Sunday, April 12, 2015

Is documentary photography dead?

Is documentary photography dead? by Eli Regan (essay written in 2006)

The bigger picture does not exist. The nature of our existence in relation to the world around us dictates our capacity only to understand and see situations around us in fragments. The physical photograph allows us to revisit those fragments which were particularly memorable as we trapped them. The photograph is an isolated incident (however many situations/interactions are being shown within one photograph) free of context which represents our gravitas to subjectivity. However, to contradict the last statement or at least undermine it, it should be said that these rectangles and squares become in being trapped, liberated by constrictions of time and space and in their silence are able to provide the starting point for endless interpretations and possibilities.

This essay aims to begin to question and not necessarily resolve whether documentary photography is alive or dead in the 21st century. It aims to create a thoughtful debate by discussing a few aspects in relation to documentary photography: 1) Documentary photography and truth, 2) Postmodernism and its effect on the documentary genre, 3) Recent critics’ views on documentary practice within photography and 4) A brief discussion of a photograph by 20th century and 21st century documentary practitioner, Donovan Wylie.

1.Documentary photography and truth

I remember an image of a woman in Sudan crying out in the heat, maybe mourning the dead or the living in the front of The Guardian, deeply affecting me. I remember seeing the same image printed in the front page of The Independent months later referring to Sudan . It’s strange how I could not muster the same depth of feeling as I had on my first encounter of the image. It is not that the situation was any less torturous for the Sudanese, but I felt betrayed by the lack of current pictures. The chances are that my first encounter with the image of the Sudanese woman crying, was an archive ready-made commodity. The association of documentary photography with truth is a contentious one, and one much criticised by many documentary photographers themselves. In David Levi Strauss’ book of essays, “Between the Eyes-Essays on Photography and Politics”, he refers to Richard Cross, a photojournalist who covered the conflicts in El Salvador and Nicaragua between 1979 and 1983, as stating:
“In photographs, the priority seems to be on getting good shots, so to speak, shots of the news moment. And it’s a sort of unwillingness to come to terms with what is going on down there in a systematic way... I would opt much more for telling the story with lots of images and text that tries to relate what has been going on in El Salvador with what has been going on in the last 50 years in the world- things like the decline of neo-colonialism and the rise of independent nation-states.”

Documentary photographs can be used just as powerfully as text as political propaganda. With the aid of captions, cropping and editing these images are interpreted in endless permutations by the viewer, and in turn the media and or government have achieved their aim of misrepresenting the work of even the most socially conscious of photographers.

This fractured, deconstructed, overanalysed world offers us the chance to mistrust absolutely every picture we come across. There appears to be no medium between the media employing either immediate grainy mobile phone footage or hopelessly outdated images obtained from internet stock photography companies such as Corbis or Getty Images. The result of this is two fold: a public who is understandably, increasingly distrustful of the “truth” in images (be they outdated, edited, digitally manipulated, etc) and the lack of opportunities for idealistic photographers who still believe in capturing the essence of truth of a situation in various images (whether it be war, homelessness, local news, etc). The Guardian photographer, Don McPhee, spoke about the lack of opportunities for young documentary and photojournalistic practitioners in a talk about his exhibition at Manchester City Art Gallery in 2005. It is not that these documentary opportunities have completely disappeared, but in an era that demands information faster than any other generation before, quality and truth are often disregarded in favour of cost-effective immediacy.  In this climate of crisis, our hunger for photographs grows, as our cynicism also increases. Historical amnesia can have terrible consequences, and our incapacity to understand the present is causing short term memory loss even in the most discerning of people. The Orwellian nightmare is upon us and yet technology, for its all retrograde authoritarian, surveying, all-knowing power, can also be a tool for subversion, so frequently an aim of documentary photography.

2. Postmodernism and its effect on the documentary genre

There is a notion in postmodernism that refers to the concept of ‘partial histories’. To begin to understand this confusing social theory that so many discuss but not many comprehend, the concept of ‘partial histories’ is useful to grasp.

“Postmodern historians and philosophers question the representation of history and cultural identities: history as “what ‘really’ happened” (external to representation or mediation) vs. history as a “narrative of what happened”, a “mediated representation” with cultural/ideological interests… [As Walter Benjamin stated in “Theses on the Philosophy of History]: “every image of the past that is not recognised by the present as one of its own concerns threatens to disappear irretrievably.””

Once we begin to understand the idea of ‘partial histories’ as one of the hallmarks of postmodernism we see how much of an impact this has had on the documentary genre. Artists such as Willie Doherty from Ireland , are a clear exponent of this theory. His work, mostly filmic and photographic aims at understanding history through the blurring of reality and fiction, or his own political interpretation of Ireland ’s history. Doherty, in an interview with Tim Maul, says about his own work:

“ ‘The Only Good One’ drew on those cinematic clichés of the assassin and victim but attempted to not create a character but to try and assimilate or look at the mutual dependency of both of these positions.”

His work, therefore constitutes (as with Paul Graham) a blurring of the lines between documentary, propaganda and art, another recurring theme of the postmodern, the hybridization of cinema, photography, propaganda and surveillance into highly textured, complex pieces.

Doherty also explains:

 I had a different kind of knowledge of the place [ Derry ] than most photographers, I wanted to try and use that insider information and try to work around the existing images… I didn’t want to be a Journalist and I didn’t want to try and make work for newspapers or magazines and I felt that if I could find a position within the art world it might be a more interesting place to have some kind of debate or discussion, and to allow the work to be part of it.”

