Showing posts with label Robert Capa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Capa. Show all posts

6.07.2016

Having Conversations on Photographing Others



A number of recent articles have created conversation on the photography of communities by outsiders. They include Teju Cole's writing on Steve McCurry, two posts by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa on Aperture here and here and Jan Hoek responding to Wolukau-Wanambwa's attack on his work.

I'll leave others to reply to the serious issues raised regarding race, class, power and visual stereotypes of people of color. Instead, I'd like to lay out four points on how we have conversations about work made by photographing others.
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The Subjective Demand

The closer we are to someone, the more difficult it often is to be objective about them. My mom looks at my photography and thinks it's better than Lee Friedlander or Daido Moriyama. Ask anyone in the photo world, and they'll all tell you, yeah, not so much. When we're at a crucial decision point or if we have a life issue, we often seek advice from strangers in the form of counselors, priests, psychologists and Dear Abby that can tell us things honestly and "objectively" because of their emotional removal from us.

The distance of professionals we sometimes seek in our personal lives is paradoxically considered problematic in photography. We generally demand photographers have a full engagement with their subject when photographing another community under the argument that time and completeness of immersion will inevitably provide veracity to vision, a fuller-formed sense of their subjects and sensitive photographs.

Helicopter photojournalists are criticized for landing, snapping and taking off again without connecting with their subjects or understanding much about their actual lives. Cole, in his piece on McCurry, argues for moving beyond stereotypical visions of peoples and cultures to depict the contemporary and complicated realities of subjects, an argument that implies a prolonged engagement to reach those understandings. Almost every piece of criticism I have read on Darcy Padilla's ultra-long term "Family Love" documentary project mentions she spent "18 years photographing her subject" as if simply by virtue of the enormity of the time invested the project built value. Wolukau-Wanambwa points to Dana Lixenberg's "Imperial Courts" as an example of "good" outsider photography. She spent over 20 years photographing the community of a housing estate in South L.A.

The longer we work with our subjects, however, the closer we become to them. It can be argued that by doing so we know our subjects better by seeing and photographing the fuller spectrum of their lives, but it can equally be argued that extended time makes us a participant in their lives creating a more subjective vision of our subjects. As photographers we become a central subject in the production of the work and in the photographs themselves as time elongates. In essence, we demand a documentary or journalistic - and even artistic – perspective that by its nature places photographers in a more intimate and, therefore, subjective position, and in one way to conceptualize the conversation, the closer we stand to our subject and the longer we stand there, the less we see.

Having a prolonged engagement with a subject begs questions about the abilities of photography to lie and its potential limitations in making manifest photographer-subject relationships: can a multi-dimensional person and their reality really be represented in photography? Can "connection" with our subjects be established through formal language decisions, such as shallow depth of field, soft lighting, taking a slightly lower perspective looking upwards towards the person we're photographing and asking the subject to relax their face for a moment? Can we tell the difference between a photograph made in an "intimate style" and one made as part of investing twenty years shooting the same community?

Wolukau-Wanambwa shows both the reality of and difficulty of these questions by making the somewhat shocking demand to Hoek that he include with his project some sort of explanatory text to help Wolukau-Wanambwa judge how the images represent their subject:
The provenance of these pictures; the very reason for their having been made at all; the manner of their making; the nature of the "collaborative" relationship with the photographer; the necessity that Westerners see Masai tribesmen according to Hoek's "new way"— none of these crucial but unstated questions—are deemed worthy of an answer. 
Wolukau-Wanambwa underscores here a doubt in the capacity of images to transmit basic information about photographer-subject relationships by expressing his need to have a text through which to critique that relationship in this photographic work, as he does later in his post with a critique of the work of Viviane Sassan framed through a quote from her on her work.
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Blended Narratives

Many writers on photography have pointed to its autobiographical component. We've long believed that photography cannot be truly objective, that the camera doesn't take the picture, someone does. Framing, subject selection, focus and a multitude of other decisions create a sliding scale of subjective representations of reality, from the heavy presence of the hand of the photographer in someone like Daisuke Yokota to Walker Evans' "documentary style."

