Showing posts with label Quentin Bajac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quentin Bajac. Show all posts

2.18.2015

Guest Reading Shortlist 2.18.15: Adam Bell

From "Parallel Universe: Tokyo Through Western Eyes" by Russet Lederman © William Klein

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.

Today's guest for Reading Shortlist is Adam Bell.

Adam Bell is a photographer and writer. His work has been widely exhibited, and his writing and reviews have appeared in numerous publications including Afterimage, The Art Book Review, The Brooklyn Rail, fototazo, Foam Magazine, Lay Flat, photo-eye and Paper-Journal. His books include The Education of a Photographer and the forthcoming Vision Anew: The Lens and Screen Arts. He is currently on the staff and faculty at the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department at the School of Visual Arts.

Nataly Castaño helped organize this post.
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Tom McCarthy, London Review of Books, "Writing Machines"
The novelist and writer Tom McCarthy grapples with the thorny issue of realism.

From "Parallel Universe: Tokyo Through Western Eyes" by Russet Lederman

Russet Lederman, "Parallel Universe: Tokyo Through Western Eyes"
Noted collector, writer and scholar Russet Lederman, who's also one of the masterminds behind both 10x10 American Photobooks and 10x10 Japanese Photobooks, looks at a number of well-known, and some not so well known, Western photobooks that look at Tokyo and Japan.

Rebecca Solnit, tomdispatch.com, "Everything's Coming Together While Everything is Falling Apart"
Published in early January, Solnit offers sober, but hopeful words as we move into a new year.

Entre Entree by Stephan Keppel

Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa, The Great Leap Sideways, "An Illogical Pattern of Translations: Stephan Keppel’s Entre Entree"
Entre Entree by Stephan Keppel was one of my favorite books from 2014, and Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa's lyrical response captures the fractured beauty of the book.

From Interview Magazine, "Peter Schjeldahl" © Maciek Kobielski

Christopher Bollen, Interview Magazine, "Peter Schjeldahl"
This honest and insightful interview with Peter Schjeldahl reflects on his work as a critic and writer.

Quentin Bajac, "The Age of Distraction: Photography and Film"
Just one of many great essays posted on Object:Photo, MoMA's companion site to the current exhibition "Modern Photographs from the Thomas Walther Collection, 1909-1949," Bajac’s essay does a excellent job elucidating the tumultuous context in which these revolutionary images were made.

Trevor Paglen and Rebeccas Solnit (Part 1 and Part 2)
Hosted at the Lannan Foundation in Santa Fe in March 2014, this artist talk by Paglen is followed by an interview with Rebecca Solnit. What more can you ask for?

Brian Dillon, "Shadow Waltz"
Although I initially felt it was out of place as part of Fraser's recent book A City of the Mind, Dillion's excellent essay does a wonderful job illuminating the peculiar beauty of Fraser’s work.

12.04.2014

Reading Shortlist 12.4.14

From the post "84 Illegal Photographs That Urban Climbers Risked Their Lives To Take" Photo © Vitaliy Raskalov

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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Blake Andrews, B, Hold still, this will only hurt a sec. Blake skews pretty much each and every photography site out there and describes you, dear reader, as South American, Midwestern or a lover of The Americans. We got off relatively unscathed comparatively.

Still from "The Mexican Suitcase"

The Art of Photography, The Mexican Suitcase. This made the rounds a while back, but I just got around to watching it. A video on the rediscovery of negatives from the Spanish Civil War by Robert Capa, Gerda Taro and David "Chim" Seymour. The site is a wealth of history and tech videos for your leisure time.

Jeremy Mohler, Temporary Art Review, With Our Mouths Closed. A critique of the conventional Artist Talk arrangement and suggestions on how to invigorate it.

Still from "Video Interview with Nicholas Nixon"

Fraenkel Gallery, Video Interview with Nicholas Nixon. Nixon talks through the making and the meaning of "The Brown Sisters" on the 40th anniversary of the beginning of the project.

Trevor Paglen, FotoMuseum Blog, Is Photography Over? The first of a five-part series examining the question of whether we have come to the end of photography.

Conor Risch, PDN Online, MoMA’s New Chief Photo Curator Turns to Studio Photography for First Show. Quentin Bajac talks about his first show on the MoMA based in studio photography, but more interestingly talks through some of the major issues confronting photographers, museums and curators today including the deluge of photographs, photobooks in museums and the "widening gap" between artistic and vernacular photography.

Ian Sample, Stuart Clark and James Randerson, The Guardian, Philae lander sends back first ever image from comet.

Alex Scola, Distractify, 84 Illegal Photographs That Urban Climbers Risked Their Lives To Take. Grasp desk firmly before opening link.

Andrea Zlotowitz, ArtSlant, Do We Need Galleries Anymore? The Utility of Online Exhibitions. A smart response to Jonathan Jones' asinine article in The Guardian, "Flat, soulless and stupid: why photographs don’t work in art galleries."


1.26.2014

Narrative and Photography

Photography's relationship with narrative has been heavily questioned for several decades and continues to provoke donnybrooks and end friendships. It's a relationship that has been particularly interesting for me to consider recently as I work on two photobooks.

