Category Archives: Learning Log

Dayanita Singh – Go Away Closer

© Dayanita Singh – Go Away Closer

Dayanita Singh’s book Go Away Closer is described as a novel without words, a tale of opposites, connecting personal losses with collective sadness. The series was originally produced for an exhibition, with the images in museum style display cabinets that could be arranged in a multitude of ways. The secondary production in a small photobook of 40 images has, to some extent, confined them, settled the images into a specific configuration. Singh does not add any text or titles to explain the meanings. In an interview Singh has said that she actively ‘withholds’ narrative information (Rafa, 2013). The images are a selection of portraits, empty interiors, and close ups. Some, like the starting image in the book,a young girl lying on a bed, are acutely personal, other like the ending image of wet pavement, seem distanced. There is no story other than an overall feeling of change and despair, loss and mourning. But I am not Indian. Maybe the images would not read that way to someone from her culture. In an interview or the Guardian Singh says, ‘Go Away Closer is what happens between people: I can’t live with you, I can’t live without you’  and also ‘that there was a more interesting way to edit photographs – not through an obvious “theme” but through what’s going on intuitively or subconsciously’ (Malone, 2013).

Singh has moved from creating fixed exhibitions to what she calls her ‘museums’. These consist of groups of related images that are placed within wooden structures of 30 – 40 images, but these can be changed out for other images, and she may change them even within a single show. The set becomes a reflection of her feelings at the time, not a constant and unchanging one.

© Dayanita Singh

Her online blog (Singh, n.d.) made fascinating reading giving advice to new photographers, details of her thought processes about the development of her museums and writings about her work from others. The letter by Rilke that she quotes gives very pertinent advice to anyone engaged in a creative process, but especially to anyone lacking confidence in their own self worth as an artist.  ‘So, dear Sir, I can’t give you any advice but this: to go into yourself and see how deep the place is from which your life flows; at its source you will find the answer to, the question of whether you must create. Accept that answer, just as it is given to you, without trying to interpret it. Perhaps you will discover that you are called to be an artist. Then take that destiny upon yourself, and bear it, its burden and its greatness, without ever asking what reward might come from outside. For the creator must be a world for himself and must find everything in himself and in Nature, to whom his whole life is devoted.’ (Rilke, 1934).

Reference list:

Malone, T. (2013) ‘Dayanita Singh’s best photograph – a sulking schoolgirl’ In: The Guardian 10 October 2013 [online] At: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2013/oct/10/dayanita-singh-best-photograph-schoolgirl

Raza, N. (2013) ‘Go Away Closer’, Dayanita Singh, 2007. At: https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/singh-go-away-closer-t14176 (Accessed on 20 April 2020)

Rilke, R.M. (1934) Letters to a young poet. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.

Singh, D. (2007) Go Away Closer. Göttingen, Germany: Steidle.

Singh, D. (s.d.) Blog – Dayanita Singh. At: http://dayanitasingh.net/blog/ (Accessed on 20 April 2020)

 

Julia Borissova – white blonde

 

© Julia Borissova – white blonde

Julia Borissova in White Blonde (Borissova, 2018) is telling a story about Antarctica – she says, ‘though my series I aimed to convey a feeling of he hostile and unfamiliar environment of the South Pole, creating images where the geographic reality give way to the space of dream’. She has used a combination of archival photographs, found objects and self images to explore personal and collective history. The book is short, consisting of just over 20 images. Some are full bleed, some across 2 pages and other overlap each other. They are given consistency by their tonal range, whites, pale blues, greys, beiges and black. The only bright colour (red) is in the additional print sent with the book which shows crimson folded hearts with a portrait of a woman – I assumed it was a self-portrait however now know it is actually part of Borissova’s series Lullaby for a Bride. Most of the images are blurred or overlaid with what looks like ice. In reality Borissova did actually freeze the images to get this effect, ‘to be part of the landscape to express a sense of awareness of time’ (Arena, s.d.). Borissova calls her self-portraits ‘icebergs’. The overall feeling is of age, confusion, and exhaustion in a strange landscape. It is not clear whether or not Borissova has visited Antarctica, although I do not think so.

Her images are available in the book white blonde, on her website as single images and as a slideshow. Interestingly, the order of the images is different between the book and the slideshow, they are often cropped differently (all the images in the slideshow are square and this was the original format) and not all images occur in both. The book and the slideshow are complimentary, not equal but additive.

