Showing posts with label Joerg Colberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joerg Colberg. Show all posts

6.29.2016

Reading Shortlist 6.29.16

From Jacob Bernstein, Bill Cunningham, Legendary Times Fashion Photographer, Dies at 87, The New York Times

The Reading Shortlist is an occasional post with an eclectic listing of recommended sites, readings and links. A recommendation does not necessarily suggest an agreement with the contents of the post. For previous shortlists, please visit the site links page.
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Ahorn Letter #1. Glad to hear one of the best and most respected independent online photo magazines is not only relaunching after a couple years off, but expanding into new projects.

Kate Palmer Albers, Becoming a Stock Image, and other Surrogates for the Online Self, CIRCULATION | EXCHANGE. Interesting piece about the (im)possibility of public online erasure as well as on the work of David Horowitz.

Jacob Bernstein, Bill Cunningham, Legendary Times Fashion Photographer, Dies at 87, The New York Times. Have a look at the documentary movie "Bill Cunningham New York" and you'll see why every photographer in your newsfeed was sad that he died.

Joerg Colberg, Photojournalism and Manipulation, Conscientious Photography Magazine. Colberg has a pretty amazing ability after all these years to keep finding arguments to stir the conversational pot. This piece raises an interesting question: where does the burden of a photograph rest - in this case, romantic photographic kitsch that straightjackets its subjects as one-dimensional stock characters? The photographer who makes it, the publisher who distributes content employing art directors looking for specific images or the public who creates demand? I'll meet you at the bar and we'll discuss.

Daniel S. Palmer, ARTnews, GO PRO: THE HYPER-PROFESSIONALIZATION OF THE EMERGING ARTIST. The dangers of heavy speculative investment in young artists and of their precocious professionalization.

Robin Pogrebin, The New York Times, Art Galleries Face Pressure to Fund Museum Shows. Highlights the latest problems in gallery-museum financial intertwining and interdependence.

Neal Rantoul, A Disturbing Trend. A professorial rant on the deskilling of photography and the use of text to hide poor images in a project.

Peter van Agtmael, Time Lightbox, Why Facts Aren’t Always Truths in Photography. A nice reminder of the difference between the facts and the truth and between manipulation and deception in the midst of another community debate on those ideas.

War History Online, The Executioner in the Infamous Vietcong photo opened a Pizzeria in Suburban Virginia After the Vietnam War. Some context on the executioner in the Eddie Adams image.

4.30.2016

On Mediocrity and Projects

© Lewis Baltz

Joerg Colberg recently published a piece on Conscientious entitled "Why does it always have to be about something?" In his piece, he argues that making projects that are "about" something has become - for some – a way to get away with making mediocre images. He makes a call for photographs that make us "hungry" to see them and adds at the end, "And let's also accept work more openly again that is not playing along the lines of standard aboutness. It really doesn't always have to be a project."

It's hard to disagree with those thoughts. Who wants to look at lazy mediocre photography that uses "ideas" to cover for visual weaknesses in a photograph, or to place a veneer over the limited abilities and knowledge on the part of the photographer? Why not demand great photographs? And who wants to be the stuffy artiste that mandates that photography must be made in projects for it to be "good" or serious work?

There are, however, some points I'd like to add. First let's talk about the different faculties we bring to the table when we look at photographs and how they might affect how we understand mediocrity in photography, then we can turn to the idea of "mediocre" images, how an idea like mediocrity reflects a specific time and place, as well as the context photographs are viewed in, and finally I'll throw in a general defense of the project for good measure.
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© Joe Deal

When we look at photographs we see a lot of stuff that's there, on the surface, but we also "see" things that are not physically there. When we look at the surface and observe line, color, saturation, composition, tonality and the rest, we might feel excited by their specific qualities or not, feel drawn to look longer or feel nothing. In these terms, which are those considered by the original piece, there are not really any situations that I can think of that would suggest not pushing beyond mediocrity.

I would add, however, that we don't stop looking with our eyes, we also see with our minds and emotions and we see through ideologies and within cultural moments. In the crosshairs of all those elements, we see things that aren't there on the photographs' surface.

If we look at Joe Deal or Lewis Baltz, for two random examples, some might find the removed, black and white, straight ahead work mediocre based on their eyes. As photographs, one can argue that a good percentage of their work isn't spectacular, often falling into the category of work that inspires museum goers to say they could do that.

If we understand, however, how their work is commenting on consumerism through repetition, landscape through its desolation, society through rigid geometry, suddenly these "mediocre" images are given aesthetic life and visual spark through our minds' appreciation of how they use aesthetics to create commentary. We love their appropriation of "mediocre" aesthetics in service of a specific cultural critique

If we also understand the history of landscape painting and photography, we can also "see" their radical departure from aesthetic history, we can feel excited by their move in the ongoing art chess game, by how they advance the conversation, by how they engage the work that came before it. What might seem like just a mediocre landscape or cityscape to someone unfamiliar with the background of the work itself and with art history, to others that are familiar the same work might seem aesthetically exciting because of how its formal qualities relate to the content it engages and to the context it exists in. They can appreciate how it subverts aesthetic assumptions and habits.

While there's no reason to strive for the mediocre, it's worth remembering that we make a judgment of aesthetic quality with more than our eyes. The ideas, knowledge and experiences we bring to looking at an image can excite us and make us passionate about work that seemed at first glance - or to an uninformed viewer - mediocre, and we very well might change our mind about its aesthetic value the more we learn and grow as appreciators of art, as we find more ways to engage with photography other than with just our eyes, giving us a more complex relationship to aesthetics than simply a momentary assessment of form.
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"Mediocre" is an important word choice in this conversation and a good one; other words that might be casually considered a near synonym –boring or banal or bland, for example – would change the conversation a lot.

What's the difference? "Mediocre" is a judgment of performance while "boring" and "banal" and "bland" are descriptions of the visual effect of an image. That's important to note, because mediocre is then a term we can use to assess how well a photograph is achieving what it wants to do, how well it executes its "proposal" and that of the project it belongs to, if it belongs to one.

An image could try to engage the idea, for example, of boredom or banality or blandness in Soviet apartment block architecture by working with images that reflect those qualities in their aesthetic construction, yet only do a mediocre job of doing so. Maybe they're not boring enough! Maybe there's room to emphasize even more banality! Why make mediocre boring and banal and bland images when you could make great ones!

Additionally, within a body of work, say a photobook, we almost always need what I'll call "lunch pail photographs." Putting together your best 50 images as a project won't work; there's always a need for images that aren't all-stars to bridge images in a sequence - they might set off the aesthetic spectacular-ness of the following image or help glue the theme together. I wouldn't go as far as saying that that allows for us to dip down into mediocrity, but there's definitely room for average photographs at times in service of the greater good of a body of work. The themes and ideas of our projects almost always call for aesthetic decisions that aren't just making the best damn aesthetic photograph we can make and selecting those to show.

To add one more point, sometimes "good" photographs can generate heated debate because of their subject, and making visually alluring images might not be appropriate for a given situation, suggesting that perhaps "good" photographs are not always what the photographer should be shooting for (pun noted, and apologized for, but not retracted). Think of the issues eternally surrounding Sebastiao Salgado's work or Teju Cole's Steve McCurry take-down for examples of "great" formal photographs not matching, in the minds of some critics, subject, creating problematic content.
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© William Eggleston

One cultural context or moment will judge mediocrity different than another and we judge mediocrity differently based on context. Just as we ourselves have fluid understandings of aesthetics over our lives, so do we as a culture. Ultimately art is a form of language, and sometimes we need to speak in ways that are subversive to the dominant aesthetic ideas, challenging, perhaps, where we draw the line around what is "mediocre."

Think of William Eggleston as an example of how someone completely ruptured ideas of aesthetics by challenging common ideas of beauty inside of a particular cultural moment. A photograph of the inside of a freezer! And in color! If you've seen a million pretty pictures, you might find beauty in photography that dares to usurp the aesthetics of "mediocre photographs" and posit it as high art. In a way, the entire snapshot movement in contemporary art photography was based in this concept, as well as many other "low culture" visual ideas brought into "high art" during the last several decades.

To step away from the single-image conversation for a moment, I recently saw a slide show in which a curator showed a series of (I believe it was) six photographs by Marco Breuer. The first image in the series is a photograph of a piece of photographic paper that has been folded and reshot. Mediocrity defined. Then, however, over the series of photographs, we see that each print is the previous print, folded again and rephotographed and we see that the color shifts in a mysterious way during the process from blue to red (unfortunately I can't find the images online to share).

That first mediocre image, in the context of the series, suddenly seems pregnant with what it will become, necessary, and next to the busier final images, its very simple construction seems restrained and elegant, not mediocre. In this way, mediocre is defined not only by the larger cultural moment, but also by the specifics of viewing time (through what will subsequently be seen in its sequence) and context (quiet after seeing the busier final images, for example).
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There's nothing wrong with "singles" or one iconic home run photograph standing alone or just a really, really beautiful photograph. Photographic work, or any other artistic work, doesn't need to be presented as a series or project. For better and for worse, doing so helps galleries, museums, critics, historians and collectors talk about and build a narrative for the medium. Doing so also helps classrooms generate content to debate. It helps photography take itself seriously as art. There's obviously no rule, however, written about individual works of art being lesser or unacceptable for standing on their own.

A little in defense of the project, though. I would argue that photography is at its strongest and most interesting when presented in a series or as a project because not only does it offer us images to enjoy individually, it also offers us much more. It gives us the ideas formed between photographs, ideas of narrative or argument through sequence. It gives us images that pop visually and philosophically next to each other. We can appreciate the graceful decisions across the edit, sequencing and layout of a photobook or installation.

In short, a good image can be enjoyable to look at, but a well-done project ultimately gives us much more nutrition by risking and engaging much more while still being made up of solid photographs. When a photographer can successfully juggle all of the many dynamics created by bringing so many variables together, the impact, in my experience, is always much more profound than I find sitting with a single image.

Ultimately it's the "anyone can make a good photograph" argument. That's true, just as anyone can write a great line of poetry. My ex-wife, who is a pianist, has taken some shots that enrage me with jealousy. Incredibly few, however, can put together photographs into a project that unites technique, form, subject, content and context in a way that's cohesive, fresh and that carves out its own place in the current photography conversation, just as none of us can turn our one line of solid poetry into a book of Neruda-quality poems. It's just an infinitely more complex and interesting game.
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Aesthetic understanding is, in essence, relative. While mediocrity isn't a goal to strive for, how we understand and define mediocre photography in formal terms is fluid as we change physical context and as time passes, it is affected by our biases and knowledge as much as by what our eyes physically see. This relativity exists not just on a personal level, but also a cultural one.

There are moments when content calls for backing away from creating our best photographs according to traditional paradigms of beauty and when photography, from my perspective, reaches its height of power in concert, that is to say, in the series and project. Average photographs can help such a body of work come together. So don't erase those "mediocre" images from your Lightroom catalog. You'll see them differently in five years. The mediocre photographs of one situation are not those of the next. And even if they've only risen from mediocre to average in your subsequent assessment, building your best work may just call on you to use some of your most average shots.

2.25.2015

Trends and Movements

Video still from "Gangnam Style"

Jörg Colberg put out an article on trends a little while back with some thoughts on avoiding them. While I like the idea of Jörg rocking parachute pants and friendship beads with a 60x70 inch color c-print between his hands, he apparently avoids trends, dashing that image, and he has good arguments for why we should do so, being true to ideals and so on.

In his piece, Colberg puts Pictorialism, the Düsseldorf photographers and New Formalism down as trends. First he writes, "Photography, much like any other area organized around human activities, has been experiencing trends for a long time, older ones now firmly established as important historical episodes (think "Pictorialism")," then he adds, "Right now, after the apparent demise of the Düsseldorf Photography trend, it's all about the New Formalism."

He got me thinking about the differences between "trends" and "movements." And we can throw in "schools" as well while we're at it. I would have put Pictorialism down as movement and the Düsseldorf gang down as a school. So, today's question: what is the relationship between artistic trends and artistic movements? What is the role of trends within art? Are they pure evil, to avoid contact with at all costs? Do they play any sort of necessary function? Where do trends come from in art?

The question of definition can always be dismissed as semantics, but I think it's important to square terms so we can have progressive conversation. Like you would have done, my Sherlock-level PI shit began with a Google search for "differences between trends and movements" producing a predictable string of Wikipedia entries and Yahoo! Answers links.

The Wikipedia page on Modernism swaps the terms "movement" and "trend" around in the opening text, referring first to Modernism as "a philosophical movement" and then as "a socially progressive trend of thought."

thefreedictionary.com defines movement as "A tendency or trend" while in turn it defines trend as "a general tendency or course of events" and also, interesting to us for reasons that follow, "Current style; vogue."

So Wikipedia swaps them interchangeably, while the dictionary defines movement as a trend, but gives us two options forward on how to consider a trend. Let's keep looking.

On to "Gruffalo" posting nine years ago on Yahoo! Answers. She/he/it responds to the original poster's question: "There are some literary movements in fiction and some trends in fiction . what is difference ?" [sic] by writing "A trend implies something a little more transient, a fad that will pass over and be discarded in favour of the next trend. A movement implies something a little more significant that will be moved on from, but referred back to in later works."

Gruffalo writes here wisely about literary trends and movements, and frankly it's not bad as a broader answer for the arts. I poked around a while longer and couldn't come up with anything better – no scholarly research papers, no art-based site investigating the difference.

Gruffalo intertwines an answer with time and I think that's key to providing separation between the terms trend and movement. Combining this response with the dictionary, we come to some potential conclusions. A trend can be interchanged with movement in the sense of "A general tendency or course of events." Colberg uses the word in this sense when he calls Pictorialism a trend, for example. I would suggest, however, that the second definition of trend, "Current style; vogue," gives us more specificity and utility by working more directly with the concept of time. A trend is more transient, while a movement is sustained. Choosing this second definition thus gives us two words to work with that can be used in conversation to locate meaning more exactly.

"School," to go back to that term, is defined on the same site as "a group of people, especially philosophers, artists, or writers, whose thought, work, or style demonstrates a common origin or influence or unifying belief." Using time to separate terms, we could conclude that a school relates more to movement, and could be considered a movement centralized around a single origin, commonly an educational institution or a single teacher or master.
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Let's build on this, and move from investigation to creation of terms. The answers we have so far relate to time, but what about trends and movements in relation to space? We can imagine both as local or worldwide, a local trend on the Colombian coast of dancing el choque or an international trend of dancing Gangnam Style. A local movement for the defense of the rights of truckers in Colombia or an international movement for gay rights.

