquia, in the towns of Dabeiba, Mutata, La Unión and Sonson. These properties, at the mercy of time and of being forgotten, have become a symbol of the emotional and personal realities of the owner forced to leave and of their condition of displacement, of the violation of their right to their land as well as of the social conflicts that the country continues to endure. They are "Territorios del destierro" or "Exiled Lands" that are returning to nature, forming part of the landscape and becoming a metaphor for the neglect and indifference of society towards the issue of forced displacement - an issue that is the historic plague of Colombia.
Tags:
Colombia,
Medellín,
Mónica Lorenza Taborda
4.28.2012
82: I-Hsuen Chen
I-Hsuen Chen
untitled, from the series "Nowhere in Taiwan"
2011
Series statement: Nowhere in Taiwan is a selection of photographs made while traveling through my native country of Taiwan in the summer of 2011.
Influenced by the idea of the "road trip" in American photography, exemplified in the work of such photographers as Robert Frank, Stephen Shore, and Joel Sternfeld, I set out to find scenes and situations that seem to be "in between," neither landscape nor cityscape but existing in an ambiguous space I call “nowhere.” Some of these sites are suburban, or partly urbanized, or abandoned and left behind. The aspect of location that interests me most has to do with the traces of human presence and gesture that reside or remain. In search of nowhere, I look for unexpected instances of intimacy, so that there is a sense of "nowhere" being unveiled.
Tags:
I-Hsuen Chen,
Taiwan
4.27.2012
Shifting Lines: The Increasing Consideration of Documentary Photography and Photojournalism as Fine Art Photography, Part II
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© Abraham Zapruder, film still from John F. Kennedy assassination, 1963 |
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John F. Kennedy's assassination in November 1963 is often cited as the beginning of television’s ascendency as the primary source of news for increasing numbers of people. The tragic day in Dallas entered the American memory through televised images and news coverage as much as by photography and radio broadcasts. Sales of televisions accelerated during the mid-1960s and by the beginning of the 1970s televised news coverage had surpassed newspapers and magazines as the public’s major source for news.
Television took so much advertising revenue from newspapers and news magazines that many print venues collapsed, including the great picture magazines such as Life, which folded in 1972. With the pressure placed on the print industry by television, magazines and newspapers increasingly looked only to the bottom line for editorial decisions, and cut many photographic projects. As Louis Baltz writes, "In 1945 Americans communicated the appearance of the world's great events to each other through the medium of still photography; by 1975, by and large, they did not." (Louis Baltz, "American Photography in the 1970s," American Images: Photography 1945-1980, 157)
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uncredited image from the site www.yesterdaysmagazines.com |
At the same time the economics of the magazine and newspaper industries limited options for photographers in photojournalism and documentary photography, an economic infrastructure developed to help support photographers as artists. Opportunities for displaying photography as fine art work expanded, museums began to include photographs as art more frequently in their collections and exhibitions, developments in printing allowed photographer's to use artist's books as a cost-effective forum for distributing their work, the National Endowment for the Arts provided funding for many fine art photographers, and universities hired many photographers as professors in the expanding field of secondary education in photography.
After the closing of Alfred Steiglitz’s gallery 291 in New York in 1917, few U.S. galleries in the following decades showed photography and none exhibited photography exclusively. The Limelight Gallery in New York City and Carl Siembab’s gallery on Newbury Street in Boston showed photography and occasionally held one-person exhibitions of photographers, but it was not until 1969 that Lee Witkin successfully opened the first commercially viable New York art gallery exclusively showing photography as fine art work. During the 1970s a large and active market for contemporary photography developed and Baltz recounts that, "While it was extremely difficult to see photographs exhibited as art on New York gallery walls in 1967, by 1977 it was extremely difficult not to." (159)
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John Szarkowski, from the page www.obit-mag.com |
By the 1970s, the photographic print had been firmly established as a unique and collectable object by museums, a process that aided in the raising of market value for photographs. John Szarkowski helped to complete the transformation of the photographic print into an art object, a “passage from multiplicity, ubiquity, equivalence to singularity, rarity, and authenticity.” (Christopher Phillips, "The Judgement Seat of Photography," The Contest of Meaning, 16)
Szarkwoski replaced Edward Steichen as director of the photography department of the museum in 1962 and also replaced Steichen’s legacy of disregard of the qualities of the “fine print” by combining two ideas of Steichen’s predecessor, Beaumont Newhall. Newhall’s early articulation of a program for the isolation and expert judging of the merit of photographs based on aesthetic factors intrinsic to photography allowed for the print to be seen as a singular, unique work, not as a mechanically reproducible item. In Newhall’s vision, an anointed expert - such as himself - could use self-enclosed and self-referential aesthetic factors separate from real world events to judge photographs as works of art. During the second phase of his career, Newhall approached prints with the supposition of creative expression in their making. This not only allowed photographs made outside of the art world to be included as part of art photography history - such as those of Mathew Brady and Charles Marville - it also provided an argument for the uniqueness of the photographic print for Szarkowski to build from in its submission that “each print is an individual personal expression.” (22)
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© Mathew Brady, Confederate dead behind a stone wall at Fredericksburg, VA, ca. 1860- ca. 1865 |
Szarkowski brought back both Newhall’s idea of the expert assessment of formal factors and the supposition of creative intent in the making of the photographic print as part of his ambitious attempt to establish photography in its own aesthetic practice. Szarkowski’s creation of “cult value,” as Walter Benjamin described it in his seminal 1936 essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” around the photographic print helped to reorder photography along the lines of other media in museums by establishing a sense of rarity and “aura” around the individual photograph.