The book requires careful examination. On my first viewing I found if difficult to follow. Some of the images are beautiful, others are confusing, some are clear, some are abstract. On multiple views I found myself sucked into the cold and the ice. They are a meditation rather than a clear story and are worth reviewing time and again.

With thanks to Julia Borissova for additional information and pointing me towards the review on Landscape Stories.

© Julia Borissova – white blonde

References:

Arena, G. (s.d.) Landscape Stories | Julia Borissova – Nautilus // Let Me Fall Again // White Blonde. At: http://magazine.landscapestories.net/en/books/book-reviews/julia-borissova (Accessed  20/05/2020).

Borissova, J. (2018). White blonde. S.L.: Bessard.

Borissova, J. (n.d.). White Blonde. [online] http://www.juliaborissova.ru. Available at: http://www.juliaborissova.ru/Julia_Borissova_PhotoSite/Projects/Pages/White_Blonde.html [Accessed 17 Apr. 2020].

Context and Narrative – Maria Short

Context and Narrative by Maria Short looks at how  the planned purpose of an image can alter how you take it and how your visual language needs to vary depending on the circumstance.

The photograph:

  • How you show the ‘truth’ depends on the intended purpose of the image
  • A photo can go beyond a simple recording and take on a different personal meaning
  • Need to consider the context, social commentary, photojournalism, the personal experiences of the photographer
  • What is the ’truth’ in a constructed image? Can it be ‘deeper’?
  • You need to be both engaged with the subject and detached to allow for objectivity
  • Need to read the brief carefully and plan what you are doing if there is limited time
  • For a self-directed brief it may take of in unexpected directions
  • The context within which the photo will be seen is crucial, remember the culture may be different
  • Consider how the images relate to each other
  • There may be a need to make repeated visits to a place to learn the nuances before even starting to take pictures

Subject:

  • Need to be passionate about something and committed
  • What do you want to show? Why does it need saying? Why a photo?
  • Need for as full as possible understanding of your subject – leads to insight
  • What camera format will work best? How do you avoid being over intrusive?
  • Need for both humanity and vision, shows the things that are inevitably absent (smell, noise, quietness)
  • Look to create empathy – see Stuart Griffiths – Homeless Ex-Service

Audience:

  • The photographer should seek an audience which will accept his vision (Brodovitch) – How?
  • Think about what the image is intended to show, how you want the viewer to feel
  • Need for truthful communication – authenticity
  • Be aware of the attitude of potential viewers, and their understanding of the subject
  • Context and how do you tell it?
  • Shape, size and ordering of images inform a series
  • The photo is a subjective impression of what the photographer sees – not someone else’s vision

Narrative:

  • A beginning, a middle and an end – sometimes
  • Can be linear – but does not have to be
  • Is it a typology? A photo essay? Or what
  • Is the sequence crucial – or could the images work as standalone frames?
  • Look for coherence – visual continuity with lighting and tonal range, consider the format
  • Is the story sequential – or several snippets that link together?
  • Do you have control of the order the images are seen in?
  • Do all the images need to be the same size? What about pairs, or triptychs?
  • Need to be clear about the intention for the project
  • A single image can also be a narrative – it might be taken as a ‘one-off’ or actually originally have been part of a series
  • The more the photographer is absorbed in the moment (and the more they understand the process) the more likely an image is to tell a story – the unconscious takes over
  • Kim Sweet – the average subject, need to experiment and explore the idea

Signs and Symbols:

  • Saussure – sign is a signifier (form) and the signified (concept it represents)
  • Pierce – representamen (form) + interpretant (sense made of it) + an object to which the sign reference
  • Barthes – studium + punctum
  • Signs can trigger memories, can explain an image
  • Symbol represents something, an icon resembles it
  • Indexicality – a photo is a trace (therefore notions of truth)
  • Signs and symbols included in images need to be considered – may or may not be planned
  • They will influence how a viewer reads the image
  • What you understand from your own image is crucial – if you don’t understand it how can others
  • Signs and symbols can control the pace of a narrative

Text:

  • Might be a simple informative caption, or might be an essay, or a book! Think what is needed
  • Think about context of viewing
  • Draw on literature as part of the research either using as quotes or getting ideas
  • Use as a multidimensional addition to work
  • Does the image need the text to make sense?
  • What about the use of text within the images, as part of the photo?
  • Use of handwriting (very different from print)
  • Use of a diary format

Reference:

Short, M. (2018). Context and Narrative. London; New York: Bloomsbury Visual Arts.

