Showing posts with label essay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label essay. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Art History; Lens and Screen, Roland Barthes Essay.

Roland Barthes sought the meaning of photography’s ability to conjure up “that which has been” in a picture of his mother who had died. Critically investigate this relationship between photography (or film) and death, thinking through whether it is still relevant in contemporary culture.

“Cameras, in short, [are] clocks for seeing.”[1]

-Roland Barthes.



Photography creates an insight into the past through its use as a tool to document, usually incorporating an element of truth relating to the subject matter. The camera is a spectator of death, or more precisely, its image. Even though it was more prominent throughout the progression of history, the tie between photography and death is just as relevant today as it was one hundred years ago. With the ability to hold and cherish memories with those we have lost, photography gives us this gateway into the past; bearing witness to history and serving as an outlet to view and discuss “that which has been.”[2] Photography gives the ability to produce an image for a consciousness that essentially mourns an absent object or person rather than relishing its presence. Photographs of various objects or people give the viewer certified evidence of their very existence, whether it is in a past or present tense. Walter Benjamin takes this concept further, using photography as a metaphor for memory and history; “having the ability to be present in another form, in another time and place.”[3]


Within Roland Barthes Camera Lucida, photography is redefined. As a medium unlike other forms of aesthetic expression, photography has an independent relationship between the operator, the photographic image and the physical world. The camera is a kind of clock for seeing, in Roland Barthes’ terms, “a memory machine that shares many of the vicissitudes of the conscious and unconscious mind,”[4] capturing events in time and storing them as visual history. The taking of a photograph involves selecting a moment and literally “slicing it out of time.”[5] The way in which memory and reality relate with one another is complex; an image is always likely to be interpreted in relation to other images and reality is always relative to the subject: it depends who is doing the looking. “A photograph is not only like its subject, homage to the subject. It is part of, an extension of that subject.”[6]

While viewing an old photograph of his mother, who had recently passed away at the time, Barthes made the connection between the studium; the general view, and the punctum; the unconscious or imaginary element or interpretation that may arise for the viewer. “It is this element which rises from the scene, shoots out of it like an arrow, and pierces me.” [7] Finding photography as a memorial element, the very essence of the medium was seen as a “spectral conjuring of death-in-life.” [8] Photography can falsify reality by implicitly arguing for individuals semiology; the ability to know others, or those within or connected to the photograph in question. There is a fine line of distinction between fantasy and reality, between truth and its interpretation; this interpretation is driven by desire, the desire of the operator, the subject being photographed and the viewer looking on. The different relationships between these positions can change the meaning and connection had between yourself and the image. Barthes presented an alternate understanding of photographs as both incarnate and transcendent. "The Photograph is an extended, loaded evidence — as if it caricatured not the figure of what it represents (quite the converse) but its very existence ... The Photograph then becomes a bizarre medium a new form of hallucination: false on the level of perception, true on the level of time: a temporal hallucination, so to speak, a modest shared hallucination (on the one hand 'it is not there,' on the other 'but it has indeed been'): a mad image, chafed by reality." [9]

What fascinated Barthes was not only the return of the dead, but of evidence, of memory not as mental imagery was about and took its attraction from, the “light of an idea.”[10] Such a memory of the forgotten may be accessible, at last, through the medium of photography. “The photographic picture reveals to our eyes no more than a primitive drawing could reveal to a primitive man.” [11] In saying this, Barthes most important example of his theory was the portrait of his mother at a young age. Due to his own personal relationship and connection with the image, the Winter Garden Photograph was not reproduced for viewing; as there would be no recognition and no studium would reveal to us the picture’s punctum. Instead, the writing of Barthes creates the mothers image from within his eyes. “I cannot reproduce the Winter Garden Photograph. It exists only for me. For you, it would be nothing but an indifferent picture... in it for you no wound.”[12]
Even through his studies, Barthes writes to her memory, allowing him to compile what is invisible to us; the punctum that marks the love of a son in mourning leaving his mark for a lifetime throughout his writing, while “looking for the truth of the face [he] had loved.”[13]