This elevation of the print, in turn, helped to commodify photographs and govern a market for prints by defining and limiting the production of the original, which in turn helped solidify art photography as a financially successful gambit for gallery owners and artists. Peter Galassi, the recently retired veteran curator of the museum’s Department of Photography, shows the continued triumph of Szarkowski’s belief in the print as a unique object by claiming that “a photographic print is a much less predictable product than a print from an engraving or an etching plate” and in his belief that the likelihood of a photographer’s being “able truly to duplicate an earlier print is very slight.” (16)
In addition to the increase in opportunities to show work in galleries and museums and the establishment of a market for the photographic print as a unique object, photographers began to use the advent of cheaper printing methods such as pad printing, laser printing, dot matrix printing, and inkjet printing to publish their own books in the 1970s in order to claim a role beyond the major presses. W. Eugene Smith, for example, often showed work in Life magazine, but after its closure he published a final version of Minamata, his project on the mercury pollution of a Japanese fishing village, as a book in 1975. Increasingly, funding for book projects came from small presses, independent grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, and photographic equipment companies such as Hasselblad, as well as from the photographers themselves, allowing for the viability of the book form as a replacement for magazines as a venue for photographers. (Mary Panzer, Things as They Are, 25) Baltz describes the situation:
Another development in American photography during the 1970's was the unprecedented
quantity and quality of photographers' and artists' publications, some in the form of portfolios
of original prints, some in the traditional form of a monograph by an established publishing
house, but most often, in the form of inexpensively printed, self-published 'artist's bookworks'
that dealt with a single subject or theme. (Baltz 160)
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© W. Eugene Smith, from Minamata |
As galleries, museums, and books provided new venues for photographers and prints rose in price as they became defined as unique objects, the National Endowment for the Arts provided grants to artists at unprecedented levels and universities added photography courses and programs in the 1970s allowing more room for photographers to make a living as fine artists. The NEA, before the ideological battles surrounding grants given to controversial artists such as Andres Serrano and Robert Mapplethorpe in the early 1990s, gave money to a significant number of photographers to help them support projects. As for working in higher education as a means of subsistence in the 1970s, Baltz writes, "Higher education was becoming both a major educator and employer of serious photographers. It is probable that teaching had supplanted commercial or magazine work as the 'other' work of most serious photographers by the mid-1970s." (157)
Szarkowski gave another reason for photography's changes in the 1970s. He fundamentally refuted the ability of photography to explain large-scale public issues and stories such as the Vietnam War or the ability of photo essays such as Margaret Bourke-White's attempt to explain the effects of World War II. "Most issues of importance cannot be photographed," he said, declaring the fields of photojournalism and documentary non-effectual in his influential Mirrors and Windows (1978). (Marien 382) Szarkowski believed, for example, that W. Eugene Smith’s efforts to characterize the historic culture of a Spanish village in seventeen photographs pushed the medium beyond its capacity. Szarkowski also pointed to “photography’s failure to explain large public issues” such as the Vietnam War. (382) He wished to cordon off art photography from the encroachments of mass culture by introducing a formalist vocabulary for examining the visual structure supposedly inherent in photographs and by denying the ability of a string of images to convey a narrative in the way that text can.
Szarkowski's comments, in a way, reflect a now long-standing trend towards a disbelief in photography which became widespread after World War II and continues today, an erosion of confidence represented by the long-standing debate about the authenticity of Robert Capa's Death of a Loyalist Soldier and other World War II images. This loss of confidence helped to create a distance between documentary photography and photojournalism and their traditional roles, facilitating their consideration as works of art or personal expression.
In sum, the 1970s brought together a confluence of factors that built on the historic flexibility of the ideas of documentary photography and photojournalism, their approximations to other photographic genres over time, and their early crossings into fine arts to further their ultimate inclusion as part of the fine arts world. We can easily imagine this quote from photographic historian Lili Corbus Bezner to include fine art photography as well: “Photographic categories such as 'documentary' or 'photojournalism' are not necessarily or immediately obvious to viewers; often we must be told which is which, a function of textbooks, museums, gallery owners, critics and historians. A single image can belong to more than one category, or its characteristics may change through time.” (Bezner 2) This process of shifting lines between genres, building over the course of the medium's history, was perhaps inevitable for an adaptable and experimental medium, considered to be both a truth and a lie, never sharply delineated as an art or a science.
__________________________________________________________
A coda to this
post / paper that follows these trends through the 1990s will be published early next week.
4.26.2012
Shifting Lines: The Increasing Consideration of Documentary Photography and Photojournalism as Fine Art Photography, Part I
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© Alec Soth, from Dog Days Bogotá |
In the latest in a recent series of articles on Thomas Hoepker’s September 11th image, Joerg Colberg of Conscientious published a well-written piece entitled “How we give photographs meaning.” In the post he opens up several threads of potential conversation: the importance of including context when reading an image, all photographs as fictions with no inherent meaning, the ethics of photojournalism, meanings as constructs, etc.
Given I agree with Colberg’s main points (and to dwell on the few second-tier points I have questions about seems nitpicky), I’m going to build on the conversation his piece continues by pulling out one particular thread of his post. This will also be a way to slow the conversation down and explore in depth one of those potential conversations his essay opens.
Colberg writes (my italics):
“The meaning of a photograph is a construct that involves a group of people operating
against a specific background (news, art, …), subject to the group’s personal, cultural and
political biases. I think what we should be talking about is not how truthful photographs
are, but how truthful we expect them to be, given the background they’re operating in.”