What does it mean to point the subjective lens towards other people as subject? If the photograph both reflects the photographer and is taken of someone else, where does "subjective vision" end and the "subject" begin?

They don't. That is to say, photographs run multiple narratives simultaneously, they are both autobiography and biography at the same time. The way we create photographs reflects who we are as much as who we point our lens at at the same time, even in the most hardcore photojournalism and documentary work. What's more, the viewer of a photograph also brings their own story to the image, completing the triad of competing narrative framings of the photograph.

Cole writes in his piece on McCurry, "Art is always difficult, but it is especially difficult when it comes to telling other people’s stories. And it is ferociously difficult when those others are tangled up in your history and you are tangled up in theirs." I would argue our stories as photographers and also as viewers/critics are always "tangled up in theirs" because the medium we work with creates an object in which multiple narrative claims are placed on the same visual information concurrently.

This is the alchemy of many critical arguments on photography: conflicts of narrative control over a single static space where multiple narratives exist together at the same time.
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Filtered Sight 

If you look at the candy aisle in the grocery store, what do you see? Well, it depends on who you are. A dentist sees future business, a marketer sees packaging decisions and a whiny kid and his parents see a battle zone. I, personally, see only candy corn.

All sight is filtered through life experience, interests, desire, needs and a whole lot more. We create an understanding consciously and unconsciously that fits our ideology within a specific temporal and spatial context and within a larger cultural ideology. How we see things reflects who we are, what we have experienced and where and when and with whom we see it. Pure sight does not exist or, as Ernst Gombrich put it, "The innocent eye is a myth." This applies as we make photographs, but equally as we look at those photographs and critique the photographs of others.

The elements of the image are unchanging; it is the readings of it that evolve based on the changing context of its viewing. Part of the duty of the critic is to navigate this inherent disjunction between creation and viewing contexts, to acknowledge what it is that we project onto older work today and to analyze photography in relation to the context it was made for, while also seeking to understand its relevance and meaning today.

As it applies to the photography of others, we are all today perfect moralists of the 20th century and understand how the ethical lines should have been drawn. And eventually all of us today, in the future, will look like stodgy reactionaries as we evolve socially. Today's progressive is tomorrow's conservative.

Looking again at Cole's piece, he rips McCurry for playing into tired stereotypes of a romantic India. There's a whole lotta truth to what he writes as we look at the full span of McCurry's thirty year career today. But while McCurry may have just edited his book India, much of the work inside – and his vision – was created in the 20th century. Cole, in his critique, applies 21st century ethics to 20th century work. In addition, he views from an art critical perspective work created to sell copies of a humanistic and romantic magazine.

Is that fair to McCurry? I would argue that it's not, because while what Cole writes I almost completely agree with, he neglects the larger framework of the conversation by failing to acknowledge his privilege of viewing the photographs from the higher moral ground and evolved ethical context that the passing of time has carried him to and he attacks work that was created for one viewing context with ideas developed in another.
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Index and Icon

What - or whom - are we arguing about exactly when we discuss the subject in a photograph? An object, as Hoek suggests in his piece, or a person? The person or a representation of that person? A truth or abstraction about whom that person is?

While there are many ways to approach those types of questions, Charles Peirce's trichotomy of signs, especially in this case the ideas of the index and the icon, is an interesting way that allows me to make a couple points. As for terms, index is the idea that a photograph has a one-to-one physical relationship with the world it represents. Icons are images or forms that carry a reduced schematic of what they represent, such as in the case of our conversation here about photographing subjects, a stick figure to represent a person.

Peirce, in his formulation of the trichotomy of signs, used photography as an example to illustrate the index, writing that "they are in certain respects exactly like the objects that they represent." Critic Rosalind Krauss cemented the use of "the index" in photography criticism with her 1977 book Notes on the Index. Spend half a day in a grad school critique and someone will mention indexicality.

