Another Heyday.
by Persinger, Tom
Afterimage • Jan-Feb, 2007 • trends in photography
Photography's history has always been inextricably connected
with technological advancement. Joseph Niepce, Louis Jacques Mande
Daguerre, William Henry Fox Talbot, Frederick Scott Archer, and others
all made significant contributions to its technical evolution. In 1884,
George Eastman embarked on his quest to make photography "an
everyday affair." (1) Four years later, the Kodak Camera entered
the market with the slogan, "You push the button, we do the
rest," and the era of amateur photography was born.
Between 1884 and 1991, photography continued along a fairly
well-defined path. While there were minor departures, film, paper, and
chemistry remained the necessities of photography. But, in 1991, the
first tremors of significant change were felt. With Kodak's
introduction of the first commercially available digital camera, the
DCS-100, the digital era was ushered in. The movement from silver to
pixels had begun, and at no time in its history had the nature of the
craft been so fundamentally challenged.
During the next few years digital camera sales soon eclipsed the
sales of traditional film cameras. Even professional photographers were
making the switch from large negatives to mega-pixels. Today, onetime
pioneering companies like Agfa, Ilford, and Kodak are struggling to
survive, reorganizing, or declaring bankruptcy. Yet, in spite of the
shift from darkroom to digitization, a group of practitioners is moving
away from pixels and computers and returning to the craft's roots:
light, chemistry, and hands-on involvement.
These artists pursue their vision independent of technological
advancement and have discarded the notion that one must continually
invest in the latest equipment to make compelling and meaningful images.
They rely on what are now known as alternative, Do-It-Yourself (DIY), or
adaptive photographic processes. Many pursue the craft without something
as seemingly necessary as a lens. This is not to say that these artists
disdain technology; instead, they embrace the idea of a hands-on
photographic aesthetic that is not dependent upon materialist
acquisition of goods. The direct hands-on involvement inherent in
alternative techniques unites photographer and process.
It has been argued that the use of such "primitive"
techniques is regressive and hinders what some consider
photography's obligation to continue its long march of
technological evolution. But it could also be argued that it is only
through the use of alternative and adaptive techniques that photography
can be freed from the interests of corporations motivated by profit
margins, shareholder interest, and a global culture of consumption
driven by messages of desire, obsolescence, and acquisition. And
perhaps, from this more independent perspective, photography can give
insightful, meaningful commentary on the world in which we live.
Hardly a uniform endeavor, artists are applying these difficult,
labor-intensive techniques and processes in a variety of ways. Some
insist on a purity of means: they construct their own equipment; use
film or nineteenth-century processes such as calotype, collodion, or
daguerreotype as negatives; and make prints using traditional wet
darkroom techniques. Others marry digital image capture with
alternative-printing techniques. Still others fall somewhere within this
spectrum, altering and adapting tools to achieve their vision.
In keeping with the individuality of the endeavor, images produced
using these methods are not bland, homogenized products of mass
production. Instead, these artists depart significantly from the status
quo by allowing themselves to create printed images that are utterly
unique. Rather than blindly adhering to an ethos of endless
reproduction, they have consciously decided that not only is it
permissible for each print--even multiple prints from the same
negative--to be different, but that it is desirable. This mode of
thinking conflicts with common perceptions regarding the nature of
contemporary photography. For many, photographic processing has become
an unthinking practice in which an image may be identically reproduced
an infinite number of times by simply pressing "enter" on a
computer keyboard. For those who work in alternative processes that
require an intense amount of time and labor, the speed of production is
not a concern. The focus is placed instead on the hands-on experience,
depending on human involvement, not machinic production.
Many use photography to seek a deeper understanding of ourselves
and our world. This goal is commonly pursued through the production of
images that isolate the subject, capturing it in a fraction of a second
of time. For example, people are often photographed in moments of
poignancy. These photographs provide documentation of an otherwise
quickly passing instant. The subjects of these images appear frozen, as
if they exist outside of time and apart from our world of continual flux
and change.
The capturing of such moments has been a guiding aesthetic for many
photographers. Henri Cartier-Bresson articulated his photographic
approach in the 1952 book The Decisive Moment. Here he defined the act
of photography as "... the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction
of a second, of the significance of an event as well as of a precise
organization of forms that give that event its proper expression."