David Hevey – The Disabled Century

David Hevey is a producer, photographer and storyteller. He is also the director for The National Disability Arts Collection and Archive. He has written books and made films. Among the films is a 3-part series ‘The Disabled Century’ that was made for the BBC in 2012. It can be watched in full on his website. This film concentrates on physical disability, cerebral palsy, dwarfism, hearing impairment although there is also some mention of mental health problems including bipolar disorder and PTSD. The 3 episodes can be seen here:

Viewing

Episode 1 – pre 1945

  • Shocking images on film of people with ‘shell shock’ (PTSD) from WWI – images that would rarely be taken now, associated with talk by ex ambulance driver about his memories
  • Images from the time on film interspersed with stills and films of people now and their memories
  • “That’s what happens with war -Nobody wants them”
  • Talks about people ‘locked away’ under 1931 Mental Defective Act – intercutting film of the past with the present day – telling what happened and how he felt
  • Deaf and dumb also sent away, segregation ‘considered caring’
  • Operations to ‘fix’ Dwarfism – to stretch people – effectively torture
  • Tended to have a poor prognosis given especially about life extent (often far from accurate).
  • Disabled workers employed in WWII – often to first work they were given

Photography – mixture of grainy film as lots of harrowing images, mainly of groups or from a distance  which emphasised the differences and the oddities and new close-ups which showed the humanity, often focusing on only parts of the faces, hands or body, often overlayered with film shots of what was happening at the time. Still unsparing – but somehow more human. Is that because you are hearing the story in the people’s own voices?

Episode 2 – 1945 – 1969

  • Disabled veterans were heroes, society owed much, developed plastic surgery to treat burns
  • NHS included support for disabled people – created a system of state-run homes/hospitals
  • Many disabled had no choice about whether or not hey would go to an institution, spent years there, lonely and bored
  • Treated as though ‘we were nothing’
  • Thalidomide – syringomyelia – led to issues about compensation and should you be made to wear artificial limbs
  • Investigations for medical curiosity ‘I felt that I was property …. A bit like a lab animal’
  • Started to see the treatment of disability as an injustice

Pictures of the past interlaced with personal stories and reminisces. Traumatic stories of punishment and treatment. Wards cramped. Beds on top of each other. very aware of the possibility of death (both own and others). People talking are very eloquent – makes a mockery of the assumption of uselessness. Pictures still the extreme contrast of close-up now and distance images from the past. Shows a stunning image of a thalidomide lady surrounded by artificial legs, telling her story.

Episode 3 – 1970 – the present

  • Talking about the grim reality of mental health wards in the 70’s
  • Not allowed to think or make choices
  • But leaving could be a shock after a life in an institution, leaving home, leaving friends
  • Care in the community was lacking in resources
  • Need for self acceptance and knowledge of who you were, important to meet other people
  • 1995 disability discrimination act – but no enforcement
  • “Here I am, you have to deal with me”
  • “We are proud of ourselves”
  • But, in reality, few jobs, much poverty and much to little support.

Ongoing contrast between old images and films shots, grainy, often in B/W, again distance shots versus close-up, sharp focus, colour of modern storytellers. Often overlaid, old on new, multiple sounds tracks implying the confusion of what happened to many people. Dark and light, flashing lights and images. Real life stories on fantastical (horrific) images that are hard to believe. Parts of faces, parts of bodies – implying need to look closely, to concentrate.

Conclusion:

The overall series is hard to watch, makes for a grim story of disability in the past, and, unfortunately, also in the present. The series was made nearly a decade ago – but little has changed. Most people continue to ignore the disabled, the resources are limited and there is little public understanding.

Reference list:

Hevey, D. (s.d.) Viewing. At: http://davidhevey.com/viewing/ (Accessed on 10 April 2020)

Regular reflections March 2 / April 1

This is an overlap March/ April. Things remain strange because of Covid and self-isolation. You would think that that would make it easier to work – but in practice my concentration is poor, and I am so easily distracted. Everybody is posting things to do, things to watch, virtual tours of museums and galleries – and its far to easy to flip from one thing to another rather than any serious thinking.