The experience of doing so has led me to an unexpected conclusion: there are ways to consider the question of narrative in photography in which photography can be presented as the most powerful narrative vehicle in the arts. This is because a series of photographs has a strong and unique relationship with the way we form memories and, subsequently, how we string together memories to create our life narratives.

Before I start, I should say that if there are two basic ways to think about narrative in photography – either being provided all at once (Rejlander, Crewdson, Wall) or in parts (as in the photobook or serial photographic essays) - this essay references the second of these ways.
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I think it's worth briefly reflecting on how differently narrative has been talked about by a handful of important contributors to the conversation on photography.

John Szarkowski challenged the ability of photography to explain large-scale public subjects in both the preface to The Photographer's Eye (1966) and in Mirrors and Windows (1978). In The Photographer's Eye he wrote, "Photography has never been successful at narrative" and he declared the fields of photojournalism and documentary non-effectual in Mirrors and Windows writing, "Photography's failure to explain large public issues has become increasingly clear...Most issues of importance cannot be photographed." He believed attempts to photograph World War II were unable to explain events without heavy captioning and that W. Eugene Smith's efforts to characterize the historic culture of the Spanish village Deleitosa in seventeen photographs pushed the medium beyond its capacity.

In a 2010 interview with current Museum of Modern Art Director of Photography Quentin Bajac, Luc Delahaye shows how the critical questioning of narrative's role in photography has continued. He said, "The refusal of narration in photography probably leads to a 'vision' of the world, not to mention richer formal possibilities."

Other photographic thinkers such as Charlotte Cotton and Alec Soth, on the other hand, have accepted the potential for narrative in photography. In The Photograph as Contemporary Art, Cotton explores the idea of narrative in tableau photography and she also discusses how - in contrast - most mid-20th century narrative photography played out sequentially. Soth, in a 2013 conversation at Paris Photo Los Angeles with Roe Ethridge remarked, "I actually want to continue to tell stories. And I'm trying to figure out how to do that with photography because it's not always natural to the medium."
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I wonder if the conversation can't be shaken up by moving its focus from results to process; that is to say, away from whether it's possible to convey a particular narrative to another person through photography to whether photography can actively involve both the photographer and observer in creating narrative.

To do so, let's first mention movies and literature which would seem the most narrative-friendly artistic vehicles. Beginning, middle, end. Linear progression. Large amounts of information spread across a few hours of images and sound or reading hundreds of pages of description and dialogue. A story may double back on itself or include flashbacks, but at the end of the work of cinema or literature, almost inevitably a particular story has been conveyed to the viewer or reader by the director or author.

The observer, however, is frequently in a passive, receptive mode in terms of narrative creation – that is to say, we receive the given narrative. We may have to make leaps of thought and keep up with the twists, but generally we are doing so in order to receive a singular, specific narrative from the director or author that is driven by a rich density of data.
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Think of a memory you have of a particular event, an important one. Where you were when the Challenger exploded? What do you remember of your high school graduation? Your first day of work?

What do you remember about that day or that moment?

What form do those memories take?

I’ve had a number of conversations the last few months with people about this question. There are a lot of constants that have come out of those conversations. There is almost never sound or dialogue as we replay memories in our minds of an event and frequently the visual images we have are either stills or something approaching soundless GIFs - several seconds of action that stops and might loop. Frequently an entire event is represented by a single still image. The image or images are often seen from something approximating a camera's viewpoint.

What apparently never happens is a cinematic or literary presentation of narrative – a coherent thread resembling a movie complete with sounds progressing forward through a fixed duration of time or a similarly linear literary presentation of narrative with dialogue and descriptions.

Our narrative memories of a single event, then, are a single image or a handful of still images or a GIF, almost always without sound or spoken dialogues - unless it was crucial to the story, like car tires skidding before an accident – that we piece together in our mind and, frequently, see from the perspective of a camera. Our minds seem to be built in some ways to use still images as signifiers of events or moments, to index an entire event with a snapshot.
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Moving outwards, think about the memories you have of last year. What were your highlights? What was memorable? Important?

As I type this, my mind slowly begins to remember my own year…in October I went to visit my parents in Florida. Was that the only time I went to the States last year? No! I was in New York and Philadelphia in the summer. I have a vision of Yaron's son Oren dancing at a BBQ. A still view of The New York Times news center. Alberto standing in the rain, taking a break from helping me grade the backyard in Philadelphia. Laying on the inflatable bed at Amani's waiting for Ana to arrive.

Where else did I go…I went to the Darién Gap…was that last year? Yes, it was in Janu…Febru…January. Who did I go with? Simon! An image of him and Luisa walking out of the hotel in Acandí. A man falling from a cliff into a swimming hole, miraculously not hurting himself. On the Darién trip I met Juan Pablo…which reminds me of standing outside his house at night in San Félix later in the year, so high in the mountains that the clouds formed around me as I stood outside at night. I have a short loop memory of a cloud forming...and a still image of the mural painted on his house.