An increasing number of practitioners, critics and everyday people, however, have shifted towards interacting with photographs as icons as we increasingly distance ourselves from the idea that the photograph relates one-to-one with reality. There has been an erosion of confidence in the truth-value of photographs beginning at least as early as the long-standing debate about the authenticity of Robert Capa's Death of a Loyalist Soldier and other World War II images. This loss of confidence was compounded with the arrival of the digital manipulation era. We see photography increasingly as we do a painting or printmaking print, an object that draws both from reality and the artist's participation in making it. This understanding of the gap between reality and photograph has pushed the idea of the index to the brink of irrelevance, and towards the idea of the photograph as icon.

At the same time, digital photography has become the new pictographic language. Through it we have adopted a set of iconic forms that we use to communicate to each other across instant platforms. On Instagram and Facebook we post informal sketches that repeat the same gestures, poses, typologies, framings, backgrounds and more. We scroll through vast amounts of this repeated visual material and the mind begins to do what it must to process so much raw information – increasingly we don't see the photograph, but rather the basic patterns of reduced information of iconic shorthand.

As we have lost faith in the indexicality of photographs, then, we have increasingly understood their distance from reality in ways that resemble Peirce's idea of the icon and we have also begun to use photography as an informal everyday language of icons. The process of this shift of the common idea of the photograph from index to icon, the incompleteness of the process and the various places we stand along the spectrum in accepting that process is one way to understand what causes heat in critiques about photographing others. There are a range of differing understandings among critics and photographers of what a photograph of a person actually is, what it can say, its capacity to hold truth-value and how to read it.
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Last Words

There's a great Ron Jude quote that's worth pulling in. He talks about the space between what photographs promise to deliver and what is actually communicated. It is inside this gap that we argue the conflicts surrounding photographing other people amidst the limitations of the medium to represent the complexities of other people with a crude machine.

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."


12.18.2013

Reading Shortlist 12.18.13

© Georgina Berkeley, untitled page from the Berkeley Album (1867/71), from the exhibition "Playing with Pictures:
The Art of the Victorian Photocollage"

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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AGMA Magazine, Playing With Pictures: The Art of the Victorian Photocollage." Some impressive works in this post of early mixed media work from high society women in the 1860s and 1870s. (Click on the words "Playing With Pictures" to get the gallery of images to open up.)

Laurie Anderson, Rolling Stone, Laurie Anderson's Farewell to Lou Reed. Nothing at all to do with photography, but a lot to do with life.

Capa at 100, International Center of Photography. A half-hour radio interview which is the only recording known of Robert Capa's voice. He discusses a trip to Russia, how a couple of his most famous images were made and how he came up with his name. Also includes one of the most awkward, non sequitur product placements I've ever heard.

© Jane Cooper, Original Caption: "This Area Is Known as Gay Hill near Stockbridge, Vermont. The Farm Was
Originally Built in the 1800's by Ephraim Twitchell, the Famous Vermont Bridge Builder 03/1974"

DOCUMERICA Project by the Environmental Protection Agency. This Flickr page of the U.S. National Archives houses over 15,000 images from the EPA funded Documerica project. The project, ongoing between 1971-1977, entailed contracting freelance photographers to capture images relating to environmental problems, EPA activities and everyday life in the 1970s. Photographers included David Alan Harvey and Danny Lyon.

© Barcroft Media via Getty Images

The Guardian, Liu Bolin, invisible man - in pictures. Not really photography either (beyond documenting his performances via the camera), but man, this guy is impressive.

Andrew Reid, EOSHD, Consumer DSLRs "dead in five years" I'm generally not very interested in talking about gear or gear articles and the points here may be a little extreme, but the coming changes to the camera market and camera development are going to affect all of us.



Sightsmap. Fascinating map of the density of photographs taken around the world.

Alec Soth, Little Brown Mushroom Blog, Popsicle #46: The letters of Sergio Larrain. Soth explores the idea of photographers giving up on photography through Aperture's Sergio Lorrain.

Susan Worsham, Fresh Air on Tumblr, Conversations with Margaret Daniel. I've been putting this hour-long audio compilation on while scanning or doing post-production the last month, just listening to Daniel talk. She could talk about anything and I'd listen.

Michael Zhang, PetaPixel, Video: Photographer Has Camera Lens Stolen From Around His Neck. Welp, that...that sucks.