Reading (and watching):

  • I am re-reading Context and Narrative for background for A3
  • Still reading about general art theory to back up my woeful lack of knowledge
  • Finished this issue of Aperture – on House and Home – some interesting stuff on home especially the article on the work of Ed Panar Walking through Walker Evans
  • Lisa Barnard – The Canary and the Hammer – really fascinating documentary type work on the extort of gold. Shows how it is possible to interweave a multitude of threads into one coherent story, includes historical images and documents alongside Barnard’s own pictures and writing
  • Margaret Landsink – Borders of Nothingingness – On the Mend – a fascinating and beautiful book on her relationship with her daughter
  • Polly Bradon’s books on ASD and LD – relevant for redo of A2
  • Watched the James Fox series on art – The Age of the Image, absolutely fascinating and very useful. Will watch again and take some notes. Also need to follow the links to the OU about whether or not we can trust what we see.
  • Watched episode 1 of David Hevey’s documentary on Disability – absolutely harrowing.
  • Rebooked at work of Arbus in the context of disability
  • Started reading Creative Vision by Jeremy Webb. An old(ish) book, but really interesting for getting ideas of different ways of working

Thinking and doing:

  • Have managed to redo A2 using the ASD family images and written it up and posted on the back of my report from tutor – which was a fair but damming!
  • Working on sorting out my multiplicity of images on DWARF for A3
  • Missed the bi-weekly hangout for photography – I need to be much more organised and put them in my diary, so I remember them
  • Started on a Cousera course on modern art for more background understanding

Photography:

  • Now working on a ‘Lockdown diary’ taking a daily series of images
    • Where I am in the house at 1200
    • Weather outside at 1200 (or as near as possible) taken of the sky and a tree from the same place
    • Screen shot of the news and the weather (also both at 1200)
    • A piece of still life, experimenting with different places, different methods and photoshop effects
    • If I manage outside – a picture that shows life in isolation, deserted park, one person in the distance etc
  • I am also linking this with a poem I have read and a story from 365 days

 

 

Diane Arbus

Diane Arbus (1923-1971) was an American photographer who, according to Wikipedia (!) ‘worked to normalise marginalised groups and highlight the importance of proper representation of all people’. (Wikipedia contributors, 2019). Her work has become controversial simply because of that. She called the people she photographed her ‘singular people’ and they were often different, disabled (both physically and mentally) or had other things that set them aside from high society: nudists, transvestites, Jews. Her images are often stark, usually graphic and highly revealing. I have looked at her work before in Self Evidence – Woodman, Arbus and Mapplethorpe (after seeing an exhibition) and  Reading Images (in response to a research question).

Over years I have worked with people with a range of disabilities similar to those Arbus photographed and find her images both disturbing and tender. How I interpret them depends on my mood. On one day I think “How could she” and on another I think “that is perfect”. In the book ‘diane arbus’ (Arbus and Arbus, 1990) she is quoted as saying, “You see someone on the street and essentially what you notice about them is the flaw”  and “there are certain evasions, certain nicenesses that I think you have to get out of” and “Freaks was a thing I photographed a lot. It was one of the first things I photographed and it had a terrific kind of excitement for me…. they made me feel a mixture of shame and awe…. they’ve already passed their test in life. They’re aristocrats” and “I work from awkwardness, by that I mean I don’t like to arrange things. If I stand in front of something instead of arranging it, I arrange myself”. On looking though the images in that book the odd thing that struck me was that the happiest, and most honest, smiles were in the images of the people with learning disabilities.

csm_Lempertz-1041-106-Photography-Diane-Arbus-Untitled-2-_f803013e78

Her images are black and white (although colour film was available), square format (a Rollei) and usually low key. Often the most important part of the image is dark. Most of the portraits are taken full face on, with the subject looking straight at her – has she actually arranged them? Or is this just how people expect to be photographed?

She gave the marginalised people a voice, whether or not it was a voice that they would have chosen is an interesting question, but a least she engaged with them rather than ignoring them.

References:

Arbus, D. and Arbus, D. (1990). Diane Arbus. London: Bloomsbury.

Wikipedia Contributors (2019). Diane Arbus. [online] Wikipedia. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_Arbus [Accessed 25 Mar. 2019].