Slowly, the year fills out more and more as I type. Images of people and places begin to create memories of events and represent them. All of these single images or small groups of images that represent events are then threaded together into the year's narrative. Some narrative structure begins to take place, but only to a point. I can't remember the sequence within many events or the sequence of a series of events. I am forgetting some of the big moments of the year while overemphasizing details. Some things that I remember probably happened the year before.

In short, the year doesn't come together from January to December clearly. I recall still images that represent specific events and connect them, then try to run a line through them as best I can to begin to form a narrative of my year from them. Large gaps of information exist between these images, however; most of the year is inaccessible to me already. Ultimately the whole year's narrative is defined by a few dozen distinct still images that represent events strung together in some kind of order that's most likely not actually very sequential in relation to how they were lived. They are loosely connected - mostly by having been lived by me - and distanced by a lot of empty space between them.
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The artistic experience that most closely resembles this sewing together of memory-images into a narrative is making or looking at photographic projects, exhibitions or books. It closely duplicates how we create and reference our memories and then turn memories into our personal narratives. While the photobook or exhibition usually present a given sequence, we have to actively make sense of that series of still images through associations, across large gaps of information, without implication of duration, without informative dialogue, music, or effects, while relying on - as compared to a movie or novel - a very small amount of information. It is we, the observer, who create duration, fill gaps, imagine sound, create logic and relationship and ultimately imagine narrative.

This relationship places the observer of the photographic exhibition, essay or photobook actively in a role that simulates how we build narrative from our own life memories. This similarity makes forming narratives from photographic works a powerful experience for the observer in the process of interpreting photographs - as well, I should add, as for the creator in the process of making the photographic project.

As a last, practical, note, a project that doesn’t give enough images or spreads them too far apart can leave us unable to connect them, creating an opaque project we can't enter by refusing us the process of narrative construction. In turn, a project that connects the dots itself for us looses the special narrative privilege of photography we've identified and more closely approximates the dictated narrative of cinema or literature. Mark Steinmetz has said it well: "Photographers who are too controlling come up with pictures where the viewer has little free will - the experience of looking at the photo is over-determined and so there's not so much lasting pleasure."

A balanced sequence, in turn, gives us the dots spaced just enough apart to allow us to participate by connecting them for ourselves, to form our own conclusion of meaning of the work as active participants, and to tap photography's powerful mimesis of how we form our own life narratives from memories. This unique overlap makes narrative one of photography's strengths, not one of its weaknesses.

7.19.2013

Reading Shortlist 7.19.13

"Hidden Mother" Cabinet Photo, From "Old portraits of children with creepy 'ghostmothers'
in the background show how far mums would go for a good photo"

I'm back in Medellín after six weeks of travels which has also served as a natural summer break for fototazo. With vacations behind, today we start the second half of the year by taking a look through my ridiculously long "to read" tab to begin catching up on articles and posts to recommend from the summer...and before.

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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Wayne Bremser, It's Never Summer, Free Garry Winogrand. Bremser's Tumblr page is worth following. His write-up on the recently closed Winogrand exhibit at SF MoMA takes issue with several other reviews, but also discusses working with Winogrand's untended archives as the central feature, not "problem," of Winogrand and his career.

FOTOTA. I can't include this site in the ongoing International Site Profiles because one of the requirements for that series be that the site provide at a minimum tabs in English. This new French-language site provides an important place for African perspectives on photography that substantively augments the very narrow list of sites focused on disseminating contemporary African photography. It has a links page with more sites to explore.

Mail online, Old portraits of children with creepy 'ghostmothers' in the background show how far mums would go for a good photo. While in Minneapolis a couple weeks back, my friend Emily told me about "Hidden Mother" Cabinet Photos which also are called "ghost mother" photographs. These are images of children in which the mother is present in the image to help hold the child still for the long exposures required by early photography, but who have been hidden by sheets, blankets, or curtains. According to Emily, the images would be mounted in such a way that the mother would be largely cropped out. Taken from the mounting, however, hidden becomes a relative term, producing odd images like the image above. Here is a link to a second article with more images.

Henry Peach Robinson, Fading Away, 1858

Meghan Maloney, HENRY PEACH ROBINSON AND THE COMBINATION PRINT- BEFORE DIGITAL, In the In-Between. The Shortlist's dose of history: an overview of the career of the photographer who refined combination printing (does that mean he's responsible for Jerry Uelsmann?) and - perhaps more importantly - presented early arguments for photography's place alongside painting. One of many early photographers who died as a result of the toxicity of early photographic processes.

© Rä di Martino

Sammy Medina, Co.DESIGN, A Photographer Rediscovers The Crumbling Remains Of Tatooine. Photographer Rä di Martino chanced across the original Star Wars sets rotting in the Tunisian Sahara with Google Earth.

Brad Troemel, The New Inquiry, Athletic Aesthetics. Well-written look at the photographer as brand and the new breed of contemporary artist marked by their use of social media and constant production.

Richard B. Woodward, The Wall Street Journal, Snapshot of a Curator. Woodward interviews the MoMA chief curator of photography Quentin Bajac who was appointed last year. Bajac is only the fifth curator - and the first non-American - in the 83-year history of the position and little was known of where he planned to take the department when he was hired.