4.20.2012

Opinion: Pantall, Colberg, Hoepker and Understanding Images

© Thomas Hoepker

Colin Pantall and Joerg Colberg have both recently discussed the above photograph taken by Magnum's Thomas Hoepker on September 11th, 2011.

Pantall uses the image to point to the problem of the narrow emotional range accepted in the responses of photographic subjects to a situation, as well as the difficulty many people have coping with something beyond the simplest of narratives in a photograph. I would continue his points by adding that there's a problem with the assumption that it is possible to come to any correct reading of the emotional state of photographic subjects and in believing we can correctly conclude the narrative of a photograph in any way.

Hoepker makes these very mistakes about his own image. In a New York Times op-ed column by Frank Rich, written in 2006 on the fifth anniversary of September 11th, he's quoted as saying about this image, "They were totally relaxed like any normal afternoon...It’s possible they lost people and cared, but they were not stirred by it." Slate writer David Plotz makes the same mistakes in a rejection of Rich's column: "The subjects are obviously engaged with each other, and they're almost certainly discussing the horrific event unfolding behind them. They have looked away from the towers for a moment not because they're bored with 9/11, but because they're citizens participating in the most important act in a democracy—civic debate...They came to this spot to watch their country's history unfold and to be with each other at a time of national emergency."

Hoepker and Plotz both assert singular, different, yet conclusive readings of what is going on in the image: "they were totally relaxed"..."they were not stirred"..."they have looked away...because"...and finally "they came to this spot to watch." These assertions of being able to give a factual reading of the events portrayed in the image is problematic; all conversation about a photograph needs to be framed as conjecture. Short of finding the subjects and photographer and asking, we cannot actually know what was happening or why an image was taken - and even their words can be questioned; memories are fickle, we all have agendas.

Colberg follows up on Pantall's post by asserting that a photographer's intentions can't be known and that we observe photographs with inherent biases: "We all like to think that the photographer’s intention inform the image and that when we look at a photograph we can see those intention. [sic] But if we ignore the simple fact that we have no way of knowing what the photographer’s intentions were (How would we know? All we have is a photograph), especially in a news context, we don’t just look at photographs, we look at them with our own sets of expectations (as Colin notes) and biases. We often see in photographs not what they show, but instead what we want to see."

I will add a question to the conversation - if the emotional state of the subjects and the narrative cannot be extracted from an image, and the photographer's intentions cannot be known, how about allegory and metaphor as a strategy for correctly reading images? Not if the word "correctly" is left in the sentence. Reading and concluding - or better yet, creating - the allegorical and metaphorical meaning in an image is informed by one's life experience and knowledge and a matter of subjective insights. As long as the observer remembers that their conclusions also remain in the realm of conjecture, however, metaphor and allegory can definitely be a way to analyze and discuss an image.

This is why I would take what I imagine is an unpopular position and defend Rich's column, even though I don't agree with his conclusions or his reading of the image. Unlike Hoepker and Plotz, Rich does not claim a truthful interpretation of the facts the image contains. Jonathan Jones writes in an article in The Guardian about the debate around Hoepker's image, "[Rich] saw in this undeniably troubling picture an allegory of America's failure to learn any deep lessons from that tragic day, to change or reform as a nation: 'The young people in Mr Hoepker's photo aren't necessarily callous. They're just American.'" And Plotz writes about Rich's column, "So they turned their backs on Manhattan for a second. A nice metaphor for Rich to exploit, but a cheap shot." That may be so, and we can attack the conclusion and the arguments Rich uses to construct it, but he avoids making conclusive factual statements about the image of the type that get both Hoepker and Plotz in trouble.

© Gregory Crewdson

Let's start to draw some conclusions from all of this with a few more questions.

If we agree it's not possible to know the true emotions or narrative of an image, nor the intentions of the photographer, and that allegory and metaphor need to be remembered as a subjective reading of an image, does that mean that Hoepker's image of 9/11 should be read in the same way as the above image by Gregory Crewdson?

Should all art photography, photojournalism and documentary photography be read in the same way?

Is a news image in The New York Times as "truthful" as one of Crewdson's constructions?