The theme of mortality has always been relevant to photography, ranging from the Victorian mourning portraits such as spirit and/or aura photography to Barthes interpretation of his own portrait of his mother. Referencing death and the process of mourning, “the photograph helped to turn grief into belief, and enabled the bereaved not only to come to terms with their loss but also to know with certainty that the great divide that separated them from the departed could be bridged.”[14] With its origins set against the backgrounds of life (and death) during the American Civil War (1861-65), the business of spirit photography was evidently popular throughout this period, also referencing to the amount of casualties caused by the war. Giving an extra process to the ability to mourn and grieve over lost loved ones, spirit photography doesn’t differ far from Barthes approach, embedded with metaphors, speaking strongly of faith, desire, loss and love rather than gullibility.  “In their time of loss, friends and relatives desperately need these spirit pictures, and they see in them what they want to see in them.” [15] Spirit photography opens up the “cameras indifferent eye and unerring ability to arrest the truth”,[16] not necessarily taking form of truth in regards to how these images were constructed, but the truth in which lies behind the imagery, and the historical context of the era that made spirit photography so successful. “A photograph is not only an image, an interpretation of the real; it is also a trace, something directly stencilled from the real, like a footprint or a death mask.” [17]

What photography is taking pictures of, in short, is time itself. The theme of death goes hand in hand with photography, as it stops time and captures a moment for eternity. Barthes is interested in both the natural history of death and its automatic transmission. In photography history becomes hysteria again, it turns “hysterical: the photographic picture is constituted only if we look at it- in order to look at it, we must be excluded from it.”[18] In reference to war and photojournalism in contemporary culture, photography has beared witness to some of the most disastrous scenarios, causing us as the viewer to become unattached from such confrontations, numbing us to the violence within the world. “Photographs are relics of the past, traces of what has happened.”[19] In Barthes writings, the photograph is caught in a struggle between the banalities of the media code and more authentic forms of visual experience. The studium could not convey trauma, only the punctum, which wounds, was appropriate to the experience of traumatic loss which was at the heart of the photographic experience. “Certain images might shock in the short term but they “shout” rather than wound. The punctum was bound to feelings of desire and love: without emotional investment, no trauma affected the viewer as real.”[20]

Pop art and installation artists challenged the photography medium’s autonomy by using it as a merely one creative tool among many. In its capacity as an art of the trace, photography has served as an important model for a broad range of contemporary art. This status has made the medium a focus of ongoing debate and controversy in contemporary criticism. The things we take for granted, such as our family portraits hold importance to those to which they belong to. Once memory or tragedy hits, these images are then turned into keepsakes, reflecting on the past and the intangible objects that period of time possessed; such as post 9/11 mementos or memorial sites on the side of the road. From that point in time, we see the unseen truth within the images we have captured;“Whether or not the subject (of a photographic picture) is already dead, every photograph is this catastrophe”.[21]




[1] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[2] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[3] Mora, G 1998, Photo Speak: A Guide to the Ideas, Movements, and Techniques of Photography, 1839 to the Present, Abbeville Publishing Group, New York.
[4] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[5] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[6] Marsh, A 2003, The Darkroom, Macmillan Publishers, Australia.
[7] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[8] Marsh, A 2003, The Darkroom, Macmillan Publishers, Australia.
[9] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.
[10] Batchen, G 2009, Photography Degree Zero: Reflections on Roland Barthe’s Camera Lucida, The MIT Press, London.
[11] Marsh, A 2003, The Darkroom, Macmillan Publishers, Australia.
[12] Price, M 1994, The Photograph: A Strange, Confined Space, Stanford University Press, California.
[13] Marsh, A 2003, The Darkroom, Macmillan Publishers, Australia.
[14] Harvey, J 2007, Photography and spirit, Reaktion Books Ltd, London, p.58.
[15] Kaplan, L 2003, ‘Where the paranoid meet the paranormal: speculations on spirit photography’, Art Journal, vol.62, no.3, pp.18-30, viewed 17 April 2011, ProQuest Full Text.
[16] Harvey, J 2007, Photography and spirit, Reaktion Books Ltd, London, p.176.
[17] Sontag, S 2008, On photography, Penguin Books, London, p.154.
[18] Marsh, A 2003, The Darkroom, Macmillan Publishers, Australia.
[19] Berger, J 1980, About Looking, Pantheon Books, New York.
[20] Meek, A 2009, Trauma & Media: Theories, Histories and Images, Routledge, Hoboken.
[21] Barthes, R 1993, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Vintage, London.

