Title: Chapter Seven: Photography Theory
1Chapter SevenPhotography Theory
- Is It Art? Is It True? Is It Moral?
- From Terry Barretts Criticizing Photographs 4th
ed.
2Introduction
- Theories answer large questions and offer
competing explanations of phenomena (153). - Many personal theories are implicit (153) and
not consciously held. - Analysing theories helps us to make our theories
explicit (153)open to examination. - Private theories have no social impact shared
theories are socially consequential (153). - Theories help us to understand the world some
are fixed, others more flexible. - When new information arrives we adjust our
theories (154).
3Photography Theory and Practice
- Persons affected by photographic theory include
photographers, critics, curators, collectors,
historians, photography teachers (154-56). - Theory pervades all thinking about
photographyits history, criticism, making, and
teaching (156). - Disagreementsare based on disagreements about
underlying theories (157). - See the Avedon and Mapplethorope critiques in
Chapters 2 and 6. These photographs are
considered art, but that they are art is
insufficient for some critics to designate them
good art (157).
4Ontological Concerns What is a Photograph?
- Ontology asks questions about the nature of
being eg. what is it? - Photography (claimed in 1839 by Dominique
Francois Arago as a French invention) is both a
science and an art (158). - It has a special connection to truth
(158)light from an object is recorded (see
colour plates 24, 19, and 7 as real-life
events). One reason pornography is
objectionable (158-59).
5Barthes vs Snyder
- Roland Barthes
- a magic, not an art
- power of authentication exceeds its power of
representation (159). - Photos evoke the past (159).
- studium and punctum studium denoting the
cultural, linguistic, and political
interpretation of a photograph, punctum denoting
the wounding, personally touching detail which
establishes a direct relationship with the object
or person within it (wikipedia). - C. S. Pierce, also interested in signs, says
photos have an indexical quality or are signs
caused by what they show (159).
- Joel Snyder
- no more privileged than painting or language
- false belief that photographs give us
privileged access - camera invented to recreate the style of
representation common in Western aesthetics
(159)that shows 3-dimensional depth perception
or perspective.
6Digital Images and Ontology
- What is a photograph?
- How are traditional photographs different from
digital photographs? - Martin Lister, a British cultural theorist,
suggests analog photographs (chemically created)
are transcriptions whereas digital images are
conversions (160-61). - Analog photos can be scanned and converted into
pixels, or images can be digitally shot. - Photographers now have unprecedented access to
a previously inaccessible level of information
and signification (161).
7A digital image vs an analog photograph?
Trick question both are digitalon your computer
screen! The one of the left was shot from outside
our atmosphere (800 x 800 pixels) with the Hubble
space telescope, the other by an amateur at
ground level (ST10XME CCD 20in RC Optical
Systems telescope Operating at f/16.8 2in AP 2x
Barlow).
8Digital Images continued
- Something in the real world was in front of the
lens in analog photography, but no such claim to
truth can be made about digital images (161). - The digital age suggests the death of photography
as we know it (161). - This claim is epistemological (161 62) which
is a question about the nature of truth. - Are photographs closer to truth than paintings
(162)? Do digital images undermine belief in
photographs as true (162)?
9Epistemological ConcernsRealist Theory and
POSITIVISM
- Since the invention of photography accuracy and
perfection of detail (162) were considered
paramount. - The science of photography influenced sociology
positivism tells us that the methods of
natural science can be directly applied to social
science (162). - Positivism pursues facts (162).
- Photographs are credible and persuasive (163
65)legally, politically, commercially, and
scientifically. - Barthes, Hines, Paul Strand, Ansel Adams, Edward
Weston, Kendall Walton (transparency), Susan
Sontag and Life Magazine all make powerful claims
about photo-realism (163-65).
10Conventionalist Theory
- Joel Snyder disagrees with realist theory.
- Three ways to photograph a horse in motion
demonstrates that conventions determine
representations of motion (166) - Stationary camera slow shutter speed (horse is
blurred and background is sharp) - Panning camera (horse sharp, blurred background)
- Stationary camera fast shutter speed (both
horse and background are sharp) - Realism is a style of representation that is
culturally created and read (166). - Cameras in the 1800s enhanced nature (167)
according to picturesque conventions or rules.
Sometimes nature wasnt pretty enough, so
machines made it better!
11Photographic Truth
- Digital images cause realists alarm (167).
- Adrian Piper (philosopher and artist) gives us a
balanced view There is something special
about the photographs relation to what is being
photographed, even when that information is
adjusted with Photoshop (168).
Charles Messier (1771), a comet hunter, created
the Messier Catalogue of what not to look at.
See the Messier Grid Map (Plate 31, 169), images
of 110 astronomical objects.
12- Same Messier Grid Map, though some images are
enhanced or stacked to create colour others
have been photographed using different
wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum.
13Photographic Truth continued
- One famous example discussed earlier is Times
cover of O.J. Simpsondigitally rendered (170).
14Photographic Truth continued
- Analog manipulations were done early to mimic
paintings, part of the preference for
pictorialism in photography (171). - Censorship and government manipulations of images
assume people prefer entertainment over harsh
reality (173). See colour plate 7 in reference
to one of the only stark images to come from the
first Gulf War (173).
15Aesthestic Concerns
- Is photography Art?
- Yes, it is, though hotly debated in the 1960s
and 70s (173). - The camera was used in its early history by
artists, but some artists felt it was incapable
of using imagination (174). - During the 40s and 50s, even straight photos were
used as abstract imagery (abstract art was at
its height), eg. Minor Whites images as
metaphors (174). - MOMA was one of the first museums to collect
photos as art (174)see also the discussion of
Grundberg and George Dickeythe institution
confers the status of artform (176).
16Aesthestic Concerns continued
- Allan Sekula calls art a mode of human
communication (178). - The New York Public Library had to re-catalogue
books of famous photographers in 1975 (previously
under history, geography, and science) under
Photography (179). - What are the consequences of calling photographs
art? - Money , (see pricing of images 180).
17Modernism and Postmodernism
- Modernism in art and photography is part of the
larger era called modernity (155). - Modernity is placed in time from the
Enlightenment (1687 1789) to the present (155). - Early modernity emphasized a belief in science as
the key to understanding the universe, and
therefore politics could also be based on reason
as well to create an ideal just society (155). - See page 184 for a list of basic Modernist
aesthetic principles.
18Modernity
- Major events include democracy, capitalism,
industrialism, science, urbanization (emphasis on
freedom and the individual). - Margaret Bourke-White was a famous female
photojournalist whose work exemplified the
heights of modernity. She was the first well
known industrial photographer her famous photo
of the Hoover Dam appears on the first cover of
Life.
19Postmodernism or Po-Mo
- Beginnings are obscure.
- Some date postmodernism to the student revolt in
Paris in 1968 as its symbolic birth (156). - Postmodernists reject modernitys results no
true just society, but rather oppression of
peasants under monarchy, workers under
capitalism, and women under patriarchy. - See the list on 185 of Postmodern photographic
practices.
20Postmodernism and Disillusionment
- Walter Benjamin, a German Jewish Marxist critic
and cultural theorist, examined the importance of
photography as central to postmodernism. - His famous essays are called The Work of Art in
the Age of Mechanical Reproduction and A Short
History of Photography. - Both of these emphasize that art and photos can
be endlessly reproduced, thereby diminishing the
status of art as precious objects (hailed by
modernists). See the discussion on 186-87. - Susan Sontag reacts negatively to postmodernist
claims that seem nihilistic and may leave us
paralyzed and unable to react to the worlds
injustices (187).
21Photographs as Texts
- For postmodernists even photographs are texts, so
are films and television shows. - Modernists speak of works made by DWMs (Dead
White Males) rather than texts. - Works speak with one voice and have one
meaning, presumably the authors (181). - Texts speak with many voicessome blend and
others clash as a field of citations and
correspondences called inter-textuality (182). - No one text is completely original.
22Structuralism and Post-structuralism
- Both influence current critical theory.