This quote raises a slippery question: how do we know what background we are operating against? Just where are those lines between fine art photography, photojournalism, and documentary photography?
It’s not immediately clear how we should approach establishing those lines in a photographic world in which someone like Alec Soth, to choose an example, can call himself a documentary photographer while simultaneously being a member of the premier photojournalism agency in the world and having a retrospective at a major contemporary art museum. Is it a question of where we see the photograph? If the same image is in both a gallery and a newspaper, should we say we’re operating against an art background in one situation and against a photojournalistic one in the other? Or is it a question of subject matter so that a picture made to describe a war, for example, is inherently photojournalism? But then what to make of Richard Mosse’s Infra? Is a photograph what the photographer says it is? Joel-Peter Witkin surely couldn’t claim his work is documentary. Then is it the observer that decides? What if you and I differ in opinion - who’s right?
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© Richard Mosse, from Infra |
To make things more complicated, the question is also a temporal one – the lines between genres are alive, constantly moving and shifting to reflect cultural changes, historical events, prevailing intellectual winds, and the photographic marketplace.
To look at these questions, I’m going to dust off and cannibalize a paper for this post that I wrote a few years ago that explores the history of the relationship between these three genres. More historical than polemical, it examines how the 1970s in particular played an important role in forming the contemporary photographic landscape of more elastic definitions that we live in today.
I’ll boil the paper down as much as possible to get rid of what’s not to the point and polish it up a bit, but I don’t think I can get rid of the fundamental academic feel of having written it in a university setting. I solemnly swear to you, however, that I won’t use the words “hegemony,” “epistemological,” or “syllogism.”
This post will be divided into at least two due to length. Today will give the background for what happens in the '70s which will be the subject of the second (and any subsequent) posts.
______________________________________
A number of factors combined during the 1970s to accelerate the movement between the photographic genres of documentary work, photojournalism, and fine art photography that have opened into today’s era of more fluid relationships. During this decade the rise of television and the concurrent decline in the magazine industry, the rise of galleries dedicated to showing fine art photography, the museum’s firm establishment of the photographic print as a unique and collectable object and the resulting development of the market for photographic prints, the development of artist's books, the evolution of an economic infrastructure that helped sustain photographers as artists, and the questioning of the ability of photography to document or record events factually all contributed to the rise of the new era.
The boundaries between documentary photography, photojournalism, and fine art photography have never been absolute and have increasingly overlapped during the course of photographic history. The '70s built on existing trends in photography. Photographic historian Mary Warner Marien writes about the '70s milieu in a book called Photography: A Cultural History:
The presence of documentary and photojournalistic photographs in museums and
galleries was not new…Nevertheless, in the past, image-makers, audiences, curators, and
scholars had considered art photography, documentary photography, and photojournalism
as having their own separate lines of development and different social agendas. (Marien 410)
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© Eugène Atget |
To pull out just a few examples, Eugène Atget consciously cropped the developing modern Paris around the historical construct he intended to photograph in his Vieux Paris images and he photographed in correlation to the interests of his various clients, revealing a strong subjectivity to work he labeled “documents.”
Dorothea Lange and other documentary photographers of the Farm Security Administration made their way into art exhibitions and Walker Evans exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in 1938. Evans defined his work as art despite often being considered a prototypical documentarian by asserting that his work does not have a utilitarian use such as a police crime scene photograph. He also noted the artifice involved in “documentary work.” FSA photographers used stylistic elements such as sharp focus, even lighting, and a frontal composition to code their images as factual and to indicate that they should be read as unbiased. “Documentary?” famously questioned Evans. “That’s a very sophisticated and misleading word. And not really clear. . .The term should be documentary style.” (Blake Stimson, The Pivot of the World: Photography and Its Nation, 210) Evans, in short, was aware of the common urge to view documentary images as mimetic, but was cognizant of the bias of the photographer’s perspective.
The Magnum photography agency in 1947 challenged the notion of what constituted photojournalism. Founded as a photographic cooperative, members of Magnum retain the rights to their photographs as well as the authority to conceive and execute their own projects. Although their work still needs to find a market, by removing the responsibility to answer to assignments designed by newspaper and magazine editors, the freelance photojournalists of Magnum defined the term "photojournalism" for themselves, broadening the scope of the genre to include longer projects done in essay form, which becomes close to indistinguishable from the type of work done by Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine. In turn, Riis and particularly Hine can be listed as either documentarians or photojournalists depending on the article or book.
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Original front cover, uncredited image |
Robert Frank’s The Americans (1958) marked a new era in documentary work in which individual and psychological issues replaced the historical, ideological, and political issues of earlier photographs (such as those of the FSA) and formed a style of intimacy instead of an attempted detachment. Working under a Guggenheim Foundation grant, and not under the guidelines of a newspaper editor or a government program, Frank documented 1950s American society of all strata during his cross-country road trips, photographing flags, politicians, cars, and racial dynamics. At the same time, however, he concerned himself with how the exterior world reflected his interior world. “I’m always doing the same images,” he has stated, “I’m always looking outside, trying to look inside.” (Stimson 105) The angry, bemused looks that manifest the photographer’s intrusion in The Americans might be said, according to Stimson, to be the singular moment of the document becoming art, though the document could be considered art since Atget. (Stimson 211)
From the 1950s to the 1970s, work that allowed more space for the personal and contingent in photojournalism became accepted and known as "new journalism." (Mary Panzer, Things as They Are, 27) Although more commonly associated with print journalism, the term “new journalism” became connected to photographers who injected a personal, first-person perspective into their reporting. The Vietnam War, for example, became the center of a perceived link between photojournalism and personal politics as photographers such as Phillip Jones Griffiths abandoned their supposed objectivity and took a stance in opposition of the war.