These examples aren't random. While space doesn't differentiate our terms in the sense of breadth as we see above, perhaps it could in terms of dimension. That is to say, perhaps a trend is a concept that has little or no dimensionality – an idea of little substance, a surface, while a movement provides a sense of both substance and depth. These imaginations bring us to a crucial idea as far as the two terms and art. A trend cannot sustain conversation – it is repetition and redundancy between practitioners because the context provides so little space to operate, it is the inevitable burn out of a dance style or the boring interlocutor that corners you at the high school reunion that inevitably has little to offer or say.

A movement, on the other hand, sustains conversation. Various practitioners work with the same set of ideas or problems, but they create space within the conversation to say something different on the subject. There is more substance, many levels on which to work, much more at play. The collective of artists pushes downwards and outwards until the space has been more or less fully expanded, explored, resolved, or, in some exciting cases, ruptured leading to new movements.

Moving on the question of the role of trends within art and where trends come from. One possible way to think about trends within art is as proposals. So, for example, there's a trend towards "digital glitch," a proposal to work with the very fabric of digital production by manifesting its architecture and highlighting error. Before throwing away this idea, however, consider the possibility that a movement could come from this trend, or come from the confluences of various trends. If these glitch photographers and, let's say, photographers who composite multiple negatives come together and invite Jörg's dreaded New Formalists to the party, we might have the creation of some sort of movement – a sustained interlocking of various strategies for understanding digital presence in photography.

Trends also provide opportunities for subversion. For all the cars of Cuba I've seen, all the slums, all the Ché murals, Irina Rozovsky's "Island on my mind" is compelling for how it plays away from these expected visuals that have emerged from the trend of photographing Cuba. It in part needs exhausted trends to offer surprise and a sense of freshness.

Seen this way, trends many not be so noxious in terms of their role in photography. They are merely proposals, seeds and opportunities. Some we quickly realize offer nothing and die away and we label them, forever, trends. Others stay, combine, grow and we realize that they offer enough dimension to sustain conversation. They become a movement. In either case, they also are a potential source for reactionary chemistry.

We've arrived at the last part of our conversation, where trends come from. That is a question I'm realizing I am not prepared to answer, but that's never stopped me from taking some guesses.

The first door to knock on looking for an answer to a question like this is, for me, always money. Before getting there, however, let's observe that trends can definitely develop organically, from the artist or group of artists reacting to larger social, political and technical changes by building similar work. Photographers react to McCarthyism by creating abstract work instead of social documentary work to avoid persecution. Photographers react to the perceived lack of investigation of new digital media to explore its components instead of simply trying to ape analog. Suddenly we have trends towards abstraction in the 1950s and digital media explorations in the 2010s.

There is, however, a more cynical view to take. We could say trends are defined top-down, with galleries, museums, collectors and other financially invested parties giving opportunities based only in certain ideas. Artists are coerced into creating in certain modes because they need to survive and they knew opportunities are only offered to works created in modes A and B, and that mode C will never sell and therefore are consciously or unconsciously discouraged from exploring C. Colberg pushes the artist towards staying with C anyways if it comes from an honest place true to your interests, and I would suggest the same, but the reality is that many look for name and fame and will opt for A or B and find a justification. I would imagine this observation compelled Colberg to write his original piece.

Loring Knoblauch of Collector Daily wrote a strong post called "In Defense of Ferocity" a few months back and it's revelatory when read in relation to this proposal of trends being defined top-down. It's a call for collector's to create a market for riskier, edgier, uglier work. He writes, "By sending this direct signal that we are ready and receptive (rather than timid and afraid), we can break the log jam, allowing the fierce and the vivid to once more reclaim their rightful place in the photographic conversation." The concept one could extract from his writing, that collector's can promote the growth of trends through investment decisions, is fascinating in the implications. Let's see if riskier, edgier, uglier develops.

As always, I would say the answer lies between, not at the extremes. Some mix of organically developed trends and marketplace reinforcement of certain of those trends at the expense of others is the guess I'll leave you with.

6.13.2014

Reading Shortlist: 6.12.14

Film still from "George Osodi: Kings of Nigeria," part of Al-Jezeera's "The New African Photography" series

The Reading Shortlist is an occasional post with an eclectic listing of recommended sites, readings and links. A recommendation does not necessarily suggest an agreement with the contents of the post. For previous shortlists, please visit the site links page.
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Al Jazeera, The New African Photography. This six-part video series, each focusing on a young or middle-aged contemporary African photographer, aims to counter the legacy of colonial visual interpretations of the continent and present alternative paths forward for imaging Africa in new ways.

Jörg Colberg, Conscientious, How to Write About Your Photographs. Solid advice from Colberg, especially on how writing can inform your work process.

Philip Gefter, The New York Times, With Cameras Optional, New Directions in Photography. An article ostensibly about the show "What Is a Photograph?" at the ICP summarizes the big questions in photography today.

Evita Goze, FK Magazine, Interview with Aaron Schuman. Schuman talks about research as part of photography process and product as well as about photography as language.


Hubble Goes to the eXtreme to Assemble Farthest-Ever View of the Universe. Deepest ever view of the universe confirms it looks a lot like Lucky Charms.

Barry W. Hughes, SMBH Blog, Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2014. Sharp, insightful critique of this year's Deutsche Börse Photography Prize results and exhibition.

Ieva Laube, Fold, Designing visual novels. Interview with Teun van der Heijden. Dutch designer van der Heijden, who designed Stanley Greene's Black Passport among many other books, talks about how he conceptualizes his role in relationship to the photographer and on what makes a good photo book.

Craig Mod, The New Yorker, Goodbye Cameras. An argument for the holistic potential of networked devices and an end to cameras.

Colin Pantall, Incestuous and Self-Congratulatory Photobooks? Pantall asks a question that deserves a lot more conversation.

Shit My Photography Professor Says. A student in a Thomas Roma class at Columbia documents Roma's wisdom and insanity.

3.01.2014

Navigating the Stream, Part II

from acidcow.com

Last week we posted Part I of our look at the stream, the fast flow of fragments of information that makes up the contemporary Internet. We focused on describing some of its qualities and then critiqued the problems of the stream in relation to photography and photographers. Today we will continue the conversation with a consideration of what the stream can offer us as photographers as well as with some final thoughts for working with the stream.

So, I think we can begin by all agreeing that the only two things that are universally evil are the Yankees and Strawberry Quik and, this being the case, despite the litany of issues ascribed to the stream in Part I, there must be positives for photographers in receiving and distributing information in this way as well. And of course there are.

In fact, the stream maximizes what the Internet does best – it's the most efficient, to date, employment of speed, volume and democracy in terms of distribution and consumption of images that exists. Anyone with computer access and a means of making digital images can create a potential viewership of their images anywhere in the world to an unlimited number of people immediately. And any viewer can continue the distribution process with a split second share, retweet or reblog.

The stream moves us beyond the individual page or personal site in terms of distribution – you no longer have to actively choose to make a visit. Images appear in your constantly updated stream via the posts and reposts of your contacts and also, increasingly, the algorithms of Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr that produce recommend and promoted posts to the stream. Looking at my Tumblr stream right now, there are dozens of photographs by people I've never heard of and to whom I have no connection; they are images that I would never see through the process of actively visiting individual photographer sites.

