Showing posts with label Matthew Swarts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthew Swarts. Show all posts

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."






























11.20.2012

The Image: Matthew Swarts, Untitled (Self-Portrait), Long Beach Island, New Jersey, 2007


I was alone in my aunt's beach house, a few days before my birthday. She has a huge hot tub on the top floor of her house, in a private bedroom. Usually, the tub is off limits but while alone on a rainy day, I took advantage of its dark interior and made some self portraits. My arm is actually extended and holding the camera in the space before the foreground in this image, like I was making a cell phone picture for a social network. This image is of course darker than that on all sorts of levels, but the impulse was the same.

The image is part of my series, AMSTERDAM, which is a kind of self-implicating and self-reflective scopophilic narrative. It's about a dark kind of looking. Not lechery, but an implied descent into sexuality and the body. The work was made in large part during a very turbulent time in my life, and I accelerated how that turbulence was implied by photographing models in addition to myself and close friends. I wanted to attempt to stake something out about the inescapably biological roots of the male gaze. I find the problems surrounding the gaze fascinating, but something about feminist, post-phallocratic-hegemony politics strikes me as equally violent against heterosexual maleness, and wrong, and in my pictures I wanted to find a way to present how it has corrupted my feelings about looking. I used to have a tremendous amount of unresolved guilt in relation to images that sexualize women. On the one hand, I was drawn to them. On the other, because of what I know, I was disgusted and repulsed. That sour dialectic is what the work is about.

Of course, in this image as in others in the series, I am looking at myself and asking the viewer to consider my image with as much moral weight as they might consider the others, perhaps even more. I'm pausing over my own descent and submergence, and (of course) asking questions about my own demise.

It's the first image in the series, too, and I like that. By putting it up front I'm putting myself in the position of both subject and object simultaneously, and I'm inviting my own consumption. It's one way for me to say I'm neither not self-aware nor excused. I'm participating, hopefully, in your vision as much as I am in mine.

- Matthew Swarts

9.01.2012

115: Matthew Swarts


Matthew Swarts
Beth, Long Beach Island, New Jersey, 2012, from the series "Open Water"

Series Statement
I have always come alive near water, and will always photograph nearby. I also love the very early morning. Open Water is an ongoing project and has a dual narrative. There are images of my partner and family framed against water, and images of the open ocean itself. I am curious enough to want to continue to watch both.