Do we know as little of the intentions of a advertising photographer making an image to sell a bar of soap as those of a photographer like Crewdson?

Is the answer that we just can't know anything about an image for sure, so all interpretations of it are equally valid?

I think Pantall gives us a way to answer these questions when he writes, "[We] want to reduce things to black and white and right and wrong dualities." To begin answering the questions above, we need to remind ourselves to avoid reducing our thinking about how to look at images to simple dualities - while going ahead and continuing to look at and discuss images. Photography does not allow us to make conclusive readings about images, yet it is part of our job as photographers, critics, curators, and writers on photography to attempt readings anyways. We investigate images and construct arguments for how an image could be read. We aggressively ask what is really going on, what the photographer's intentions are, what biases we have, and what meaning we can construct through allegory and metaphor. This is the foundation of using visual images for communication (and the root cause of really long grad school critiques).

© Nick Ut

Taking this point one more step, all readings of an image are not equally valid - it is not the case that because there is no photographic truth, all readings are therefore of equal value. The problem is that it's difficult to quantify the reasons why. A toddler does not deserve the same voice on an image's meaning as mine or yours. We have more experience looking at images, knowledge of context, life experience, and knowledge of history. My conclusion to all of this is we need to accept something I'll call spectrum reading. Spectrum reading would be the rejection of a duality that says because, for example, we can't know for sure the true emotional states of the children in the horrific Vietnam War image by Nick Ut seen above, they are therefore open to the same degree of speculation as the emotional states of the man and woman in the image by Crewdson. Or that the intentions of a photographer taking an image of a bar of soap are as vague as Crewdson's. Or that because we can't easily quantify the value of a particular response, that all are therefore equal.

We need to read the context of the image, take note of who the observer is, look at who is making the image and try to figure out why; we have to understand the accepted parameters for image manipulation in the media venue of the image, talk with friends and colleagues, etc...then we can make more (or less) intelligent arguments about an image and its meaning. The site Bag News regularly does a good job of this with political and news images. Pantall does this regularly on his site and did so here on this site a month ago looking at an image by the photographer Billy Monk. We can look for truth, argue about intention, divine metaphor - we just can't claim to be absolutely correct.

Lastly, I'm going to be a little more optimistic than both Pantall and Colberg on one final point. Pantall writes, "We are still not very sophisticated in our visual way of experiencing the world" and Colberg writes, "We don’t really understand photography." I'd like to suggest that although the ability to understand visual communication may not be as developed as with written communication, we're not where we were in decades past, either.

There has been a corrosion in the belief in the truth value of a photograph at least going back until World War II. John Szarkowski, the long-term director of New York's Museum of Modern Art, fundamentally refuted the ability of photography to explain large-scale public issues, such as Margaret Bourke-White's attempt to explain the effects of World War II in her photographic work. "Most issues of importance cannot be photographed," Szarkowski claimed, declaring the fields of photojournalism and documentary as non-effectual in his influential book, Mirrors and Windows (1978). His comments reflect a now long-standing trend towards doubt about photographic veracity which became widespread after World War II and continues today, an erosion of confidence represented by the debates about the authenticity of Robert Capa's Death of a Loyalist Soldier (below) and other World War II images. This loss of confidence has helped to create a distance between documentary photography and photojournalism and their traditional roles, facilitating their consideration as works of art or personal expression, an interesting conversation beyond the scope of this particular post.

© Robert Capa, Death of a Loyalist Soldier

This erosion of confidence in the truth of photographs is also seen in the almost immediate questions we have around the authenticity of an image like the one below. We see it, we question it's truthfulness. As the manipulation of photographs has grown, so has our own skepticism and disbelief - that is the foundation for a more sophisticated reading of images in our culture, an advancement in ability. We now largely understand that, "A snapshot can make mourners attending a funeral look like they're having a party," as Walter Sipser - the man on the right in Hoepker's photograph - wrote after reading Hoepker's comments on the image and Rich's column. We're still not a visually literate society, but we have a wider understanding of the power, lies, and meanings of images now than we did before.

Uncredited image from the Facebook page of "All Things METAL \m/"