Sunday, 17 April 2011

Art History; Lens and Screen, Spirit Photography Essay.

William H. Mumler's self portrait containing the silhouette of his deceased cousin.


William H. Mumler's portrait of Mrs. Mary Todd Lincoln.



Essay Question:
“How do metaphors of ghosts, spirits, phantoms and other otherworldly figures facilitate critical analysis of photography, film or video as mediums?”

“The single, indisputable truth about any photograph is not its meaning or veracity but its testimony about time.”[1]

Photography creates an insight into the past through its use as a tool to document, usually incorporating an element of truth relating to the subject matter. However, when relating specifically to the subject of spirit photography, those lines are somewhat blurred, questioning the existence of the paranormal and what can and cannot be captured through the eye of a lens. Using this medium, a sense of honesty was presumed within this body of work, which questioned the visual certainty of the medium and how these images were produced.
The controversy that surrounds spirit photography refers to the practice in which the images were created, and the stories that helped build these photographs. Although, technically these images were fraudulent in their construction, just by studying the various aspects within spirit photography have given it new meaning and another sense of truth in relation to its social and historical content. “Photographs are never just simple images of reality; they are also ideas and interpretations.”[2]

Spirit photography was evidently founded during the mid 1800’s during the rise of the machine. With these advances in technology, inventions such as photography and the radio had the ability to capture something beyond the material realm. Spirit photography contained what radio couldn’t hold, and vice versa. Having this option gave belief in something beyond the visual and the everyday. This embarked on a different understanding to the world around us, stretching the boundaries of time and space. “It is another way of articulating photography’s ability to see the invisible and reveal truths beyond the powers of the naked eye.”[3]
Because of this excel in photography, séances and paranormal based activities started to be documented via these outlets, giving visible form to the disembodied sprits, and existence of invisible realities. These photographs recorded manifestations visible to the naked eye, capturing what an observer at the scene might have witnessed during séances, experiments with telekinesis, levitation and the production of ectoplasm. “Technology such as photography, electricity and telegraphy were pushing back the boundaries of human perception and experiences in all directions.”[4]

“The photograph helped to turn grief into belief, and enabled the bereaved not only to come to terms with their loss but also to know with certainty that the great divide that separated them from the departed could be bridged.”[5] With its origins set against the backgrounds of life (and death) during the American Civil War (1861-65), the business of spirit photography was evidently popular throughout this period, also referencing to the amount of casualties caused by the war. Giving an extra process to the ability to mourn and grieve over lost loved ones, spirit photography is embedded with metaphors, speaking strongly of faith, desire, loss and love rather than gullibility.  “In their time of loss, friends and relatives desperately need these spirit pictures, and they see in them what they want to see in them.” [6] Spirit photography opens up the “cameras indifferent eye and unerring ability to arrest the truth”,[7] not necessarily taking form of truth in regards to how these images were constructed, but the truth in which lies behind the imagery, and the historical context of the era that made spirit photography so successful. “A photograph is not only an image, an interpretation of the real; it is also a trace, something directly stencilled from the real, like a footprint or a death mask.” [8]

