[accessibleimage] Re: A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
- From: Lisa Yayla <fnugg@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 06 Mar 2006 19:38:57 +0100
Hi Barry,
Fine to be contrary. But I think impressions and feelings are also
information, just more inarticulate - that is, difficult to define what
it is.
That's my 2 cents.
Best,
Lisa
Barry Kleider wrote:
Lisa,
Thanks for the thought "A photograph may or may not be art. It's
always information."
Just to be contrary, I'll add that I've seen some photographic images
which were art -- containing more impressions or feeling than
information.
Cheers,
Barry
Lisa Yayla wrote:
Hi,
I liked the sentence "A photograph may or may not be art. It's always
information." I think it seems to sums it up pretty good for all
types of images. Link and article follow.
Regards,
Lisa
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2006/02/26/theyre_connected_by_community/
They're connected by community
Exhibit captures local residents who share a bond
By Mark Feeney, Globe Staff | February 26, 2006
A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
Before it does anything else, a picture /shows// /something. It can
do many other things, too -- dazzle or provoke or arouse, you name it
-- but any other visual action is subsequent to the presentation of
information.
This primacy of showing underlies ''Document: Contemporary Social
Documentary Work From Greater Boston," which runs at the Photographic
Resource Center through March 26. Chris Churchill, one of nine
photographers in the show, puts it best in an artist's statement.
''To find truth in photography we must understand that the medium can
reflect aesthetic choices on the part of the photographer, but at its
heart, it is representational."
What's represented here are eight local communities, communities
variously defined by vocation, location, and circumstance. (There are
only eight because two of the photographers, Mariliana Arvelo and
James Patten, are collaborators, as well as husband and wife.)
Arvelo and Patten's subjects are deaf and blind. Arvelo takes color
photographs notable for their warmth and matter-of-fact humanity. She
doesn't beseech or strain for emotional effects. She doesn't have to.
The liveliness of the play of hands she captures as language is being
signed in '' 'Untitled,' Newton, MA" is a marvel of expressivity.
''Play of hands" is the essence of Patten's work: He uses a laser to
etch tactile equivalents of Arvelo's images. His hang below hers,
with a sign bearing the memorable notice ''Please touch! But do not
lean."
Sometimes community is a function of place, as with Churchill's
photographs of the students and faculty at the Patrick O'Hearn
Elementary School in Dorchester, or Suzi Camarata's images of
merchants and their stores in Mission Hill. Yet as their work reminds
us, the more specific the place, often the more universal the effect.
Who among us hasn't gone to grade school? Who among us wouldn't want
to entrust his rugs to an affable employee of ''Joseph Sullivan
Carpet Cleaning"?
Sometimes community is a function of vocation -- and, it turns out,
age. Claire Beckett's subjects, National Guard personnel, and
Surendra Lawoti's, Somerville firefighters, both wear uniforms and do
dangerous jobs. What's striking about Beckett's people is how young
they are. It's as if their uniforms are wearing them. Conversely,
Lawoti's sitters are older, more seasoned, fully emerged. She takes
big color portraits, 40 inches by 32 inches, and the faces of these
men are worthy of such imposing scrutiny. Lawoti's camera looks them
in the eye, and they look right back.
Looking into the camera can be a social or even political statement.
That's the case with the 42 snapshot-size color pictures that make up
Amber Davis Tourientes's big photo mural ''Families on Stage." Each
image shows a same-sex couple and their children. Like any family
photo, the pictures are full of affection and warmth. Also, like any
family photo, they're about people rather than statements. Tolstoy
never imagined same-sex marriage, but Tourientes's pictures bear out
that all happy families really are alike.
''Families on Stage" affirms and celebrates its subjects. Only
affirmation is in order for Michael Manning's images of local
homeless people and Lisa Kessler's photo project ''Heart in the
Wound," about the church sexual-abuse scandal. Both Manning and
Kessler, who shot their subjects in black and white, offer a strong
sense of narrative. Even with just fleeting glimpses, we sense a
context for these lives.
Sometimes Kessler spills over into tendentiousness. Her motivation is
understandable -- perhaps unavoidable -- but it produces uneven
results. The heavy-handedness of the looming image in ''Video
Projection of Cardinal Law Saying Mass for 3000, Boston, MA, March
2002" contrasts unfavorably with the grim eloquence of the empty
office space in ''Director Barbara Thorp Moving Into the Newly
Created Archdiocesan Office of Healing and Assistance, Newton, MA,
June 2002."