(2) Harold "Doc" Edgerton's 1931 development of the
electronic flash could quite possibly be seen as the apex of a
photographic quest to stop action and time. Images such as Milk Drop
Coronet (1957) and Bullet Through Apple (1964) depict single
instantaneous events impossible for the unaided eye to see.
While images made with these alternative processes are often
beautiful, they could also be viewed as sentimental, encouraging
individuals to cling to particular moments and events in a world of
impermanence and change. Perhaps they represent the failure of
photography to fulfill its potential to "show things as they
are": fundamentally changing and impermanent. In response to these
challenges, the craft's unique blend of mechanical and artistic
facets endow it with many possibilities photographers might utilize in
the production of their work. Through the use of extended exposures,
photography can transcend single, isolated moments and provide a more
complex representation of the world in which we live.
Photographers use assorted techniques to achieve these longer
exposures, such as a tiny aperture without a lens or filters to reduce
the amount of light reaching the film. No matter how photographers
achieve these longer exposures, the resulting images reveal the
temporary and ever-changing nature of the world around us. These images,
exposed over time, contain artifacts of motion--blurred objects and
ghosted, semi-transparent forms. In this "continuity of
moments" we are arguably able to see more deeply into the world.
When photography is approached through these processes, not only
the images but also the actions of the photographer change. Prolonged
exposures give photographers time to fully engage with the subject in a
contemplative way. In this direct, focused encounter a photographer
moves from observation to engagement, becoming fully conscious and aware
throughout the exposure. From the moment the shutter opens to the time
it closes the photographer monitors all aspects of the subject,
including light conditions, motion, sound, and all of the subtleties
that continually occur but often go unrecognized during a conventional,
short exposure.
Of course exposure times vary in length: some may be measured in
days or months, others in hours or minutes, and some in a few short
seconds. A photograph can only show a segment of time, but if an
exposure is long enough to give representation to time, it can result in
a subject that may be seen to transcend the world of everyday
appearances and provide that long-sought glimpse of the sublime
ordinariness and plain beauty that continually surround us. Jonathon
Keats, for example, has recently started a project at the Hotel des Arts
in San Francisco that will utilize an exposure time of one-hundred
years. The photographs and the act of making them are both an
exploration of time, culminating in the representation of past, present,
and future in one still image.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Nothing about these techniques comes easily. They take time and
require great effort, yet it is clear that we are squarely in the middle
of a photographic renaissance. At no time in the craft's history
have so many artists and photographers experimented with such a wide
variety of photographic techniques. Many artists seem to be getting
involved with these processes as a reaction to digital methods--both
digital cameras and the digital darkroom--that some consider alienating
and impersonal. Others are exploring them precisely because of the ease
of digital methods.
Regardless of the motivation for this renaissance, its exponential
growth can be credited to the Internet. The Web is ideally suited to
connect geographically dispersed people with niche interests. There are
several Web sites and discussion forums that focus specifically on or
offer information regarding these hands-on techniques. (3) The
discussion rises above the traditional barriers of space and time,
politics and language, in an exchange of images and information. In the
May 2005 issue of Artforum, photographer Tim Davis declared that
photography was in a "Heyday!" where "anything is
possible." (4) Judging from the renewed exploration of alternative
methods and means going on now I might say he's right.
NOTES (1.) Kodak Corporation, "George Eastman"; at
www.kodak.com/global/en/corp/historyOfKodak/eastmanTheMan.jhtml?pq-path=2217/2687/2689 (accessed December 11, 2006). (2.) Henri Cartier-Bresson,
"The Decisive Moment," The Mind's Eye: Writings on
Photography and Photographers (New York: Aperture, 1999). Originally
published in The Decisive Moment (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1952).
(3.) See, for example, www.f295.org; http://unblinkingeye.com;
www.alternativephotography.com; www.mikeware.demon.co.uk;
www.luminous-lint.com; www.photoformulary.com. (4.) Tim Davis, "Top
Ten" Artforum Volume XLIII, no. 9 (May 2005), 98.
TOM PERSINGER is a photographer, artist, and the founder/director
of f295.org.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.