The origin of the word archive is located in the public domain and
possesses a secular significance, most often referring to documents
sequestered in a particular repository, the Greek arkheion. In a lecture
delivered in London on June 5, 1994, that father of the deconstruction
revolution, Jacques Derrida, identified archives as shelters for
memory--historiographically, arks that house documents that will pass
from the private to the public realm. (1) The artist's book, Feast:
Christy Johnson and 33 Confessors (2007), functions as a shelter for a
fraction of the more than three-hundred First Communion commemorative
photographs collected by the artist Christy Johnson. These are private
images made public through her act of archiving and are joined by a
textual archive.
In a rite of secular remembrance, Johnson transcribed over one
hundred and seventy-five pages of taped dialogue between herself and
thirty-three women on the subject of their communion pictures. With the
help of Victoria Millar of Bloomsbury Press, Johnson edited the
transcriptions and they audiotaped the dialogues together so as to
reclaim the conversational quality of the discourse while minimizing the
intervention of the interrogator. They did not rewrite or remove
anything from the responses except for the occasional "hmm" or
pause for breath. No one put words into anyone's mouth ... except
each interviewee who entered the photograph by way of a subversive
dialectic structure, thus sanctioning the real experience of the silent
subject in the image. Strangers to one another, the interviewee and the
pictured communicant unwittingly conspired to create an authentic
fictional state through the fusion of a factual document with a true
story. Johnson assembled these two distinct archives into the
artist's book Feast--a communion of sorts.
The sacred status of the ritual to which these archived photographs
attend liberates them from their worldly, chemical substantiality. The
photographs become revelations of the soul, literally "emanations
of the referent" that touch us through their "carnal
medium," light. (2) Johnson enables this release by allowing the
images to commune together within the pages of the book. Avicenna, the
Persian philosopher, describes the release of the soul in his Treatise
of the Bird (Risalat at-Tair). (3) His fable recounts the ordeal of a
flock of doves that, when ensnared by hunters, grow weak and facile in
captivity until a few determined birds succeed in escaping the net and
soon thereafter those remaining seek to follow. The story is an allegory
for the containment of the soul (the spiritual world) in the body (the
material world). It is the remembrance of the protected park (heaven)
that invests the bird with the longing to ascend and eschew captivity.
Avicenna states that the gain of metaphysical knowledge reminds the soul
of its origin and longing, signalling its desire to return to the
Divine. This early Islamic idea differs radically from the Christian
Doctrine of Original Sin that was generated from the famed consumption
of fruit from the Tree of Knowledge. Guilt is not associated with the
ingestion of knowledge, according to Avicenna. It is in the abuse of
intelligence that Avicenna finds fault. Feast is an ark for the
secularized documentation of a sacred event. The project provides a
protected park within which the photographic emanations might be safe.
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According to Roland Barthes, "in photography, the presence of
the thing (at a certain past moment) is never metaphoric" (4)
(emphasis added). Barthes used that dangerous, inflexible word never in
order to bar the allegorical fixity inherent when one assigns symbolic
status to a photographic image. For Barthes, a photograph was a register
of representation, not a substitution of one material object for
another. The common iconographic terrain occupied by these communicants,
captured by light, momentarily divests them of their corporeality. They
are representations of spirit not symbols for it; they are not trapped.
The young women in Johnson's photographs perform a shared
meta-concentration on the separation of blood from flesh that symbolizes
the sacrifice of the man-god of which they have recently partaken. We
witness the normally hidden formation of a belief system within these
females dressed in white. And, if the inward contemplation on the matter
at hand cannot be detected in their eyes, we observe that the direction
of the girl-child's gaze is oriented externally toward the
surveillant authorities, the photographer and/or God. Some of the
adolescents appear dwarfed by the event while others command the space
they occupy, staking out an identity apart from authority and ritual.
These confident subjects are triumphant in their newly attained status
as emergent sexual beings and they become representations of resistance,
willing to risk leaving Avicenna's protected park. However, many
shrink from exposure, willing to hide behind the staged drapery, false
scenery of a gothic church, or the spindly legs of a Victorian
table--afraid to apply their knowledge.
Individually, these photographs perform as archives of time and
place. A few of the photographs are framed by botanical matter or
cut-paper borders. These margins operate as indices of origin, as do the
costumes worn by the supplicants. Still, the vegetal-like edgings might
also be understood as devices for enclosure, protecting the doves within
the divine park. Geoffrey Batchen makes much of this type of surround in
relation to portraits of the dead and the preservation of memory in his
eloquent text, Forget Me Not: Photography and Remembrance (2004). (5)
Pine branches and newly formed cones encircle one photograph, presumably
of Northern European origin and found within Johnson's Feast. They
surround an awkwardly posed girl who wields a long, phallic candle in
her right hand and a missal and rosary in the other. (6) In addition,
she is guarded by two angels on the table. This child is ensconced in an
artificial space fabricated by a studio photographer, yet, the sense of
a rarefied place, conjured artifice, is sustained by her stare and tight
hold on the instruments of knowledge.
By combining the archive of commemorative images with one of text
shaped by her interviews with the thirty-three invisible communicants,
Johnson invents a fictive location of experience and memory--a buffered
space that shields the girls and the women from social, religious, and
familial forces. Although the referents may not be physically tangible,
this archive project is mystically objective. Their experience of
spiritual emanation returns in the form of a luminous residue.
CATHERINE CLINGER is an artist and scholar who is currently a
visiting assistant professor of Art History at the University of New
Mexico in Albuquerque.
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NOTES 1. Jacques Derrida, "Archive Fever: A Freudian
Impression," Eric Prenowitz, trans., Diacritics, Vol. 25, no. 2
(Summer 1995), 9-10. 2. Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, Richard Howard,
trans. (New York: Noonday Press, 1981), 80-81. 3. Abu Ali al-Husain ibn
Abdallah ibn Sina (973-1037), one of the leading philosophers of the
golden age of Islamic tradition, was born in present day Uzbekistan and
died in his adopted Persia (Iran). His influence on intellectual thought
was immense, from Thomas Aquinas to Spinoza. He was a master of
mathematics, physics, and medical science. 4. Barthes, 78. 5. Geoffrey
Batchen, Forget Me Not: Photography and Remembrance (New York: Princeton
Architectural Press, 2004). 6 Christy Johnson, Feast: Christy Johnson
and 33 Confessors (London: UCCA Press, 2007), 149.
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