Assignment 2 – Response to tutor’s report

I have now received a very comprehensive formal review on assignment 2 from my tutor. Usually I find a face-to-face feedback (via hangout or similar) more helpful, but that was not possible this time, however the amount of information given was extensive.

Overall, he seemed pleased, but with some caveats.

The tutor’s comments are blue, my responses black

The assignment:

  • However, (taking sentiment out) I do feel that better planning and a more considered use of the set-up would have resulted in a more consistent series of images.
    • I totally agree with this. I ended up taking the images in a rush, partly because of the endless delays on the shoot due to illness and weather, partly because Sam was clearly getting bored. I had planned on trying to redo them, but again this was delayed and then became impossible
  • I know it isn’t your assignment submission but I feel that the project you also worked upon with the autistic couple and baby is really interesting and shows great potential. I’m not sure how much you have shot (70?) and you decided against inclusion as assignment due to the studio brief but personally I find these images (potentially as I can only see 12) stronger and more engaging. They feel like they are born out of a more collaborative process and less intrusive, there is empathy but also distance and rawness to the images
    • I also felt that these images were stronger, I had a good, but not too close, relationship with the family. I didn’t use them initially in the assignment as I was trying to keep to the ‘studio’ part of the brief. I will have another look at them and work them up as a set.

Research:

  • A positive response here. Helpful to know that the ‘regular reflections’ make sense.

Learning log:

  • My only concern is that there is so much of it in different folders and the future assessment team would have difficultly viewing it all. Make sure that the more relevant folders such as research are kept up to date with the most relevant information
    • I struggle with this. Maybe everything that is directly related to the assignments should go in the ‘research’ folder, and everything else divided up.

Suggested reading:

  • Lots of useful links given here. More reading!

Thanks to my tutor for his helpful advice.

Borders of Nothingness – On the Mend

Infinity
© Margaret Lansink

Margaret Lansink is a Dutch photographer who lives in a small village near Amsterdam. She was one of a very large family and uses her camera to connect with her emotions. She, according to her artist’s statement, often feels like a spectator of a play. Her images are intuitive, blurred and misty, full of emotion. Her new book Borders of Nothingness – On the Mend grew out of her estrangement from her daughter and subsequent reconnection (although you do not learn whether or not it was/is a success). In the introduction it says ‘In the infinite flow of everything, people come and go in our lives. While the presence of some can be so subtle that we hardly register when it begins or ends, with others its far clearer: they enter, or leave, with a bang’ (Lansink, 2020). In her interview for Leica, Lansink says, ‘Borders of nothingness is my way of telling people that life is not always what you expect from it’ (Klink, 2018).

The book is small, 14 x 18.5 cm and tactile. The original edition of 50 copies was hand bound in a Japanese style, the edition I have is still beautiful, although without the gold leaf collage of the original. The images are black and white, silver and gold and their lack of clarity makes one dream of what has happened and what might be. They are subtle, haunting, and I have found myself going back over and over to read slightly different stories.

I bought this for myself to break the miseries of isolation. It was well worth the price.

_Natsukahii

Lansink’s website shows more of the images and is worth a look both for this and her earlier series which are photographed in a similar style.

Reference list:

Klink, D. (2018) Margaret Lansink – Borders of Nothingness | LFI Blog. At: https://lfi-online.de/ceemes/en/blog/margaret-lansink-borders-of-nothingness-1641.html (Accessed on 26 March 2020)

Lansink, M. (2020) Borders of Nothingness – On the Mend. Belgium: Ibasho.

Lansink, M. (s.d.) margaretlansink. At: https://margaretlansink.com/ (Accessed on 26 March 2020)

 

Regular Reflections- March 1

I am well behind with my updates at present because of the general world chaos! However, that dories not mean that I have not been plodding on. Social isolation is difficult, not just not seeing people but actually functioning in an ordered manner.

