Archive for November 13th, 2008

13
Nov
08

Sontag, Susan. “Photography: A Little Summa”

“5. In a modern society, images made by cameras are the principal access to realities of which we have no direct experience. And we are expected to receive and to register an unlimited number of images of what we don’t directly experience. The camera defines for us what we allow to be “real” – and it continually pushes forward the boundary of the real. Photographers are particularly admired if they reveal hidden truths about themselves or less than fully reported social conflicts in societies both near and far from where the viewer lives.

Sontag, Susan. “Photography: A Little Summa,” in Sontag, Susan. At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches. London: Hamish Hamilton, 2007, p. 125.

13
Nov
08

Diane Arbus photograph

Diane Arbus. "Untitled" 1970 - 1971

Diane Arbus. "Untitled" 1970 - 1971

13
Nov
08

Eugene Atget photograph

 

Eugene Atget. "Au Tambour, 63 quai de la Tournelle" 1908

Eugene Atget. "Au Tambour, 63 quai de la Tournelle" 1908

13
Nov
08

Edward S. Curtis photograph

 

Edward S Curtis. "Nuhlihahla-Qagyuhl" nd

Edward S Curtis. “Nuhlihahla-Qagyuhl” nd

13
Nov
08

Edward S. Curtis: Visions of the First Americans (with Eugene Atget and Diane Arbus)

Following my thoughts on the series ‘The First Australians’ on SBS we have this wonderful coffee table book of photographs: ‘Edward S. Curtis: Visions of the First Americans’ with images taken from his seminal 20 volume work ‘The North American Indian’.

Curtis worked on the project from 1906 to 1927 hauling his large format glass plate camera across the United States much as Eugene Atget did at roughly the same time in Paris, taking photographs of the old city and its hotels, shops, parks and gardens. Atget died in 1927 with his art recognised by few whilst Curtis lived on into the 1950’s, dying in obscurity and poverty after the fame of his ground breaking work had disappeared. Both photographed a vanishing world capturing it for prosperity on fragile glass plates. Both brought to their projects a unique vision and a belief in what they were doing.

Atget’s photographs of people half seen through shop doors and windows, like shadows of the night. Curtis’s photographs of masked Yeibichei dancers wearing elaborate attire. Curtis thought he was photographing the dying races of the American Indians. Atget knew he was photographing the collapsing spaces of old Paris. Both use the space of the photograph to signify their intentions: an understanding of their subject matter, an empathy with a disappearing way of life, a need to record their vision of this world – and an intensity of insight into that condition.

No other photograph has the space and timelessness of an Atget.

No other image the presence of the plains that Curtis summoned.

His masked dancers remind me of the last photographs of the great American photographer Diane Arbus in their candour and beauty, posthumously called‘Untitled’. Finally Arbus has found a subject matter that she could return to over and over again. As did Atget and Curtis.

As Doon Arbus has commented

These images – created out of the courage to see things as they are, the grace to permit them simply to be, and a deceptive simplicity that permits itself neither fancy nor artifice …. The photographs appear to be documents of a world we’ve never seen or imagined before – one with its own rituals and icons, its own games and fashions and codes of conduct – which, for all its strangeness, is at the same time hauntingly familiar and, in the end, no more or less unfathomable than our own.”

Arbus, Doon. “Afterword,” in Diane Arbus: Untitled. London: Thames and Hudson, 1995.

 

Amazon new book

Some late Diane Arbus photographs from Google Images

 

Edward S. Curtis: Visions of the First Americans

Amazon new book: look at images from the book

 

Eugene Atget Wikipedia entry

Google images by Eugene Atget

13
Nov
08

The artist does not turn time into money

The artist does not turn time into money, the artist turns time into energy, time into intensity, time into vision. The exchange that art offers is an exchange in kind; energy for energy, intensity for intensity, vision for vision… Can we afford to live imaginatively, contemplatively?

  Winterson, Jeanette. Art Objects. London: Vintage, 1996, p 139.
13
Nov
08

heard:

“Thankyou for waiting an operator will be with you shortly”

  

Repeat

 

“Thankyou for waiting an operator will be with you shortly”

 

Repeat

 

“Thankyou for waiting an operator will be with you shortly”

 

Repeat

13
Nov
08

The First Australians: SBS TV Australia

A wonderful long overdue documentary series on SBS television about the history of ‘Terra Nullius’, the white occupation of lands through the persecutions, massacres and genocide acted on the Aboriginal population.
Although some of the ‘academic’ comment lacks balance this can hardly be blamed.
As an Englishman who is now an Australian I feel deep shame over the actions of my predecessors and empathy towards those whose civilization was uprooted.
And so it continues …

In episode 3 the nobleness of the Aboriginal leader Barak broke my heart

“And may the Lord bless you sir,
and give you good knowledge.”

he wrote to his persecutors.

After his son had died
After the promises had been broken.

There is a moment in Greek tragedy when the hero realises all he knows is untrue: peripateum. Barak must have had such a moment and he returned to his people and his cultural roots, in the last years of his life painting his memories: alive, wonderful, moving.

Vale

http://www.sbs.com.au/firstaustralians/

13
Nov
08

‘The 3 A.M. WAKE UP’ by Michael Leunig

leunig-3am

 

The 3A.M. WAKE UP by Australian artist and cartoonist Michael Leunig.

My favourite cartoon in the world!

More Leunig images …

13
Nov
08

After Light

And on the other end of the spectrum, there is the AFTER LIGHT, a light of the past, which are echoes from past experiences so intense that they sometimes appear in front of us in the form of unexpected shadows. They hide on clear days under the roofs of houses. It is believed to be the same light seen by people we knew many years ago that survives like a message in a bottle, but always in a precarious way and often vanishes into thin air.

Helguera, Pablo. “How to Understand the Light on a Landscape,” in Patt, Lise (ed.,). Searching for Sebald: Photography After W. G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Cultural Inquiry, 2007, p. 119.




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