The stream functions via the sample - the quick quip, the solitary image, the cut-and-paste - entering photography distribution very belatedly into postmodernism even as we are, people smarter than me say, becoming a post-postmodern world. This is fantastic. It creates the possibility for creating new forms and meanings through liberating the whole and giving us parts to work with. An actively managed process of juxtaposition on thoughtfully curated Tumblr pages is a new form. The idea of curators as some sort of photographic DJ, culling and ordering existing images via the Internet is trending (sorry) and a frontier in terms of exploratory use of photographic material. I would say the stream is a facilitator of that process. In terms of the curation of projects and conceptual work with the flow of images, we now have another arrow in the quiver.

While some are intelligently exploring the use of the stream as a vehicle for creation – see Mark Peter Drolet's curation project on Tumblr – the stream for the majority is about consumption of the sample. While this has its drawbacks as explored in Part I, it has its positives including the chance reception from a much larger pool of sources that might provide important information or inspiration that one would not encounter reading or looking through entire articles or pages. It increases the random chance of interaction.

Let's not overstretch the academic vocabulary here – you can find cool images on Tumblr or pithy quotes on Twitter all day and all night. It may be a simple pleasure to sit down and look through random single images or quotes but sometimes that random flow provides the spark you need for your own work in a way that sitting down and studiously working through Retinal Shift can not. And as much as I can argue why watching the entirety of Citizen Kane is better than GIFs of people falling down, sometimes people falling down is what you want or even need in terms of intake and inspiration.

One more point in terms of the stream and potential content. Some of what could be seen as the negatives of the stream can make for fascinating material for art. The slow converging lines of reality in the world and the reality of the Internet towards - but inherently never being able to arrive at – one conflated entity via constantly documenting the lived moment in the stream is some wildly dystopian shit to work with. So is the fact that all of this documentation is being lost into the ever-increasing flow of the stream – very little of all of this information will be referenced beyond the moment. We type faster and faster and add more and more with the result of more quickly losing. If you're not there to bear witness, it's gone –it's beautifully ephemeral sound and fury.
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Whether to accept or reject the stream I would say is almost irrelevant as a question. It's an inevitable system if we want to take part in social media which the vast majority do. It's the direction of computer interface as it plays to the idea of faster and bite-sized as inevitable societal demands. Computer scientists are not going to start looking to return the Internet to its slower, whole sources-only ancient history of a few years back.

Clamoring for people to not post so much or not add so many images seems fuddy-duddy and futile. People want to endlessly post and enjoy doing so. So be it. Fighting to make sense of the stream of images on Tumblr or Facebook or Flickr – 5 billion on Flickr alone according to this source - is also a losing battle. It's meaning is the form in which it's distributed; any organization project of the material or strategy to make sense of it beyond that seems to be literally an impossibility to me - you'll have a million more photos to deal with before you finish reading this post and the quantity will keep growing in multiples in the future. Such hypothetical organizational projects go against the nature of what this is – endless streaming information.
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Having looked at the stream's qualities, problems and strengths and recognized that it's a system we necessarily have to work with if we want to be connected to the world via social media, lets start to make some final conclusions.

I should say – as a pre-emptive strike - that it's not my goal to tell you how to use the stream or the Internet, but rather to have a healthy conversation as people involved in photography about "smart use." Each should draw their own conclusions for themselves. I'm trying to look fairly at the stream, its risks and benefits. While the world at large may love posting endless images from their trip to Saskatoon and if the conversation stops there, that's fine. As artists, the conversation can be more textured and consider a bit more on its use and effects.

On the practical side, Tumblr can be a way to try ideas, generate audience and gauge reaction to images. It can be a way to explore, publicly, an edit. All photographers probably have had the experience of seeing their work differently once it's placed in front of the eyes of others. It's an important part of the process of understanding your work and Tumblr can help. It can be a free calling card when you're at the point you want to solicit distribution for your work by getting it in front of editors, curators and gallerists – and it can continue to be handed out for free for you by others. And anyone can take part - for some, it may be the only way to take part, actually. In the end, it's always about the right tool for the job, and if the job is exploration of ideas about and edits of your work, volume and speed, looking for attention from distributors or using the stream itself as content, it's a hell of a tool if employed judiciously.

The main issue for me in relation to the stream, to elaborate on a problem discussed in Part I, is the potential to confuse tool and product. The casual release of work and the tempting intellectual laziness the stream provides as an end in itself for one's work that I sometimes see from photographers suggests to me the confusion exists for more than a few. The single image limits the power of photography and generally isn't very interesting beyond the momentary engagement. Meaning is compounded between images; the job of the artist is to synthesize their work into something more, something beyond individually sticking up all your great shots to the stream.

I also suggest there's risk to getting caught up in the possibility of getting work out now, threatening the digestion, rumination, care and time behind almost all good art. Let's all bow our heads and remember sage words from producer Rick Rubin: "From the beginning, all I've cared about is things being great. I've never cared about when they were done."

You develop risk and skin in the game when you put the most at stake. To consider a question from Joerg Colberg's post from last year, in your artwork the most is at stake when you risk your very self through caring about it deeply, by taking a stance through it and by giving it huge quantities of your life/time. Mindless use of the stream can leave your work short on all counts.

So I’ll leave it here with the stream. It's a tool. Its use is almost inevitable. I argue for being selective and mindful in how you add to it and how you digest it. When should you use it with your work? How much time do you want to give it? Why do you want to use it? At what cost? With your own work, you take it from here.

10.02.2013

Reading Shortlist 10.2.13

Mark Steinmetz, still from "Lecture by Mark Steinmetz" at the California College of the Arts

The Reading Shortlist is an occasional post with an eclectic listing of recommended sites, readings, and links. A recommendation does not necessarily suggest an agreement with the contents of the post. For previous shortlists, please visit the site links page.
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Laurence Butet-Roch, Meta-narrative: Fred Ritchin on the future of photojournalism, British Journal of Photography. Ritchin is mad, but in the kind of way that makes you believe that in a hundred years when people look back that he will have been the obvious genius in the room.


A Camera Strapped to the Back of a Real Eagle is Just...Wow. Title self-explanatory.

David Campbell, Abundant photography: the misleading metaphor of the image flood. Campbell attacks the conventional ideas of image overproduction and overaccess to images today.

Jörg Colberg, Matthew Swarts and Beth, Conscientious Photo Magazine. Colberg doing what he does best - stirring the pot. Provocative comments arguing for an inherently selfish nature to all portraiture and for the limitations of portraiture to reveal anything more than a cartoonish sense of the subject.


David Gonzalez, Photographing the Majesty of the Common, The New York Times Lens Blog. A biographical sketch of Abelardo Morell as a new retrospective of his work opens at the Getty.

Nicholas Jeeves, The Serious and the Smirk: The Smile in Portraiture, The Public Domain Review. The lack of smiles in contemporary fine art portraiture isn't a new thing. Not at all.

Manik Katyal, Simon Baker: 'Europe's No Longer the Home of Photography,' Emaho Magazine. A series of short takes from Baker that give a general sense of how the curator of photography and international art at the Tate sees contemporary photography.

John Edwin Mason, Déjà Vu All Over Again: James Estrin & "The Tsunami of Vernacular Photographs." Related to the ideas in Campbell's piece, above, this older post by Mason points out Estrin ignores history in his comments on the "tsunami" of contemporary images.