Lastly, new social documentary photographers emerged from the mix of anti-Vietnam War activism and conceptual art ideas of the era to add another dynamic to the idea of the photograph as a document. The interests of this informal group, which included Allan Sekula, Martha Rosler, and Fred Lonidier among others, included techniques not traditionally associated with documentary work, such as collage, to comment on social oppression without making "victim photographs" that evoked too much overt sympathy or voyeurism. Rosler says, "We wanted to be documentarians in a way that documentarians hadn't been…We wanted to use obviously theatrical or dramatized sequences or performance elements together with more traditional documentary strategies, to use text, irony, absurdity, mixed forms of all types." (Marien 429)
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© Martha Rosler, Balloons |
We can see that the terms “photojournalism” and “documentary photography” showed significant flexibility before the 1970s. “Photojournalism” went from encompassing the construction of events by the photographer - such as Alexander Gardner's openly rearranged Civil War battle scenes - to considering itself as objective reportage, including politics as part of its stance, and accepting first-person perspective in the form of "new journalism." “Documentary photography” went from being considered the recording of actual documents to being a passionate crusading appeal intended to provoke its audience to action with the work of Riis and Hine, a passive and objective lens with the FSA, an attempt to present psychological reality, sociological assessment, the recording of other art forms for documentation such as earthworks, and even the physical collage of images.
As Lili Corbus Bezner writes in her book Photography and Politics in America: From the New Deal into the Cold War, “documentary photography frequently intrudes into contradictory categorization; it exists uneasily, therefore, within the supposedly distinct domains of journalistic, artistic, landscape, fashion, and advertising photography.” (Bezner 1) Similarly, Beaumont Newhall, the first director of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, wrote in a later edition of The History of Photography, “Since World War II the [documentary] movement has lost impetus in the organizational sense. Its tenets have been absorbed and have become essential to the fabric of photojournalism.” (Bezner 12)
To be continued Friday
4.25.2012
81: Martin Gremm
Martin Gremm
Goodbyes, from the series "Instants"
2011
Series statement: Not all instants in life are created equal. Most contain mundane actions and events, but there are a few that trigger powerful questions in those who witness them. Questions urgent enough that people stop to find answers. Questions like, How did this happen? What is going on? Did I cause this? Should I do something?
Many powerful Instants will be accidents and similar life-threatening events. This body of work has nothing to say about those, because such Instants usually force the protagonists into certain narrowly defined actions. Instead, this portfolio explores situations where the range of possible responses is much more fluid and the danger, if it is present at all, is emotional rather than physical.
Rather than trying to photograph naturally occurring decisive moments that capture the viewers' attention, I follow my scientific training by creating them under controlled circumstances. Every image in this series is not only carefully planned, but also carefully pared down to the essential components. They explore how much needs to be shown explicitly and how much can be implied, which clues are essential and which are merely distractions, and how much of the action can occur outside of the frame.
My work is not science. It is about discovering what awakens a viewer's curiosity. It is about leaving out what is not essential. It is about having a little bit of fun. But most of all it is about asking you to do all the hard work of imaging the before and after surrounding the Instant I created for you.
Tags:
Martin Gremm
4.24.2012
Portfolio: Patricia Lay-Dorsey, Falling Into Place: Self-Portraits
Born in Washington, D.C. in 1942, Patricia Lay-Dorsey brings her training as a social worker and decades as a visual artist to her work as a photographer. She is all about seeing herself and others from an insider's point of view.
Patricia's essay, Falling Into Place: Self Portraits, has been featured on the New York Times Lens blog, Visura Magazine, Lenscratch, Burn Magazine, New Mobility Magazine (print), and in Catherine Edelman's "The Chicago Project." The cover image was included in the 2011 Beauty CULTure exhibit at The Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles. Falling Into Place received 3rd prize in the 2010 FotoVisura Grant for Outstanding Personal Photography Project. David Drake, Director of Ffotogallery in Cardiff, Wales, has begun work on publishing the book.
Patricia and her husband Ed have lived in the Detroit area since 1966.
A statement on the work follows the images.
Tags:
Patricia Lay-Dorsey
4.23.2012
International Site Profiles: oitzarisme
In an opinion piece on the limitations of access to crowdfunding projects, we made an argument for taking the initiative to explore sites that promote photographers from countries and cultures less frequently seen.
We're following that post with a series of short profiles that will collectively provide a starting point for an exploration of international blogs, online magazines, and pages. We began by looking at Kilele, We Take Pictures Too, Arab Image Foundation, Greater Middle East Photo, Space Cadet, Street Level Japan, Kantor Berita MES 56, Japan Exposures, Invisible Photographer Asia, and my new notebook. Today we explore Romania's oitzarisme.
THE BASICS
Site: oitzarisme
Founding publisher: Constantin Nimigean
Location: Bucharest, Romania
Recommended sample post: Klaus Pichler - One Third
Frequency of posts: High - averages about a post a day
Founded: January 2007
Last updated: April 2012
In a sentence: A web-gallery featuring a wide-range of photographic styles.