''Document" has an extensive online component, at
www.bu.edu/prc/document/links.htm
<http://www.bu.edu/prc/document/links.htm>, with more than 90 links
relating to the photographers' work and subject matter. A document,
after all, can consist of pixels on a screen just as it can an image
or piece of paper.
- References:
Other related posts:
- » [accessibleimage] A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
- » [accessibleimage] Re: A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
- » [accessibleimage] Re: A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
Lisa,
Thanks for the thought "A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information."
Just to be contrary, I'll add that I've seen some photographic images which were art -- containing more impressions or feeling than information.
Cheers,
Barry
Lisa Yayla wrote:
Hi,
I liked the sentence "A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information." I think it seems to sums it up pretty good for all types of images. Link and article follow.
Regards,
Lisa
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2006/02/26/theyre_connected_by_community/
They're connected by community
Exhibit captures local residents who share a bond
By Mark Feeney, Globe Staff | February 26, 2006
A photograph may or may not be art. It's always information.
Before it does anything else, a picture /shows// /something. It can do many other things, too -- dazzle or provoke or arouse, you name it -- but any other visual action is subsequent to the presentation of information.
This primacy of showing underlies ''Document: Contemporary Social Documentary Work From Greater Boston," which runs at the Photographic Resource Center through March 26. Chris Churchill, one of nine photographers in the show, puts it best in an artist's statement. ''To find truth in photography we must understand that the medium can reflect aesthetic choices on the part of the photographer, but at its heart, it is representational."
What's represented here are eight local communities, communities variously defined by vocation, location, and circumstance. (There are only eight because two of the photographers, Mariliana Arvelo and James Patten, are collaborators, as well as husband and wife.)
Arvelo and Patten's subjects are deaf and blind. Arvelo takes color photographs notable for their warmth and matter-of-fact humanity. She doesn't beseech or strain for emotional effects. She doesn't have to. The liveliness of the play of hands she captures as language is being signed in '' 'Untitled,' Newton, MA" is a marvel of expressivity. ''Play of hands" is the essence of Patten's work: He uses a laser to etch tactile equivalents of Arvelo's images. His hang below hers, with a sign bearing the memorable notice ''Please touch! But do not lean."
Sometimes community is a function of place, as with Churchill's photographs of the students and faculty at the Patrick O'Hearn Elementary School in Dorchester, or Suzi Camarata's images of merchants and their stores in Mission Hill. Yet as their work reminds us, the more specific the place, often the more universal the effect. Who among us hasn't gone to grade school? Who among us wouldn't want to entrust his rugs to an affable employee of ''Joseph Sullivan Carpet Cleaning"?
Sometimes community is a function of vocation -- and, it turns out, age. Claire Beckett's subjects, National Guard personnel, and Surendra Lawoti's, Somerville firefighters, both wear uniforms and do dangerous jobs. What's striking about Beckett's people is how young they are. It's as if their uniforms are wearing them. Conversely, Lawoti's sitters are older, more seasoned, fully emerged. She takes big color portraits, 40 inches by 32 inches, and the faces of these men are worthy of such imposing scrutiny. Lawoti's camera looks them in the eye, and they look right back.
Looking into the camera can be a social or even political statement. That's the case with the 42 snapshot-size color pictures that make up Amber Davis Tourientes's big photo mural ''Families on Stage." Each image shows a same-sex couple and their children. Like any family photo, the pictures are full of affection and warmth. Also, like any family photo, they're about people rather than statements. Tolstoy never imagined same-sex marriage, but Tourientes's pictures bear out that all happy families really are alike.
''Families on Stage" affirms and celebrates its subjects. Only affirmation is in order for Michael Manning's images of local homeless people and Lisa Kessler's photo project ''Heart in the Wound," about the church sexual-abuse scandal. Both Manning and Kessler, who shot their subjects in black and white, offer a strong sense of narrative. Even with just fleeting glimpses, we sense a context for these lives.
Sometimes Kessler spills over into tendentiousness. Her motivation is understandable -- perhaps unavoidable -- but it produces uneven results. The heavy-handedness of the looming image in ''Video Projection of Cardinal Law Saying Mass for 3000, Boston, MA, March 2002" contrasts unfavorably with the grim eloquence of the empty office space in ''Director Barbara Thorp Moving Into the Newly Created Archdiocesan Office of Healing and Assistance, Newton, MA, June 2002."
''Document" has an extensive online component, at www.bu.edu/prc/document/links.htm <http://www.bu.edu/prc/document/links.htm>, with more than 90 links relating to the photographers' work and subject matter. A document, after all, can consist of pixels on a screen just as it can an image or piece of paper.