James Panero, Art's Willing Executioner: Peter Schjeldahl's 'Let's See,' The New York Sun. Panero pummels Schjeldahl, the long time art critic of the New Yorker, for ignoring his own sense of good taste due to economic pressures, for bedding with gallery owners, and for supporting the aesthetic visions of fascists and Nazis. Yikes.

Lecture by Mark Steinmetz. Classic-contemporary photographer's photographer gives a lecture at the California College of the Arts.

Various, Is the age of the critic over?, The Guardian. An article that's been in my reading queue for, apparently, over two years based on the article date. Five critics debate the current state of criticism, focusing largely on the impact of the Internet in allowing a wider base of and platform for more voices in criticism. Whether that's a good thing, they discuss.

10.01.2013

Portfolio: Matthew Swarts, "BETH"


The presentation of Matthew Swarts' BETH is accompanied below by his statement on the work and a short Q&A.

Matthew Swarts' work has been featured in The New York Times Magazine, Doubletake Magazine, Contact Sheet, Afterimage, Fotophile, In the Loupe and other publications. He attended Princeton University and the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, and has taught photography at Amherst College, Bowdoin College, Ramapo College, The University of Connecticut, The University of Massachusetts, Boston, Middlesex College, the Community College of Rhode Island, and The Massachusetts College of Art and Design. He is the recipient of a J.William Fulbright Scholar Grant and the Ruttenberg Arts Foundation Award for the best new work nationally in photographic portraiture. His work is in the permanent collections of The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, The Library of Congress, The deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Princeton University, and Light Work, among others. He lives and works in Somerville, Massachusetts.



Statement
BETH is an extended visual and psychological portrait of partnership. In the nearly three years since Beth and I have cohabited, we have become something of a primary family to each other, and watched as our respective birth and adoptive families have either disintegrated or disappeared. (My parents divorced after 43 years of marriage and her parents have not spoken to her for over three years in apparent disapproval of her recent divorce.) This has put an unusual weight to our partnership, and I have been trying to document its complicated arc of loss and sadness in our lives. While BETH is composed of fairly traditional photographic documents, there are also some unique surprises in terms of how the images were made. I have used broken printers, fax, and copy machines to create and complicate the possibilities for how each image looks and feels. I am hopeful that somewhere in these visual 'translations' of our relationship, the viewer will feel the profundity of caring we share for each other, in times of equal parts love, sadness, caring, and laughter.




fototazo: What did creating this project add to your understanding of who Beth is and what your relationship with her is?

Matthew Swarts: It made me realize, fairly quickly, that I was with a woman who truly loved me enough to accept my also profound love for photography. That isn't so common. And in the photographs, I began to recognize over time my own feelings for her put into physical form. It took awhile for pictures to emerge that fit together into something that I could recognize, and what that thing is -- who knows? -- is not necessarily a reflection of our relationship so much as it is a window into how I am currently thinking about photography. We both recognize that, and I think so far it has been healthy. The fact that Beth allowed me to photograph her naturally brought us closer together, and for the most part, when we make pictures it is usually a short and fun affair. I've learned to recognize, through making some obvious mistakes, when it is appropriate to photograph.

f: You talk – in your statement – about attempting to present an "arc of loss and sadness" in your lives that comes from a number of difficult family situations. How did you approach transmitting this idea in visual terms?

MS: The short answer to this is that I didn't. I didn't set out to create a project about Beth and the private tragedies of our lives. Rather, we lived through things together and the photographs emerged as I busied myself with cameras and other equipment in the middle of our loneliness. I didn't think, until long afterwards, that there was a project at all inside any of these images. In fact I was quite depressed about not having a project to sink myself into because of all the distractions of our respective situations. In our coming together as a couple, however, we were unified in sharing deep family tragedies. Perhaps it is projection to think that this particular aspect of our narrative has any edge inside the photographs, but I cannot separate myself from the fact that we bonded over our sadness, and in some way, came out to the other side by leaning into one another. Losing our idea of family, and feeling like tiny islands, is one thing that cemented our caring for each other. Perhaps because she knew I was alone in a different, but somehow connected way, Beth allowed me to experiment broadly with her image. For that I am very grateful.




f: What do the ideas of presenting "visual 'translations'" and using post-production and alternative printing and scanning methods to break the "window" of the photographs of Beth allow you to do with the presentation of the images and themes?

MS: I sometimes get bored with straight photography and my lack of proficiency in making images. One way around this 'sticking point' in the habit of working has been to experiment as much as possible with digital and rudimentary alternatives. I have a history of using low-tech methods and low-tech tools for creating images that I've come to care about. I guess experimenting with some of these tools is just a natural part of my working process. Teaching has something to do with it, too, for in the classroom, I'm always trying to come up with ways to challenge my students and their ideas about photography. I like it very much when other artists have challenged me to rethink what kinds of mark making, for example, can be thought of as either meaningful or beautiful. In this project I have a few examples of my forays into that kind of alternative image making. Hopefully, the presentation of Beth's image from a variety of different mechanical means gives the viewer some freedom to assemble their own meanings for the pictures.

f: Joerg Colberg wrote an essay about your project based around an idea of portraiture (and all photography) as a selfish act of "taking" from the subject that reveals no more about the personality of the subject than a cartoon quality sketch. What do you think about this description of portraiture, particularly as it relates to your project?

MS: First, I would like to say that Joerg Colberg's piece was generous, and, I think, ultimately kind. I can't thank him enough, as I will you, for allowing a space where people could come to the work with thoughtfulness. What he wrote about portraiture being a selfish act, (with the exception of someone needing to, at times, be an "asshole"), is really a truth about representational art in general. You really do have to 'use' someone (in however limited a way) in order to create something representational. You are placing a human being in front of you to mediate your vision and, hopefully, your feelings. What matters is whether or not you harm (or extend) them with your work. This always creates moral residue inside me, no matter whom I photograph. I remember being a student in Emmet Gowin's introductory photography class, and responding quite deeply to Emmet's work concerning his wife, Edith. How could you not? In the retelling of his story about these images, Emmet always made it a point to discuss how this work was about collaboration and trust, and how (ultimately) the photograph was not even a referent to the person depicted. It was a separate, mysterious thing in and of itself, and the best ones were not even remotely connected to the person who made them, but to something inherent in the process. I think Joerg is saying the same thing in perhaps a different way, and I know for certain Beth very much feels that way about the work I have been creating about her. "It's not me," she says, over and over. "It's you and what you want it to be."






























3.30.2013

Considering a Photograph

I’d like to explore a number of ideas on how to consider a photograph, using as a departure point a recent post – well, not that recent anymore, but life has a way of sneaking along surprisingly rapidly these days – by Joerg Colberg on process.

I learned much of my approach to considering an image from the painter Paul Celli as an undergraduate student. We discussed images in his class in terms of technique (materials and process), form (the visual language employed), and content (themes and concepts). Over time I’ve added a fourth element to that system, "context" or the historical facts surrounding how and when an image was made, for example political environment or social milieu.

Forming bridges between these four elements allows them to function together and complement one another. Technical choices create forms that suggest themes that are relevant to their context - something like that. Very few images, projects, or artists are able to do this consistently. This approach could be considered reductive and it has all of the inherent problems of using any system, but for the purposes of analysis and conversation, it's a least a functional way to consider images.