Nimigean presents a photographer's portfolio, statement, and short biography with no further commentary, about one a day. The curation ranges across the contemporary photography map, from street to documentary to conceptual, perhaps with a slight emphasis towards the latter. The only true common denominator is the strength of what he presents. He does a good job featuring work from photographers not frequently seen on other sites.
oitzarisme is a made-up word that Nimigean says means something like "sheep things;" it was one of LPV Magazine's Top 15 Photography Websites of 2011.
In January 2011, Nimigean started a second project, a bimonthly online magazine called Love Issue.
oitzarisme has an open submission policy; it can be found on Facebook and followed on Twitter.
Tags:
Constantin Nimigean,
Love Issue,
oitzarisme,
Romania
4.21.2012
80: Bruno Quinquet
Bruno Quinquet
Ueno Park, from the series "Salaryman Project" (2006-present)
2008
Series Statement: In this series, I try to approach the archetypal figure of the Japanese male office worker (aka salaryman) in a candid street photography manner. Because of the increasing tension between photography and privacy and because of my own discomfort with the idea of candid portraiture, I give my subjects a chance to escape the gaze of the camera. The result, that can be seen as a collection of missed portrait opportunities, comes in the format of a business schedule, referencing in the same vehicle office work and the specifically Japanese sense of the season. I think that the project has some kind of documentary value, but in a poetic and slightly conceptual sense rather than as a social critique. In 2006, after a 20-year career as a recording engineer, I started photography during a stay in Japan and decided not to go back to my native France. Since graduation from the Tokyo Visual Arts Photography Department, I have pursued my photography work in Japan.
The Salaryman Project has been featured in "Street Photography Now" (Thames & Hudson 2010), HotShoe Magazine, 1000 Words Photography, Invisible Photographer Asia... and fototazo! I am now trying to self-publish this work through a crowdfunding campaign.
Tags:
Bruno Quinquet
4.20.2012
Opinion: Pantall, Colberg, Hoepker and Understanding Images
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© Thomas Hoepker |
Colin Pantall and Joerg Colberg have both recently discussed the above photograph taken by Magnum's Thomas Hoepker on September 11th, 2011.
Pantall uses the image to point to the problem of the narrow emotional range accepted in the responses of photographic subjects to a situation, as well as the difficulty many people have coping with something beyond the simplest of narratives in a photograph. I would continue his points by adding that there's a problem with the assumption that it is possible to come to any correct reading of the emotional state of photographic subjects and in believing we can correctly conclude the narrative of a photograph in any way.
Hoepker makes these very mistakes about his own image. In a New York Times op-ed column by Frank Rich, written in 2006 on the fifth anniversary of September 11th, he's quoted as saying about this image, "They were totally relaxed like any normal afternoon...It’s possible they lost people and cared, but they were not stirred by it." Slate writer David Plotz makes the same mistakes in a rejection of Rich's column: "The subjects are obviously engaged with each other, and they're almost certainly discussing the horrific event unfolding behind them. They have looked away from the towers for a moment not because they're bored with 9/11, but because they're citizens participating in the most important act in a democracy—civic debate...They came to this spot to watch their country's history unfold and to be with each other at a time of national emergency."
Hoepker and Plotz both assert singular, different, yet conclusive readings of what is going on in the image: "they were totally relaxed"..."they were not stirred"..."they have looked away...because"...and finally "they came to this spot to watch." These assertions of being able to give a factual reading of the events portrayed in the image is problematic; all conversation about a photograph needs to be framed as conjecture. Short of finding the subjects and photographer and asking, we cannot actually know what was happening or why an image was taken - and even their words can be questioned; memories are fickle, we all have agendas.
Colberg follows up on Pantall's post by asserting that a photographer's intentions can't be known and that we observe photographs with inherent biases: "We all like to think that the photographer’s intention inform the image and that when we look at a photograph we can see those intention. [sic] But if we ignore the simple fact that we have no way of knowing what the photographer’s intentions were (How would we know? All we have is a photograph), especially in a news context, we don’t just look at photographs, we look at them with our own sets of expectations (as Colin notes) and biases. We often see in photographs not what they show, but instead what we want to see."
I will add a question to the conversation - if the emotional state of the subjects and the narrative cannot be extracted from an image, and the photographer's intentions cannot be known, how about allegory and metaphor as a strategy for correctly reading images? Not if the word "correctly" is left in the sentence. Reading and concluding - or better yet, creating - the allegorical and metaphorical meaning in an image is informed by one's life experience and knowledge and a matter of subjective insights. As long as the observer remembers that their conclusions also remain in the realm of conjecture, however, metaphor and allegory can definitely be a way to analyze and discuss an image.
This is why I would take what I imagine is an unpopular position and defend Rich's column, even though I don't agree with his conclusions or his reading of the image. Unlike Hoepker and Plotz, Rich does not claim a truthful interpretation of the facts the image contains. Jonathan Jones writes in an article in The Guardian about the debate around Hoepker's image, "[Rich] saw in this undeniably troubling picture an allegory of America's failure to learn any deep lessons from that tragic day, to change or reform as a nation: 'The young people in Mr Hoepker's photo aren't necessarily callous. They're just American.'" And Plotz writes about Rich's column, "So they turned their backs on Manhattan for a second. A nice metaphor for Rich to exploit, but a cheap shot." That may be so, and we can attack the conclusion and the arguments Rich uses to construct it, but he avoids making conclusive factual statements about the image of the type that get both Hoepker and Plotz in trouble.
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© Gregory Crewdson |
Let's start to draw some conclusions from all of this with a few more questions.