Reading:

  • Project Cleansweep – fascinating and very scary book about military use of land in Britain
  • Marianne Hirsh – Family Frames, very dense book on memory and use of photo in memory work. Eventually finished it and made (very long) notes
  • Also re-read the work on the Hardman Collection by Keith Roberts
  • Daniel Chandlers work on the gaze – this was actually very helpful in my thinking process
  • Reading latest Aperture magazine – House and home – much of which is on architecture
  • Natural Light II (and some of the associated books)

Thinking and doing:

  • Spent a lot of time thinking about how I can do work with the present issues of social isolation. I am pretty much house bound at present, which makes taking pictures of people other than my long-suffering family very difficult. Maybe I need to invest in a very long lens and stand on the balcony!
  • I bought an old room screen that has decoupage (in a poor state) – which I am thinking about using as a backdrop for some inside images
  • Idea for a new project
    • Our local park has a lot of memorial benches. Can I take images of the benches and/or the nameplates and/or the settings and somehow use them in work about collective memory?
  • I attended the bi-weekly hangout for the photography course for the first time – interesting although just sat and listened today, it was useful though to be in contact with other people
  • Planned to attend the zoom on assignments – but missed it – that is the issue with the lack of structure. However, have downloaded to PDF and will look at the advice in detail

Photography:

  • Spent the first week of isolation trying to take regular hourly inside images, using my mobile phone and a square format
    • Where I was in the house
    • A selfie
  • I found this harder to do than I expected as, even with using a timer I tended to forget to take the images, and also they tended to be very repetitive as I was mostly inside either in the living room or at my desk. However, I think this is a piece of work that could possibly be repeated, or even used as is for an example of moving/lining in a confined space
  • I also spent time playing with photoshop and layered all the selfies for each day together to make a composite image – this was definitely interesting. I would not say that they make me look my best – but interesting.
  • untitled (3 of 7)
  • Continued to take the images of DWARF that I will use for assignment 3. Good thing I did as I now cannot get them as closed for foreseeable future.
  • Took a series of images of son and husband for the gaze exercise. Remarkably difficult to get family to pose and do what you are asking rather than what they think you want!

Marianne Hirsch – Family Frames

I read the book Family Frames, photography, narrative and postmemory while inside during a period of ‘social isolation’. I admit that I might not otherwise have managed to finish it in one sitting (albite over several days) because of its complexity.  The book is a combination of an autobiography, a discussion of others work; written, photographic and cinematic and a description of how Hirsh sees both photography and writing as a way to describe memories of yourself, postmemories (of the past), and ways of making portraits (allo-portraits) by combining all of these together. It is interlaced with feminist and sociological theories and also other people’s thoughts on photography (specifically Barthes). Much of the book is based on ways of imagining the Holocaust and its description in photography and writing. It ended by raising more questions in my mind than it resolved – but maybe all books should do this.

While I was reading this, I walked around our local park and looked at the memorial benches in the formal garden. They all have a simple plaque, with a name, a date and sometimes a few additional words. I knew none of the people commemorated – but they still brought back memories of my own. These are family memories in themselves.

Some notes from this (very complex) book and added thoughts in italics.

Family frames:

  • Talks about Barthes and the picture of his mother that he refused to show. Gazes circulate. The mother becomes the child. The punctum is private. Text and image together tell a story. The photo is linked by an umbilical cord to the viewer. The referent (the thing that was photographed) is/was present and now absent. ‘Photographs, as the only material traces of an irrecoverable past, derive their power and their important cultural role from their embeddedness in the fundamental rites of family life’ (p.5). The photograph is evidence. It shows time.
  • Eastman production of Kodak was aimed at everyone – the means to tell a family story. It tells the family myth, a collaboration between photographer and the viewer. The photograph often shows what we wish – not was actually was.
  • Looking within a family is mutual – self and other, subject and object. How do we describe this? But what about the external gaze? Each culture has an ideal – and the images are read though that.
  • ‘Family photography can operate at this junction between personal memory and social history, between public myth and personal unconscious’ (Holland and Spence, 1991).

Mourning and post memory:

  • Pictures can become emblems, especially if disseminated widely (both for the family, and wider world)
  • Photographs represent both life and death; note Sontag quote ‘Photographs state the innocence, the vulnerability of lives heading towards their own destruction and this link between photography and death haunts all photos of people’ (Sontag, 1978) v. Barthes connection to life (umbilical cord)
  • Pictures can show horror (holocaust, but also any major trauma) – context helps. The horror is in the imagination of what happened and also the ‘might-have-been’. Family images do not always make for painless reading. I have a selection of images from my mother’s time in Germany in WWII having a great time with the army – her memories were of fun – but not linked to anything else occurring then.
  • Postmemory – the memory of a child of something that happened before they were born, mediated by stories from the past, especially traumatic ones. Memory itself is ‘a double-coded system of mental storage and retrieval’ quoted from W.T.J. Mitchell (p.22)
  • Photographs as leftovers, fragments, building blocks!
  • Does an image anesthetize horror – and therefore make it less (especially in the context of the amount of truly horrific ‘fantasy’ films and novels circulating at present). Are people desensitised by this as much as by repeated looking?
  • Photos can keep memory alive – but a shrine – any picture will be altered by other memories, altered by words (especially if modulated via someone else’s memory). The photo as a memento mori. The living may compete with the photo (and can never win). A photo can stand in for anyone (especially if indistinct).