The ‘discovery’ of spirit photography in 1861 by the Boston engraver, William H. Mumler, saw the beginning of one of the most fascinating genres in the history of photography. Whilst attempting a self-portrait alone in his studio, Mumler claimed to have discovered a second, transparent figure on the developed plate, standing beside him. Mumler claimed that this figure was that of his cousin, who passed away twelve years prior to the image (See image at top of screen). Such figures would come to be known as ‘spirit extras’, as they continued to appear in the multitudes of studio portraits Mumler produced over a period of almost twenty years. 
Being a photographer, Mumler’s image not only translated the familiar metaphors of loss and grief related to spirit photography that we know of now, but cleverly marketed his business. It is argued whether he took advantage of those in turmoil at the time to benefit himself; however, he gave those in need another way to grieve over their loved ones through an alternative way of mourning. Photography stops an image of a living person dead in its tracks, and peels that frozen image away from them. In this sense, all portrait photographs are spirit photographs because they allow us to see, and almost touch, people as they lived in the past. The people in these images, once so desperate for an image of their deceased loved ones, are now themselves all dead also, but ironically revenant in their portraits.”[9]
 What was most likely an accidental double exposure coupled with an innocent over-interpretation gave birth to a phenomenon that would capture the imaginations of countless Americans. Within ten years, spirit photography had traveled to the United Kingdom and Europe where numerous photographic studios appeared to cater for the sudden public demand for images of the dead.

William H. Mumler had the opportunity to photograph a number of faces, consisting of one of the most historically recognised faces through all of American history. A perfect example of an image which not only refers to the social, emotional but political values of spirit photography is Mumler’s portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln (See image at top of screen). This image was taken months after her husband; Abraham Lincoln was assassinated on April 15th, 1865. After various séances that had taken place after her husband’s death, Mary invested in spirit photography to not only interact with her husband, but gain closure from his untimely passing. Having this photograph taken gave Mary great comfort in the thought that Abraham was still with her.
The image of Mrs. Lincoln not only acts as a consultation for grief, but is heavily embedded with an American ideological and spiritual context. Using a famous historical figure within this image can not only embark on nationalism and political propaganda, but also humanised Lincoln, allowing the viewer to see him as an ordinary family orientated being. “Looking into a photograph allows us to believe that we can see and feel the presence of someone sundered from us by the passage of time, or by death itself.”[10]

Photography as a medium can translate and express a certain concept or message to an audience. Whether any of these figures were really present within these images can be interpreted by the viewer; either believing that these otherworldly figures were of the physical sense, or just a representation of a ghost. However, the physical form of these phantoms isn’t necessarily the most important part of the image, but what lies beneath the meaning of the photograph itself. These images tell us the history of photography at the time and the specific use of photography during a particular period. While doing this, these images also inform us about human nature in relation to technology, its valorising strategies, its hopes and beliefs. “They reveal the work of the imagination, or errors of judgement. All in all, they allow us to investigate the history of human beings through the images they have made.” [11]






[1] Baer, U 2002, Spectral Evidence: the photography of trauma, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States of America, p.7.
[2] Jolly, M 2006, Faces of the living dead: the belief in spirit photography, Melbourne University Publishing Limited, Carlton, Victoria, p.145.
[3] Kaplan, L 2003, ‘Where the paranoid meet the paranormal: speculations on spirit photography’, Art Journal, vol.62, no.3, pp.18-30, viewed 17 April 2011, ProQuest Full Text.
[4] Martyn J, 2006, Faces of the living dead, Melbourne University Publishing Limited, Carlton, Victoria, p.20.
[5] Harvey, J 2007, Photography and spirit, Reaktion Books Ltd, London, p.58.
[6] Kaplan, L 2003, ‘Where the paranoid meet the paranormal: speculations on spirit photography’, Art Journal, vol.62, no.3, pp.18-30, viewed 17 April 2011, ProQuest Full Text.
[7] Harvey, J 2007, Photography and spirit, Reaktion Books Ltd, London, p.176.
[8] Sontag, S 2008, On photography, Penguin Books, London, p.154.
[9] Martyn J, 2006, Faces of the living dead, Melbourne University Publishing Limited, Carlton, Victoria, p.9.
[10] Martyn J, 2006, Faces of the living dead, Melbourne University Publishing Limited, Carlton, Victoria, p.9.
[11] Cheroux, C, Fischer, A, Apaxine P, Canguilhem, D & Schmit, S 2004, The perfect medium: photography and the occult, Editions Gallinmard, Paris, p.14.