If we agree it's not possible to know the true emotions or narrative of an image, nor the intentions of the photographer, and that allegory and metaphor need to be remembered as a subjective reading of an image, does that mean that Hoepker's image of 9/11 should be read in the same way as the above image by Gregory Crewdson?
Should all art photography, photojournalism and documentary photography be read in the same way?
Is a news image in The New York Times as "truthful" as one of Crewdson's constructions?
Do we know as little of the intentions of a advertising photographer making an image to sell a bar of soap as those of a photographer like Crewdson?
Is the answer that we just can't know anything about an image for sure, so all interpretations of it are equally valid?
I think Pantall gives us a way to answer these questions when he writes, "[We] want to reduce things to black and white and right and wrong dualities." To begin answering the questions above, we need to remind ourselves to avoid reducing our thinking about how to look at images to simple dualities - while going ahead and continuing to look at and discuss images. Photography does not allow us to make conclusive readings about images, yet it is part of our job as photographers, critics, curators, and writers on photography to attempt readings anyways. We investigate images and construct arguments for how an image could be read. We aggressively ask what is really going on, what the photographer's intentions are, what biases we have, and what meaning we can construct through allegory and metaphor. This is the foundation of using visual images for communication (and the root cause of really long grad school critiques).
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© Nick Ut |
Taking this point one more step, all readings of an image are not equally valid - it is not the case that because there is no photographic truth, all readings are therefore of equal value. The problem is that it's difficult to quantify the reasons why. A toddler does not deserve the same voice on an image's meaning as mine or yours. We have more experience looking at images, knowledge of context, life experience, and knowledge of history. My conclusion to all of this is we need to accept something I'll call spectrum reading. Spectrum reading would be the rejection of a duality that says because, for example, we can't know for sure the true emotional states of the children in the horrific Vietnam War image by Nick Ut seen above, they are therefore open to the same degree of speculation as the emotional states of the man and woman in the image by Crewdson. Or that the intentions of a photographer taking an image of a bar of soap are as vague as Crewdson's. Or that because we can't easily quantify the value of a particular response, that all are therefore equal.
We need to read the context of the image, take note of who the observer is, look at who is making the image and try to figure out why; we have to understand the accepted parameters for image manipulation in the media venue of the image, talk with friends and colleagues, etc...then we can make more (or less) intelligent arguments about an image and its meaning. The site Bag News regularly does a good job of this with political and news images. Pantall does this regularly on his site and did so here on this site a month ago looking at an image by the photographer Billy Monk. We can look for truth, argue about intention, divine metaphor - we just can't claim to be absolutely correct.
Lastly, I'm going to be a little more optimistic than both Pantall and Colberg on one final point. Pantall writes, "We are still not very sophisticated in our visual way of experiencing the world" and Colberg writes, "We don’t really understand photography." I'd like to suggest that although the ability to understand visual communication may not be as developed as with written communication, we're not where we were in decades past, either.
There has been a corrosion in the belief in the truth value of a photograph at least going back until World War II. John Szarkowski, the long-term director of New York's Museum of Modern Art, fundamentally refuted the ability of photography to explain large-scale public issues, such as Margaret Bourke-White's attempt to explain the effects of World War II in her photographic work. "Most issues of importance cannot be photographed," Szarkowski claimed, declaring the fields of photojournalism and documentary as non-effectual in his influential book, Mirrors and Windows (1978). His comments reflect a now long-standing trend towards doubt about photographic veracity which became widespread after World War II and continues today, an erosion of confidence represented by the debates about the authenticity of Robert Capa's Death of a Loyalist Soldier (below) and other World War II images. This loss of confidence has helped to create a distance between documentary photography and photojournalism and their traditional roles, facilitating their consideration as works of art or personal expression, an interesting conversation beyond the scope of this particular post.
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© Robert Capa, Death of a Loyalist Soldier |
This erosion of confidence in the truth of photographs is also seen in the almost immediate questions we have around the authenticity of an image like the one below. We see it, we question it's truthfulness. As the manipulation of photographs has grown, so has our own skepticism and disbelief - that is the foundation for a more sophisticated reading of images in our culture, an advancement in ability. We now largely understand that, "A snapshot can make mourners attending a funeral look like they're having a party," as Walter Sipser - the man on the right in Hoepker's photograph - wrote after reading Hoepker's comments on the image and Rich's column. We're still not a visually literate society, but we have a wider understanding of the power, lies, and meanings of images now than we did before.
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Uncredited image from the Facebook page of "All Things METAL \m/" |
4.19.2012
Review: Sophie Calle at the Museo de Arte Moderno Medellín
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Sophie Calle (© Tom Griggs) |
Sophie Calle’s exhibition Historias de Pared opened at the Museo de Arte Moderno Medellín (MAMM) on March 21st and will be up until June 3rd. The show will then travel to Bogotá’s Museo de Arte del Banco de la República. The exhibition consists of four works – The Blind and See the Sea in the MAMM’s Sala Norte, Exquisite Pain in the Sala Sur, and the 72-minute video No Sex Last Night screening three times a day in the Sala de Proyectos Especiales (10:30 am, 2:30 pm, 4:00 pm).
SNAPSHOTS OF THE WORKS
In The Blind (1986), Calle asked a group of people born blind to describe their conception of beauty. She presents a portrait of each of the respondents, the text of their response, and one, two, or three images that represent the content of that response (in one case there are no images).
For See the Sea (2010), Calle met people living in and around Istanbul who had never seen the sea. She brought them and filmed their response. The videos each present a person or people seen from behind with the sea beyond them; after a few minutes of looking out towards the water, they turn to face the camera so we see their response. There are five videos presented on separate flat-screen monitors mounted to the wall.