Reframing the human family romance:

  • Family images act to consolidate the group – it may include ‘guests’ but they still remain ‘other’. There will be a familial gaze. Much photography has a function o support the family group. Photos are taken of the ’best bits’.
  • Photography came to show the idea of a global human family – the Family of Man, a ‘universal brotherhood’. A post-war attempt to show human universality.
  • The freezing of the image acts to perpetuate a myth of the family as stable and universal (very much a Western view) – a nuclear family. A romance. An ideal.
  • The family is constituted by ‘familial’ looks, the family album makes the relationship (or the shoe box of pictures) – the idea of a back and forward gaze – ‘the mirror sees you’. But how does that work in the context of an exhibition? Steichen’s idea of producing a sense that ‘everybody is the same’ depended on the photo’s being of individuals, seemingly private rather than public, a fantasy of love (although all white and heterosexual).
  • How does the fantasy of love fit against the images of war? How do the different races show similarity? Or does it actually point out the differences (and the American/European feeling of superiority)? ‘They can become like us, but we don’t have to become like them’ (p.58). Why are most of the photographers American or European even when the subject was not?
  • Paula Rabinowitz – “the story that seeks to ‘know’ though what it can ‘see’ of the other finds, not the other, but itself” (Rabinowitz, 1992) very relevant to identity and looking at images of other people
  • There is not a simple/single notion of a human family (true when she wrote this in the ‘90’s, even more so today in the 2020’s)
  • How are images different if they are taken by the person themselves rather than an outsider? What would they choose to show? (How much can you immerse yourself in another culture?). What does someone of another culture say about you?

Masking the Subject:

  • What do photos of relations taken many years ago tell you? How do they link with the people you know? What do they tell you about yourself and your relationship to them? Do they become autobiographical? How is it affected by history – both world history and family stories?
  • The familial look defines a boundary, an idea. The inclusion of people within your story is due to your interpretation, and only yours.
  • Family pictures can be self portraits, self portraits include the other
  • As we pose we assume masks, as we read the image we project masks (ideological frames) onto the image (are they the same?). Whose face are we photographing?
  • Lacoue-Labarthe’s idea of the ‘allo-portrait’, subject exists in time as “other”, as a mirror (Lacan’s theory), as a construction of the self, externally recognised, and as a previous self that was taken at a specific moment in time.
  • Do relationships construct the universal artist with ‘the power to express universal feelings’?
  • Different theoretical frameworks allow different understandings of images (all could be correct, or at least, equally valid)
  • What happens when you actually wear a mask? (Lucybelle Crater), becomes surreal, comic – but does the relationship stay? The images were taken in the lead up to death – and have become allo-portraits, self-images.
  • We all function as both subjects and objects in a ‘complex visual field not entirely determined by the gaze, but also the product of a series of more individual , local and contingent looks, which are mutually constitutive, reversible and reciprocal’ (p. 102).
  • Reading is affected by race, gender, class, historical moment, age, nationality etc
  • Lacan – looking and being looked at are identical processes
  • Images can be used to question, looked at alongside others, talked to, tell stories – they are not the truth always
  • Sherman’s images do not show a familial look – why not? And does it remain a human subject?

Unconscious optics:

  • Why do we put up family images? What do they mean? what do they tell us? Are we more likely to put us family pictures or other objects that are linked with earlier stages of our lives?
  • Optical processes that are invisible to the eye can be seen by the camera. It can expose hidden dimensions of actions, tension in photographs between flatness and illusion of depth, between what it des reveal and what it does not
  • Family pictures can be read differently by different family members and also over time (re novel Family Pictures)
  • Family memory is both shared and vulnerable, exposed in photos. ‘The mystery of the family’.
  • Jo Spence’s work on constructing and reconstructing images and phototherapy (need to read more of her work first hand) – her project is ‘begin to re-imag(in)e who we are’, talks about absence of photos that show much of her life. Using family photos in therapy – giving permission to make the stories work in our interest, also taking images that can allow memory to become conscious
  • Images of illness, images of sexuality – allowing them, making them real.
  • Carrie May Weems – reversing the traditional gaze of white people looking at black as poor etc, concentrates on the unseen, absence as well as presence
  • The camera can be a space for both reflection and self-reflection – you look at yourself
  • Can use a mixture of text and images to tell the story, one fills the gaps in the other, may have an incongruity – but that adds another layer