Process is not an end point for a work of art, except in work that explores the medium and process as content. Colberg's post is an appreciated reminder of this. I agree with him that process is not interesting in and of itself, that it must be a vehicle for saying something. Images that stop at process are one-dimensional and don’t sustain prolonged viewing. An 8x10 is not an excuse to create boring and sterile images that try to use sharpness or print size to carry interest nor is a camera phone an excuse to create images with poor technique or form. The qualities of the camera have to be intelligently matched to subject matter and content so that there is harmony across the elements of the image. One project deserves one camera, another project another.

These points on process pertain to almost every image ever created, including not only photographs, but paintings, drawings, and prints from printmaking processes.

While the meat of the Colberg post I unreservedly support, he uses an example of two "tintypes" for illustrating his points that I find problematic. It raises separate and unnecessarily complicating conceptual issues. His having done so, however, opens a number of conversations on how to consider a photograph that, it should be said, fall outside the scope and interest of his original post.

CHANGING MEANING BY PRINTING THE SAME IMAGE WITH DIFFERENT PROCESSES

According to the addendum to his post, Colberg received a number of responses to the original text that pointed to the difference between photographs as prints / objects and photographs on the screen. This is a starting point that I would also use; given it's apparently trodden ground, however, I'll just sketch out some thoughts on this and leave it at that.

The original post uses as an example two images, one created by the Hipstamatic Tintype filter and the other an actual tintype. If they are manipulated to look the same, Colberg writes, then this shows process doesn't matter in terms of meaning.

To cite a fairly extreme contrary position, former MoMA curator Peter Galassi has argued that even a print of the same negative by the same artist on the same substrate using the same process is unique – the odds of being able to exactly duplicate an image by keeping all variables stable through the printing process being infinitesimal. Now consider two separate processes, one trying to imitate the other and imagine trying to control for all the variables involved. Ink lays on the surface of one process and enters the paper in another. The type of paper used for a process affects its presence in space through thickness, amount of transparency, and texture of paper. The tones and gamut of color in a print varies from developer to developer and printer to printer. Different boxes of paper from the same company of the supposed same paper can produce different prints based on conditions in the factory when the box of paper was manufactured – picture how much different papers using separate processes vary.

It becomes hard to argue prints can ever try to imitate another process successfully. Any print differs in meaning from another because there's simply no way to reproduce the look of another print process, no matter how skilled the attempt. The original tintype example, one has to conclude, can only apply to onscreen images because as a print even a mildly discerning eye can see the differences quickly between a digital print of a Hipstamatic image and a tintype. Given the inter-connection between technique (including process), form, and content discussed above, changes in process affects content and therefore meaning.

THE VISUAL LIMITATIONS OF THE SCREEN

Given this point about the differences between prints, Colberg's post can also be read as a condemnation of the screen as a viewing and showing space for images. The screen's severe limitations become apparent through his example: if you can make two images from separate processes look the same on a screen, including one made with a minipad through a digital process and the other with an analog direct positive on an iron substrate - and I agree with him that you can – that serves as a demonstration not so much of how process doesn't matter, but rather of how much is lost viewing images on the screen, of its homogenization of images, its elimination of subtleties, and its reduction of the factors for viewing. This reduction also speaks to the limitations for photographers who create work specifically for the screen. The photographer choosing it as their venue for showing photographs must accept the limited use of a narrowed range - or perhaps better to say a different range - of visual language possibilities.

DIFFERENT PROCESSES CREATE DIFFERENT IMAGES

A related but different and fundamental point: on a screen you might be able to create those two "exactly the same" images from Hipstamatic and a tintype, but neither image, to remind ourselves, is a tintype. One started as a tintype, but then it was scanned. It was corrected. Image information was eliminated when it was resized. It went through an entirely transformative digitization process. Perhaps the artist believed they were simply creating a digital copy to show their tintype on their website. They may have even done so with the idea that they are not involved in a creative process, simply a reproductive process.

To the contrary, however, they have actually created a different image. The act of digitizing is an act of interpretation which is an inherently creative act. The image is transformed by process into a different, second image based on the first. This limits Colberg’s original example to an argument that two digital files deriving from different sources in the right hands can be manipulated to look the same and if they arrive at a point of sameness, they have the same meaning – and therefore process doesn’t matter.

DIGITAL IMAGES AS PHOTOGRAPHS?

This leads us – parenthetically - to the assumption in the original post that digital images on a computer screen are photographs. Colberg writes, "Many photographs do not even exist as objects any longer." Is a digital file that shows an image a photograph? In one sense, yes, what the hell else would it be? But is it a PHOTOGRAPH? That’s a slightly different question more open to conversation.

The images you place on the Internet, unless they are part of a project designed specifically for presentation online or on a screen, are – as Bryan Formhals of LPV Magazine says – equivalent to a movie trailer, the showing of a section of a body of work in an alternative format. The actual photographic print or the photographic book are the object and the work of art, the intended format for most art photography. The file image on the screen? I continue to view it, personally, as either a digital negative or a format for showing people in other places the image in an accessible way, depending on where the file is in its process. It runs the risk of becoming a semantic argument, but this does not necessarily translate to it being a photograph. It remains open to question that the product of Hipstamatic / Instagram – printless photography in conception – as well as an image from another source presented on the screen are best considered as similar enough to a traditional slide or print that they should be referenced with the same word. We remain at a point where the definition of a photograph is in flux; conceptualizing photography beyond the print remains a process.

IDENTICAL IMAGES CAN MEAN DIFFERENT THINGS BASED ON CONTEXT

We left off with the two tintypes example as an argument that two digital files deriving from different sources can be manipulated to look the same and if they arrive at a point of sameness, they have the same meaning – and therefore process doesn't matter. That's still problematic, however. Let's challenge this point in order to underscore another idea of looking at images. These two hypothetically identical images on a screen made by separate processes of digitization arriving at sameness in some situations may be considered to have the same meaning. In many others, however, they may not.

Why?

This gets into the most interesting part of the conversation for me: what information should we consider while analyzing an image? Should we be using the same information in different contexts of interpretation? What types of contextual information impact the meaning of an image? Does meaning depend on who's looking at it? How should unseen contextual information surrounding the creation of an image change our reading of an image as this information becomes known to us?

Like almost everything in life, the answers are frustratingly gray: people interact with and read an image differently depending on their use of the image under consideration and what their needs for understanding are. The way people should be pursuing a consideration of context - including process – when they look at a photograph depends on when and where and how they're asked to look at it.

Let's first consider what we mean by context. I would consider context as all of the extenuating factors surrounding the creation of an image. This includes information such as the year of creation, where it was created, the social and political environment surrounding its creation, who created it, for whom they created it, and also how the image was made.

There are times to view images apart from process and other contextual information, which is to say, when process and context don't matter very much or at all. One is a situation encountered, I imagine, with much more frequency by those that might read this post than the population at large and probably the situation Colberg imagined as he wrote his post – the cold critique of art photography. This is a read of how visual language (form) creates content apart from any context. This, for example, applies to a student asking for a critique of their work without speaking or otherwise communicating context before receiving comments. If the student has done their job, there shouldn't be much need for conversation about process unless it's getting in the way. This type of critique proposes to talk about what we are seeing and what it means without background information; we should be able to look past process and engage the form and content directly (again assuming the image content is not a commentary on technique or process).