In 1984, Calle’s lover broke up with her by phone after she had been traveling alone in Asia for 92 days. It was, up until that point, the worst day of her life. Fifteen years later, she was ready to deal with the episode artistically in Exquisite Pain (2000). The work is divided into two parts. The first is a series of 92 photographs and documents of various sizes, framed and hung side by side, each stamped sequentially with the days remaining before the day of “unhappiness.” For the second part, she presents diptychs. She asked friends after returning to France what had been the day that they had suffered most, and presents their response as embroidered text on a sheet, with a related photograph above. Alongside it she gives a version of her own story, also embroidered into a sheet, with a photograph of the phone where she received the bad news in New Dehli above.
The film No Sex Last Night (1992) documents a cross-country road-trip Calle took with the artist Gregory Shepard in a convertible Cadillac. They drive from New York to Mills College in California where she would teach the following semester. Each had a video camera to record the real-life narrative of the trip from their perspective, presenting competing visions of their relationship.
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Installation view of Exquisite Pain (© Tom Griggs) |
CURATION AND INSTALLATION
The four works span the length of Calle’s celebrated career and balance two works focused on her personal life with two works which center on the lives of others. It pairs The Blind and See the Sea as an installation in the same room together; Calle envisions them as sister projects. Calle herself designed and oversaw the installation. The show flows through the limited space of the museum’s galleries, filling the spaces completely without feeling cramped.
The installation is better than previous productions at the museum, but is still problematic. There were some unfortunate problems typical of the MAMM during the press conference with Calle: slanted wall texts and non-functioning videos. During two repeat visits over the following weeks, however, the issues had been resolved.
Remaining deeply problematic, unfortunately, is the installation of The Blind. Glare destroys the higher of the two tiers of images, the glass of the tilted images picking up the museum lighting and making the images only viewable from an exaggerated angle (see image below). It’s a bad marriage between the pre-existing lighting conditions and the to-the-millimeter pre-set triangular installation formation Calle uses for the work in which she places the top images high on the walls. I understand she can’t vary the organization of the existing work, but I don’t see any conceptual reason for her deviation from her usual straight-line horizontal installations and, at least in this case, the deviance fails her.
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Installation view The Blind (© Tom Griggs) |
COMMENTS ON THE EXHIBIT
Well, we’re not here for visual beauty. Writer and photographer Hervé Guibert wrote the preface for the catalog to Calle’s first retrospective at the Paris Museum of Modern Art and said, “She calls herself a photographer, but Sophie Calle can’t even manage to take a proper photograph.” In the same catalog, critic Yves-Alain Bois writes, “Firstly, her pictures are invariably bland, uninteresting.”
The photos of Exquisite Pain are snapshot average, those of The Blind are as visually stimulating as reading text. No Sex Last Night combines more snapshot stills with home video. See the Sea has higher-end production values, but again form functions simply to communicate an idea. With Calle, as long as the form doesn’t get in the way, it’s done its job and here it has.
What we are here for is to witness her explorations of voyeurism; to see her erase of boundaries between art and life and fiction and reality; to engage with work that presaged an entire era of questions around public / private, surveillance, and the public revelations of intimacy that dominate the social dynamic of our contemporary lives.
Of the four works, The Blind stands out for the ingeniously simple, direct proposal of the work and its equally efficient resolution. This is Calle at her best; pushing the lines of documentation and art, exploring curiously, and reporting back to us with the power of the basic proposal maintained and displayed.
See the Sea attempts to repeat this direct simplicity, but here we see how thin the line is that Calle needs to walk between truth and fiction for her work to succeed. What feels honest in The Blind feels contrived in See the Sea. The orchestration and constriction she places on the event strangles the moment: each person is shown from behind so we don’t actually see their reaction in the defining moment of first encounter and then each, after a few minutes, turns to face the camera to show what feels like a forced attempt to prolong their emotional response. Except for a video featuring five children, all have a similar reaction to their first look at the sea – stoic, tearful, emotionally moved.
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See the Sea (© Tom Griggs) |
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See the Sea (© Tom Griggs) |
This uniformity of their responses, the singular emotional pitch across all the videos, and the lack of other types of reactions - of smiles, of wonder, even of indifference - seems disingenuous; “art” has unified their response. Calle has said, “I don’t care about truth; I care about art and style and writing and occupying the wall.” Here, however, she needs the sense of emotional truth of the subjects to maintain the blur between art and life, and it doesn’t. Only the children, who after going through the organized ritual of their response, run and play in the water, feel genuine. The rest are scripted into fiction, the line between fiction / reality remains clear, and the work is weakened by it.
Exquisite Pain is an idea overburdened by its elaborate production and complicated conceptual framework. Its enormous physical presence, the hundreds of framed images, the daunting amount of text, and the multi-part conceptual proposal collectively cost the observer the immediacy of the initial emotional spark of the idea - and with that, its power to move us.
No Sex Last Night is often funny and has just enough of a narrative pull. It’s a window into Calle as an obsessive, on how she places head over heart; into how she plays the role of passive observer to her own life, making decisions simply to see what will happen, playing out life with a sense of its absurdity and of theater production. The press release says, “The viewer is challenged to face the possibility of reconsidering the cultural roles imposed by gender, sexuality, power and tradition. Throughout the process, Calle seeks to redefine through personal research, the terms and parameters of the relationship subject / object, public / private, truth, fiction and role games.” That’s a lot to read into this. I'd argue the viewer is equally challenged to stay for the whole 72-minutes; I was the only one in attendance for the screening who did.
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Installation Exquisite Pain, part 2 (© Tom Griggs) |
WRAP-UP
The show is by far the biggest museum event in the six years I’ve known Medellín and something of a coup for the MAMM. Their curatorial team directly arranged Calle’s participation and the show helps cement the museum as national quality, showing it no longer needs to look to Bogotá’s Museo de Arte del Banco de la República for curatorial help and guidance. The installation and management is better than previous shows at the MAMM, but still needs polishing.
This show doesn’t do much to push or challenge any of the prevailing thoughts about Calle’s career – it’s a balance of some of the greatest hits with no particular fresh interpretation of the work. In sum, its like going to a stadium show by an aging rocker; you know what you’re getting and the songs by heart, you bring your lighter, you sing along.
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Sophie Calle (© Tom Griggs) |
Tags:
Colombia,
Hervé Guibert,
MAMM,
Medellín,
Sophie Calle,
Yves-Alain Bois
4.18.2012
79: Natasha Gudermane
Natasha Gudermane
Leela, from the series "Mademoiselles"
2011
Series Statement: I photograph young Parisian women, my friends as well as strangers met in the street, nude, at their homes, in their intimate surroundings.
I love undressing people in front of my camera because I believe that it sends them back to the idea of who they are, to the idea of their gender. Having nothing on to cover their bodies, my models seem to envelope themselves in their souls. It is this magic moment I am trying to capture in my lens.
Tags:
France,
Natasha Gudermane,
Paris
4.17.2012
4.16.2012
International Site Profiles: my new notebook
In an opinion piece on the limitations of access to crowdfunding projects, we made an argument for taking the initiative to explore sites that promote photographers from countries and cultures less frequently seen.
We're following that post with a series of short profiles that will collectively provide a starting point for an exploration of international blogs, online magazines, and pages. We began by looking at Kilele, We Take Pictures Too, Arab Image Foundation, Greater Middle East Photo, Space Cadet, Street Level Japan, Kantor Berita MES 56, Japan Exposures, and Invisible Photographer Asia. Today we return to Japan for a look at my new notebook.
THE BASICS
Site: my new notebook
Founding publisher: Ken Iseki
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Recommended sample post: Japanese Photography in the 1980s: Shoji Ueda / Mode in Dune (1983)
Frequency of posts: High - averages about a post a day
Founded: July 2010
Last updated: April 2012
In a sentence: A "bridge" site that aims to introduce international photographers and photobooks to Japanese readers as well as to introduce Japanese photobooks to overseas readers.
As Dan Abbe has pointed out in several articles on his site Street Level Japan, photography blog culture in Japan is at a nascent stage and much online information produced in Japan is geared for a Japanese audience.
my new notebook, originally written just in Japanese but now in English as well, functions as a rare site that aims to increase the flow of information into and out of Japan. It has become one of the leading sites for the exploration of Japanese photography online. Posts lean towards photobooks, but also explore exhibitions and the photographic history of Japan and Western photography.
Posts are simple and straightforward, a presentation of links, images, facts, and single sentence comments. The site serves as a way to discover new names and learn about the landscape of Japanese photography, both past and present.
Along the righthand sidebar below "My Tweets" are some important boxes for site navigation that are not translated. In descending order they are: Popular Articles, Categories, and Archives.
Ken Iseki can be followed on Twitter here - although he forewarns 90% of his tweets are in Japanese.
Tags:
Japan,
my new notebook
Of Interest 4.16.12: Early Kodak Ad
A very early Kodak ad. This is a screengrab from George Eastman: The Wizard of Photography, a PBS American Experience Documentary.
Tags:
Kodak
4.14.2012
78: Nancy Newberry
Nancy Newberry
09 11 19, 2010, from the series "Mum"
Series Statement: Artificial, shiny, spirited and virtually unknown outside of Texas, the Homecoming Mum is an elaborate corsage, or for the boys, a garter worn on the arm. Exchanged between friends, The Mum consists of a large silk flower decorated with long glittery ribbons and other trinkets, which indicate the wearer's interests, social standing, and allegiances to friends. Mums are proudly worn for all activities on Homecoming Friday, and then immortalized as trophies on bedroom walls all over Texas. Each year the collection grows with a more elaborate Mum, marking progress and personal history.
As both adornment and insignia, the Mum offers its wearer the opportunity to promote self-image, while identifying their status an integral member of their particular community. At a time when many American high schoolers seem actively disengaged from the world around them, the Homecoming Mum constitutes both a unique act of cultural immersion, and a specific brand of folk art.
Shot slowly and based on interpretation of memory, I have limited the settings of the photographs to in and around the subject's personal space, to further contain and charge the portraits through confines of the subject's own making.
I have intentionally paired diverse visual language of both spontaneous and carefully arranged moments. This work is a cultural investigation and reflects the chaotic nature of self-identity and the interplay between individuality and social affiliation.
The work highlights the importance of rituals as vehicles of expression. Customs are vital in defining all cultures. The simple existence of the Homecoming Mum is an artifact that is symbolically relevant. It isn’t necessarily important to relate directly to the Mum tradition or to understand why it exists. This photographic treatise serves as an invitation to immerse ourselves in appreciating another culture on a very basic level.
Human existence is a creative act; the mystery is in how we are driven to innovate and engage the unspoken narrative of ourselves.
Tags:
Nancy Newberry
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