Maternal exposures:

  • Mann’s images of her children – controversial/beautiful/eerie/disturbing – loving images by a mother of her own children. How does the ‘position of power’ affect the maternal role?
  • What are the social pressures on mothers who want to be artists? And how does this affect the family dynamics and the type of photos taken?
  • Are the images of children ‘allo-portraits’ of the mother rather than representations of childhood?
  • How does it impact on the child to see themselves reflected in the lens of the camera rather than in the mother’s eyes? What are the implications for their relationship? Is the mother taking pictures to recreate her own childhood?
  • How much control does the child have? Every picture of a child is, too some extent, a picture of the mother. How vulnerable is the mother?
  • Where does the father fit into this (CarlVision), or the foetal image?
  • What happens when there are no family pictures? does it stop you understanding your history?

Resisting Images:

  • Family images/albums show the past – but does that make us happier?
  • Images and stories can be manipulated to reveal alternative stories, reinventions of the events and the social roles
  • Can you erase parts of the images, tell a part story, join them together again? A different start, a tabula rasa
  • Not all memories have photos, could have been taken but wasn’t! Can you (should you) construct an image to match them, words? Images? Collage?
  • Mutilating images may reveal an underlying anger, a rage (rage, rage against the dying of the light)
  • Cutting up images lets you out of the family frame (see Novak for examples)
  • A ‘maker and reader of images…. can make a space for see[ing] differently…. she can also reveal, through splits and contradictions, through incomplete suturing, the complicated and painful process of identity’ (p.215)

Pictures of a displaced girlhood:

  • Translation from child to adolescence can (usually is) be traumatic
  • Pictures can mediate the changes
  • Autobiographical reading can act as a pre-text, an ‘allo-portrait’, with shared resemblances
  • Do all people who have had a form of displacement end up ‘on the border’? In a shifting space.

Past lives:

  • How do past lives in the family, our experiences of their history affect our views of the world? Their stories (if they tell them) occupy a place in our childhood (and if they don’t, there is a gap) . Is there a sense of exile?
  • What about mourning, grief, rage, parental trauma, ‘absent memory’?
  • Are the actually too many stories? Leaving those who come after to wander, disenfranchised (from Nadine Fresco, p.245)
  • Memorial book as acts of witness, public mourning
  • If you alter an image does it still maintain its indexical nature? Or does the changes of reference take it away (thinking about Boltanski’s work on the holocaust and aftereffects)

References and suggested reading:

Barthes, R. (1988) Camera lucida : reflections on photography. New York: The Noonday Press.

Hirsch, M. (1997) Family Frames, photography, narrative and postmemory. London: Harvard College.

Holland, P. and Spence, J. (1991) Family snaps : the meanings of domestic photography. London: Virago.

Kelsey, R. et al. (2019) Vision & Justice: Around the Kitchen Table – Aperture Foundation. At: https://aperture.org/blog/vision-justice-around-kitchen-table/

Norval, E. (2018) Ralph Eugene Meatyard – Anything But Normal. At: https://www.compulsivecontents.com/detail-event/ralph-eugene-meatyard-anything-but-normal/ (Accessed on 20 March 2020)

Novak, L. (2020) Lorie Novak. At: https://www.lorienovak.com/ (Accessed on 20 March 2020)

Rabinowitz, P. (1992) ‘Voyeurism and Class Consciousness: James Agee and Walker Evans, “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men”’ In: Cultural Critique (21) p.143.

Sontag, S. (1978) On Photography. London: Allen Lane.

Spence, J. (1988) Putting myself in the picture : a political, personal, and photographic autobiography. Seattle, Washington: Real Comet Press.

Spence, J. and Dennet, T. (2005) Jo Spence : beyond the perfect image. Photography, subjectivity, antagonism. Barcelona: Museu D’art Contemporani De Barcelona.