Dissent Decree

Pretty, Petty and Profound Pictures

February 1st, 2009 · 2 Comments · Images, Uncategorized

There are millions, probably billions, of images on the Flickr website. They run the gamut from the sublime to the idiotic. It is a picture library sans catalog—a de facto giant screen and projector and anyone can be the projectionist.

On Flickr there are no editors, art directors, researchers, photo-librarians, historians, theorists, philosophers, or social anthropologists who shape and order its content. It is an enormous jumble of digital images. In its way it is a perfect demonstration of democracy. Everyone can participate. Everyone can contribute, show and tell. It is a virtual universe of images, mostly shown out of context. Some are superb. Most are snapshots. A very few are serious photographs. I am a member of Flickr and I find it alternately fascinating, educational, entrancing and disturbing.

It is the generalized lack of context I find disturbing. Viewing a photograph without knowing the context in which it was made invites facile analysis at the expense of meaningful interpretation, comment and discussion. It suggests that a photograph is only something to be looked at and not something to be studied—something retinal not intellectual.

But when a photograph is presented and viewed out of context only its formal elements, composition and novelty will command attention. The story the photograph was intended to tell and the truths it was intended to point to will not be known.

As an example consider Robert Capa’s famous photographs of the D-Day landing of the allied forces on Omaha beach in World War Two. They cannot compare in technical excellence, novelty or composition to a typical studio shot done by Annie Leibovitz. Yet in context Capa’s images are exceptional photographs. They are visual records of his actual experience of that event, made as he was being shot at! They are authentic and meaningful—filled with information and questions that go well beyond what is captured in the frames. They provoke both thought and emotion. They are photographs not snapshots—indelible images not mere flickers. 

No photograph can be properly understood divorced from the context in which it was made. Likewise, every photograph is a political, cultural, historical and aesthetic statement (even the snapshot)—it is always something to be read and interpreted. Not just seen.

In fact the photograph is never just seen. It is perceived, based upon what the viewer has learned—the conventions of his or her culture, education and upbringing. The viewer cannot perceive the history in a photograph if he or she does not come to that photograph already knowing that history. Capa’s photographs of soldiers falling in the surf could be from a movie, if the viewer does not know they are in fact photographs of real men falling and dying on Omaha beach.

Indeed a photograph may be worth a thousand words. However, it is the rare photograph that can stand without a few words to explain its context. The danger with Flickr is that it encourages the popular perception that photographs are simple ephemera, the equivalent of intellectual fast food. In fact they are the art and record of our time. They are the reflection of who and what we are and what we are becoming. They demand not only to be seen but also read—if we can and will. 

Garage Works 1936 by Walker Evans, courtesy of Library of Congress

Garage Works 1936 by Walker Evans, courtesy of the Library of Congress

Fine photography is literature and it should be.” Walker Evans 

Consider the context of this image by Walker Evans. It is 1936 and America is still in the throes of the Great Depression. The sign (Evans was enamored of signs) prominently features the words, Cherokee and work, and to a lesser degree the word “used”. What is their significance? What had happened to the Cherokee? And what was then happening to work in America? Who was being used and by whom? What is the apparent attitude of the women in this picture? How are they dressed? Where are they looking?

Not only is this photograph a beautiful composition it is a story that points beyond the image. It is an exquisite combination of context, craft and art in the service of and search for truth. This is an enduring photograph. It is not a flicker.

© Michael Maurer Smith 2009

 

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2 Comments so far ↓

  • jeanie

    I’ve read this through two or three times and at different times — lots of meat here. I, too, have a flickr account which I seldom visit and where I seldom “surf.” I see some amazing images there — ones that take me into a story, and I sometimes wonder what the story was. Others, are merely lovely, and those, too, provoke a reaction. I don’t need to know what was happening for those to touch me. They were simply beautiful — perhaps a freak of nature with perfect light? A moment that wouldn’t happen again?

    And of course, the family sharing albums, all of which have their place.

    I find that these days we put ourselves out there — blogs, facebook, flickr — and why? To connect with others who find something in our work, even if their words in reply don’t dig deeply? I’m not sure, but I’m glad these are there for us — and equally glad there is discussion that goes beyond the surface.

    • Mike

      Jeanie. Thanks for your thoughtful reply.

      Flickr, certainly presents photographs for many different tastes and in that way is very democratic. However, it also serves up much that is the photographic equivalent of junk food and worse. I long ago tired of doing a keyword search on a topic of interest and then being delivered to a Flickr photo or page showing someone’s buddies getting smashed at the local watering hole? Why not set this stuff for the private viewing of friends or family and spare the rest of us? That’s only common courtesy.

      I also believe that too few photographers say anything significant about the context of their photos thereby leaving the viewer to guess why the picture was made, where, when, for what audience it was intended, under what circumstances, for what purpose, and using what kind of equipment? Answers to any or all of these questions can greatly affect the viewer’s understanding and appreciation of the image. Of course some photographs are obvious. Most are not. That is why you rarely see a photograph in a newspaper or magazine without an appropriate caption.

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