In other reading circumstances, however, context should be considered and, therefore, process does matter. Continuing with the above example, when a student or artist gives information first about the intended content and asks whether or not the images are communicating it, process does become a consideration as part of a response. Would bigger prints enhance the impact of an image's content? Would sharper images convey the content better? Would a small, faster camera help the photographer engage their subject matter in more ways? What camera, what process, and why they should be selected become elements of critique, as well, perhaps, as other contextual elements.

Another reading space where context and process matters, and matters perhaps more than in any other, is that of historians and archivists, sociologists, anthropologists and those who study material culture. Anyone, in fact, who looks to read the image to understand it within a wider societal framework. Process forms part of the understanding of the image and informs its meaning. It matters if the image was made with Hipstamatic or is an actual tintype, even if somehow superficially they look the same.

So, do Colberg's two hypothetically identical digital images derived from separate sources– equal in appearance - actually mean the same thing? Yes, but only on screen and only in limited reading situations where context, including process, does not matter, is not of interest, or cannot be known.

PROCESS (USUALLY) MATTERS

In the majority of situations I can think of, however, process matters because images are normally read with regards for and interest in context and, in addition, some amount of context can normally be known either by looking at the image or by minimal research of an image. Frequently context is actually unavoidable knowledge, inherent in the process of looking.

In fact, in most cases part of our job as observer of the image is to find out about context. As I wrote in a post last year, we need to read the context of the image, take note of what our role as observer is, look at who is making the image and try to figure out why they are making it; 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 conclusions and arguments about an image and its meaning.

What's more, I think that the reading circumstances in which process does not matter are shrinking. As a general public, we are becoming better educated about the importance of how the environment and specifics of an image's creation dictate content and as specialists we are strengthening our abilities to decipher an image’s provenance with better technologies.

OUR RELATIONSHIP TO IMAGES IS FLUID

Another line of conversation evolving from Colberg's post concerns how our understanding of an image is fluid, cumulative and based in revelation of information about the image over time; that is to say, having no context to use while considering an image is a temporary state that is actually hard to preserve. Furthermore, once context becomes known it's almost impossible not to consider the image through its lens; context becomes wedded to the image and shifts our read of it. Let's look at an example to illuminate.

Imagine I give you a vernacular image from a junk store of a smiling man. You don't know who made it or how it was made and you appreciate the image for nothing more than the odd smile on the man's face and his awkward pose. You are reading, enjoying, and understanding strictly the photograph itself, restrained to a reading based in visual language – the lights, the shadows, the texture of paper, the size of the print, etc. – and the subject-content depicted by the forms.

However, imagine that a month later a friend visiting your studio points out to you that the image of a smiling man you've tacked to your wall actually depicts a famous civil rights activist murdered the next day during a march. How does it shift your understanding of the image? It would be hard to maintain the same thoughts about it. What if you discover that leader is a family member?

How does it change your understanding if you find out the image was made by a woman or, alternatively, by a man? Should it change your understanding? What if I die and the photograph takes on special meaning to you as the only object I ever gave you?

What if you discover it's actually an image created by Ernest C. Withers, a well-known civil rights photographer and worth hundreds of dollars? Or not made with a Brownie, but rather with a camera invented by Withers, a one of a kind photograph used only to create this image, a singular example of an alternative photographic process?

What if it was created by someone who lied about who they were in order to make the image? That would be a real life case with Withers, a photographer of the civil rights era who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. It was discovered in 2010 that he was also an FBI informant.

Each small part of context we learn, however large or subtle, changes our relationship to the image, and this ever-changing relationship to an image as we get more information about it creates a limited time or space in which we can imagine reading an image outside of context. Once context – including process – becomes part of our viewing of an image, it's hard to see it again without it.

Colberg's points on process are ones I agree with. I also agree with his central point that process should not dominate our reading of an image; in fact, much great photography results from masterful technique that's also masterfully hidden so that content can be appreciated. His tintype example holds true for a very small range of situations which makes the example – while true - almost conceptual in nature. It does, however, open an intriguing range of conversational lines that I hope to further engage over time.

12.15.2012

Originality Is a Conservative Argument

A few weeks back I put together a review of Looking at the Land, a multi-venue curation project by Andy Adams of Flak Photo. One paragraph in particular has drawn some praise, some fire, and some confusion. I'd like to expand on it to see if doing so can forward the conversation.

Here is the paragraph from the original post:
So many photographers today are making strong, but related images in terms of aesthetics and production methods. I'm actually building to a point that’s not critical or dismissive around the point of originality, a point that's back on the conversational hot plate in articles like this one. I've felt more questioning recently, personally and by others, of the idea of photographers in the 21st-century as individuals. I'm coming around to the idea that all of what we're doing is a collective project, it’s group research into aesthetics, formal and conceptual ideas, and cultural themes. 5,500 submissions? Hundreds of them most likely interchangeable? The common approach seen in much of the work – but by no means all of it – to the landscape in Looking at the Land leads me to wonder just how valid the individual really is in photography anymore, assuming it really ever was valid. We are in some sort of photographic Golden Age – the number of photographers today and the quality of images produced, as shown in this exhibition, is unprecedented, even if finding truly new and fresh ideas and territory to explore is increasingly a limited proposition as the medium enters adulthood. I'd just as soon do away with individual names, contests, and the fetishism of certain work. What does it serve beyond the market and egos?
Bryan Formhals of LPV Magazine clipped out a section of this paragraph and posted it on his Tumblr page, called Photographs on the Brain. Some of the aforementioned fire came as a reply to his posted clip by a photographer who goes by santosha65 on Tumblr and as Nick Ruechel in real life. He wrote:
That’s the most asinine, deluded thing i’ve ever heard. We are in a shit storm as far as photography goes. Corporations are taking over content and the parameters in which we create it. Do away with names? FUCK YOU. 
Upon reading his reply, I had a feeling he might be based in New York City, and indeed he is.*

A more textured, but even more damning reply came from Jörg Colberg on his Tumblr site Conscientious Redux:
To quote John Berger: "After we have responded to a work of art, we leave it, carrying away in our consciousness something which we didn’t have before. This something amounts to more than our memory of the incident represented, and also more than our memory of the shapes and colours and spaces which the artist has used and arranged. What we take away with us – on the most profound level – is the memory of the artist’s way of looking at the world. The representation of a recognizable incident (an incident here can simply mean a tree or a head) offers us the chance of relating the artist’s way of looking to our own." ([Colberg's] emphasis, from the introduction to Toward Reality, taken from Selected Essays of John Berger) To "do away with individual names" is to essentially do away with art. Art is inconceivable without the individual artist, even if there are many (or, as some might argue, too many).
I'd like to clarify and expand on the original post and, given both Ruechel and Colberg singled out the phrase "do away with individual names," I'd like to focus on the last two sentences of the original post that include this phrase in particular.
____________________________

It's interesting to note how salient the overlap of formal appearance and thematic concern is through much of the work of the photographers in "Looking at the Land" and, one can theorize, among the thousands upon thousands who applied to be part of it. Most of these photographers, working separately, sent in work to be considered for the exhibition that reflects, according to Adams, a shared common thematic concern of a vanquished wilderness and an acceptance of the man-made suburban landscape. They produced images that - in many cases - are approached formally in a very similar way and made with color 6x7 aspect ratio film by similar cameras. Part of this has to do with curation for the sake of coherence to be sure, but the show could also have been comprised on the same theme made up, let's say, of almost entirely 35mm black and white work. Or "toy" cameras. Or images curated from Flickr or Google Earth.

How does this square with the idea that part of being an artist is to avoid solipsism by offering through our vision or voice something unique to the artistic dialogues of our society, the - to return to Berger - "artist's way of looking at the world"? We have chosen to pursue our passions and to make financial sacrifices to engage a pursuit that frequently involves isolation in rooms lit by Lightroom or Photoshop. We have turned our back on more conventional life choices and carved out our own way. We go into the field alone, we edit alone, we maintain a sense of our act of creation as an act apart from others before its presentation, an act shared with others.

It's easy to see how we feel singular, special, and unique given our choices in the context of societal norms and our work structure. And the current glut of competitions heightens this feeling, highlighting individuals, and so does the market as investors have a stock in our names and want to maintain the value of their investments. Art becomes about the individual artist, about you, about building a brand and circulating your name. There's some common sense to this: we're all entrepreneurs in a tough racket. In order to survive we do need to make our name in order to have money to continue to pursue what we love.

There's an issue however. The pure lone wolf artist is part of artistic mythology and always has been, along with natural geniuses and beret-wearing café bohemians who spend their spare time lounging around the Left Bank with naked lovers. It's one of the stories we tell ourselves - and that is imaged by others of us - about our role and relationship with the rest of society.

Behind the frequent feeling of having our own unique vision and "brand" in reality lies layers of interconnections. We build our foundation on top of a large and rich photographic history others have provided. We have formal and thematic debts to our branch of photography. Almost every single photographer in history and every project that they have ever worked on has precedent and references. Our connection and debt is also to each other as well as to our predecessors. We have dialogue with what's happening in the photography art world (and other areas of photography). We respond to it, even if it's a rejection or attempt to steer away from the rest. Our work overlaps. The images we see shape our own aesthetic decisions consciously or unconsciously.

Your sense of color, your obscure project subject matter, your tilted framing, mysterious dark developing, and lens refractions in your prints? Not "yours." You are cutting, combining and pasting visual language and recycling from larger thematic concepts others have also worked with as well. Your particular way of recombining those elements? Yes, it's yours, but let's qualify that correctly. A definition of "progress" in our medium should be based in a photographer’s ability to present fresh visual conversation from the creative combination and balance of technology, form, content, and a consideration of the context in which its made. That being said, don't forget you're working with deep interconnection with, and deep debt to, other photographers and that your uniqueness comes by adding a twist at the end in your combination of elements defined in relation with others.

To say your work is original is to see yourself as removed from history and context, to see yourself in a vacuum and alone. This is why I say originality is a conservative argument. To say your work is truly original is to argue along the lines of conservative political arguments for everything from not paying taxes to cutting social spending. It's seeing the contemporary without history and the individual as separate from the fabric of society, responsible only for themselves.

It's odd that in a field traditionally dominated by liberal minds - and still dominated by liberal minds judging from Twitter feeds and Facebook comments - when it comes to our own field, most get conservative. We forget our interconnection and our debts and that what we use comes in large part from our predecesors and from each other. We get defensive of "our" territory, our stomach falls when our cherished "unique" image shows up in a very similar form by another artist in a magazine or on a blog. We protect our ideas and this alone is an admission that we know somewhere inside ourselves that our work is not actually "original" - we fear another can and will make "our" ideas. We cling to the idea that we've done this alone and that our voice is a singular one.

American artist and writer Chris Wiley is a recent article in The Guardian is quoted as saying, "Everything and everyone on Earth and beyond, it would seem, has been slotted somewhere in a rapacious, ever-expanding Borgesian library of representation that we have built for ourselves. As a result, the possibility of making a photograph that can stake a claim to originality has been radically called into question. Ironically, the moment of greatest photographic plenitude has pushed photography to the point of exhaustion."

Going back to my original post paragraph, why would I suggest getting rid of the focus on individual names, the emphasis on personal accolades, and the fetishism of certain work? Because we're doing this together, our visions are interconnected, and we owe debts. Our "original" visual ideas borrow, interact, and react to those of others. There's no need to be focused on individual canonization and aggrandizement. Photography should have a feeling of collaboration, not of competition. Why not conceptualize what we are doing as a common project into aesthetics, formal and conceptual ideas, and cultural themes? Like doctors across hospitals sharing information in their investigation of cures and causes?

Let's also take my original comments with the appropriate grain of salt. I'm talking about shifting emphasis, remembering what's important, and understanding the limits of the idea of originality. I'm not suggesting there's not any space for visual innovation or that we should never mention or talk about names in the absolute. I'm also not saying all visions are equal or that there's not any difference between how we see things. There is, obviously and thankfully. It's just that those differences have to be seen in their appropriate historical and cultural context.

What I am saying is the experience of the image is what's important, the interaction around the image, the collective investigation between images between different people and over generations of photographers, the connection photography can make between us. The collective project is more important than the individual - and photography is something that we have created together, not any individual alone. Photography is the qualities of the photograph in the context of other photographs and in its cultural context. People forget this in our ever-increasing world of ever more contests, Grand Prix, winners and losers, reviews, and success through who you know.

In fact, as I suggested to Colberg via Twitter, I believe the Berger quote actually supports my point of view. Berger writes about the vision of the photographer and how we receive it - without mentioning the photographer's name. He focuses on a description of the interaction of the observer with the work. Perfect. The chance and experience of relating to that particular vision is what's important, as is remembering the context for that vision.
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As I sat down to start to write this the other day, in a moment of procrastination I checked Facebook and saw a post written by Heidi Romano on another photographer accusing her of copying her work. Her post serves as a case study and conclusion for this essay.

First, let's look at a few images. (Image credits are at the end of the essay in order to keep names out of these examples.)

Image by artist A [below]


Image by artist B [below]


Image by artist C [below]


Artist A has accused C of copying her images, but has not accused B of the same thing, even though the image by B was made after the image by artist A. Why? Perhaps because A is aware that B - internationally known and respected - has been working with books, including damaged books and with twisting and distorted and water damaged books just as A does in her projects, since the early 1990s - or roughly 10 years before A started her project.

And now let's look at a second group of images by various artists as well as objects sold by crafts vendors, installation images of works by a sculptor, and an image of a window installation at an Anthropologie store in Manhattan:


















Artist A claims that HER image - the fifth down from the top - is being ripped off by artist C in work such as the final image in the above sequence. I hope, simply by showing those two photographs surrounded by images by other artists, craftspeople, as well as dudes paid $7 an hour to put stuff in the windows at Anthropologie, the emptiness of the claim of artist A - Cara Barer - against artist C, Romano.

In sum, originality has to been seen as a question of degree and in context. This is even more true in today's photography landscape as finding fresh ideas and territory to explore is an increasingly limited proposition. Going back to the Wiley quote, we now work in relation with a Borgesian library of visual images. Ideas are driven back and forth over. There are going to be overlaps. To be sure, there is copying; that's not what I mean - and of course there is innovative visual content, but let's keep the idea of individual innovation in an appropriate frame.

To tie together these two visual examples with the earlier points in this piece, Barer is ignoring her own artistic debts, forgetting context, oddly hanging the banner of originality around a well-covered and broad idea of working with damaged books, and working against what should be the spirit of the community project of photography. In a conversation you overlap ideas sometimes. That's OK; it's part of the dialectic process between all of us in order to advance our investigation of visual ideas.
*Mr. Ruechel and I subsequently engaged in a back and forth email exchange that, while not necessarily bringing us to any agreements, brought us to a cordial understanding.