- Structuralism is modernist it is the search for
meaning and truth in underlying codes, systems
or structures (182). - Claude Levis-Strauss, a Belgian anthropologist ,
applied primitive myths and their structures to
modern sociology (182). - Poststructuralists, like Derrida, are skeptical
of any ultimate truths, believing that truth is
historically dependent and always biased
(182). - Postmodernists are even skeptical about the
notion of a self (from the Enlightenment and
Descartes) (182).
23Ethical Concerns Are Photographs Moral?
- Digital images need to be questioned regarding
accuracy and aesthetics (187 89). - Some socially-minded critics have equated the
camera to the gun and photography to hunting
(189). - Photographers show constraint in what they do
not photograph (190). - Consent is an important ethical issue.
- See also Rankin Waddells decision, as a
photojournalist, not to take pictures of 9/11
(190-91). The camera can stand in our way by
creating an emotional distance.
24Marxist Theory and Ethical Photography
- Looks at class structure and examines art in the
context of ideological struggles. - Ideology comes from ideaand refers to a world
view, normally political. - Marxism is a leftist approach to social life that
values the worker and questions the positive
effects of capitalism (a rightwing approach to
using the planets resources). - Art in aid of Marxism questions the results of
class consciousness and the power to rule over
others as well as the transparency of the
photograph that can hide complex social relations
(163).
25Feminist Theory and Ethical Photography
- Sex refers to our biological being, whereas
gender refers to our social and cultural
identification (163). - Modernism is based on patriarchy and male power
structures which has limited womens and well as
mens roles in the culture. - Feminism questions gender stereotypes and asks us
to reconsider notions of power that we tend to
take for granted, especially concerning social
roles and sexual imaging. - See Plate 33 (193). Does the gorilla head and
hand on a female torso, a pun on Guerrilla
Girls undercut or enhance the message?
26Applying Feminist Criticism
- In looking at the image by Jan Saudek entitled
The Dolls, 1975, one must consider the internal,
external and original contexts. - A feminist analysis would examine more than the
intent of the photographer and consider gender
stereotyping and cultural expectations
surrounding the depiction of women and girls as
well as their socialization.
27Multicultural Theory and Ethical Photography
- Is about social reform (early 1960s ) to help
make society more equitable for people of
diversity (197) and claims that only individuals
can make changes to society. - We can change how we view and produce visual
culture (197). - Photographs, therefore, are not fine art, but
instruments of social change. - Is about racial attitudes whites speak for
humanity while others are only allowed to speak
for their own race (198). - See 199 for the culture of spectacular
lynching and the ref. to postcards and slides - See 200 for Kobena Mercers analysis of black men
in Mapplethorpes photography.
28Queer Theory and Ethical Photography
- Queer refers to gay, lesbian, bisexual, etc.
- Teresa de Lauentis coined the term queer
theory in 1989 and traced the history of
transgendered terms (200). - Gay lib took place in the 1970s (struggled to
build a safe place for sexual minorities 200). - Queer theory demands more than liberation but
rather to destabilize conservative norms about
marriage, sex and gender (201). - Queer Theory challenges what we consider normal,
legitimate and dominant (201). - AIDS and its effect on gay artists and white
heterosexual privilege are also political themes.
29Postcolonial Theory and Ethical Photography
- Like multicultural and queer theory, postcolonial
theory is also instrumentalistphotos affect
attitudes. - Colonialism refers to the suppression and
destruction of indigenous peoples and their
culture under white European rule. - Imperialism refers to the annexing of land
belonging to others to build an empire. - Postmodern artists draw on these themes and are
much less optimistic about the future. - Postcolonialism examines the after effects of the
withdrawal of colonial domination. - Orientalism, seeing the East as inferior to the
West, is also part of this theory.
30Renee Cox and the Hot-en-Tot Venus, 2000
- See page 207 for Renee Coxs photograph of a
similar name and style made in 1994. - Why do you think she may have remade the image in
colour in the year 2000? - Read the section about eroticized photographic
representations of Others (206).
31Conclusion
- In thinking about art theories, remember that
postmodernism, Marxism and feminism are complex
and not unified theories. - Some blend together, like Marxist feminist
theorists and critics. - Theory is important as are various approaches to
theory since they affect practice (208). - Therefore we become better informed all round,
and much better photographers because we know
something more about art, theory and the world
(208).