This bastardization of various genres in order to get to the root of the various problems but not necessarily find any answers is the great impasse of postmodernism. It is also its beauty, in that for all its pluralistic values, and cynicism about absolutes, it questions, subverts and challenges the status quo, and in turn can overthrow seemingly steadfast truths with rabid interrogations.

3. Critics’ recent views on documentary photography

It is not only the artists and photographers that are questioning the established order; critics do through their appraisals of documentary practice.

Echoing what Willie Doherty believes, Brigitte Lardinois and Val Williams state:

“the view of Ireland in photographs has always been a partial and biased one.”

While this is true of most history, Ireland is the perfect example of complex issues of politics, religion, tradition and conflict that do not seem to be understood widely and are dismissed frequently. They go on to say:

When attempting to place the work of Magnum photographers within a history of photography made in Ireland , one soon becomes aware of how fragmentary and unwritten both of these histories are.”

The word ‘fragmentary’ is perhaps one of the most useful, in order to understand the basis of postmodern thought. Everything is broken down, Tarantino style with little hope of a Hollywood straightforward narrative. Lardinois and Williams proclaim:

We change and modify our concept of visual history. For many Magnum photojournalists, the editing process which their pictures underwent could also be a re-writing of history. Ian Berry remembers well how selective editing of his work during the 1970’s could entirely change its political significance.”

This view brings us into line to the earlier view that Richard Cross had of editing. So much depends on our power to interpret or see beyond what is in front of us. People misconstrue postmodernism with the notion of rejecting history and modernism. In fact, it often desires to understand history much more objectively, however fragmentary, it recognises, its attempts are.

Alicia Miller in her essay ‘Return to the Real’, in source view is:

Experimentation in every artistic medium is what drives expression forward and there is a need to acknowledge the alternate forms of photographic expression that many artists are working with. It’s time to recognise this romance with the real for what it is- a nostalgic reminiscence with something we thought we knew.”

I fundamentally disagree with the above statement. While I agree for the need for photography to go forward, I believe as stated earlier that the truth of a situation can still be represented by the hybridisation of photography with other art forms. Photographs or series of photographs can also stand on their own, real, or almost hyper-real as displayed in the recent work of Julian Germain and Donovan Wylie. 

Perhaps it is useful now to discuss various photographs from Donovan Wylie’s recent portfolio: Maze.

4. Donovan Wylie’s ‘Maze’

Donovan Wylie. The Maze Prison. Prison cell. H-Block-5, B Wing 3/25, 2003.

The caption to the photograph confirms the cell-like, incarcerating nature of the photograph. Yet that light. That screaming light. Under the relentless scrutiny of that light, I can sense the loneliness of the many who slept there, almost realise the desire for constant dark, so as to not experience the metaphor come true of light showing the grime of the crime they may or may not have committed. The tree shaped air freshener hung from the curtains echoing the curtains themselves with tree-like motifs makes me stop and look at this particular photograph, examine it slightly more than the others in the series. Maybe this person did prefer the light, maybe he preferred light, cleanliness, air freshener. Maybe his mother had been the most house proud in her street, instilled in him a sense of the ordered.

Speculation is part of the attraction of postmodernism. Wylie, born in 1971, falls into the category of Generation X, a generation without marked out beliefs trying to carve their own reality. I would say he is most definitely a documentary photographer, but I would also say he practices documentary photography in a different fashion to previous documentary practitioners.

Documentary photography, therefore is not dead. It has evolved, but in this evolution, something has been lost. Some argue, like Miller, that it was never there, we just thought ‘we knew’. I think, previous photographers, tried, in the best way they could, such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, to understand the essence of a situation and portray it as honestly as they could. This inevitably tended to be from the angle of a leftist political point of view, and therefore, biased, yet who could fail to admire their idealism and noble aims? Perhaps, many, but not me. We possess in our hands invaluable historical and social documents that teach us about wars and the working class man and family, more truthfully, I believe, than any other generation could have hoped for. History, as they say in postmodern circles, is always told from the victor’s point of view. Franco and Henri Cartier-Bresson. I know who I would rather learn my history from. 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Books
1.   Lardinois, B and Williams, V. 2005. Magnum Ireland. London: Thames & Hudson.
2.   Strauss, D.L. Between The Eyes: Essays on Photography and Politics. 2003. New York: aperture foundation.
Journals
1.  Miller, A. Winter 2004 (Issue 41). Return to the Real. Source: The Photographic Review.
Websites
1.    Irvine, M at Georgetown University, 2003.  The Postmodern, Postmodernism, Postmodernity: Approaches to Po-Mo. Available from http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/irvinem/theory/pomo.html [accessed 07/08/2006]
2.    Haul, T interviews Willie Doherty. Available from http://www.jca-online.com/doherty.html [accessed 25/10/2005]

ADDITIONAL READING
1.  Barthes, R. 2000. Camera Lucida. Vintage.
2.  Bryson, T (ed). 2005. Making History- Art & Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now. TATE.
3.  Cartier-Brésson, H. 1999. The mind’s eye: Writings on Photography and Photographers. New York. Aperture foundation.
4.  Godfrey, T. 1998. Conceptual Art. London. Phaidon.
5.  Howarth, S. 2006. Singular Images: Essays on Remarkable Photographs. Aperture foundation.
6.  Sontag, S. 1977. On Photography. Penguin Books.






No comments: