Wednesday, 28 March 2012

Final Essay

To what extent does Ryan McGinley's photography challenge traditional conceptions of the nude and the portrait?

Ryan McGinley is an American photographer, currently living in New York, who's work focuses on photographing both models and friends, predominantly naked, in various situations. He has won a string of awards including, but not limited to, the Young Photographer Infinity Award given by the International Center of Photography. A sense of freedom and youth is apparent in most of his work and tightly coupled with a level of intimacy that many other photographers fail to convey.

In order to discuss his work and the way it challenges the given conceptions of the portrait and the nude we must first define these terms; we must bare in mind that a portrait, in its simplest form, is a “a painting, drawing, photograph, or engraving of a person” as stated by the Oxford English Dictionary. A strong starting point for this discussion, and others alike, is that of John Berger's Ways of Seeing and his own discussions on nudes and portraits in which he stated that 'nakedness was created in the mind of the beholder'. (Berger, 2008, pg42) By saying this he is presenting the idea that the subject themselves may intentionally be only naked, whereas the reception of the image is what makes it a nude. Kenneth Clark, in Ways of Seeing, also states that 'to be seen naked is simply to be without clothes, whereas the nude is a form of art'. (Clark, 2008, pg47) Again this is proving the distinction between a person being naked and being nude, being naked is nothing more than a lack of clothes, here he is arguing that to be nude is to be presented in that way and thus an art form. Both of these statements are fairly generic and straightforward, essentially implying that to be nude is a state of mind or something to be presented as opposed to something that is stumbled on. This is backed up further by Berger in the way he writes that 'A naked body has to be seen as an object in order to become a nude' (Berger, 2008, pg48), this is elaborating further on the previous statements and confirming that a nude is an object and presented as an art form and thus we can safely say that a person can be naked, without necessarily being nude.

Due to this distinction we can also argue that photo may be taken of a naked person and still be seen as a portrait as opposed to a nude due to the focus and presentation of it. Historically nudes have been examples of bodies to be admired or even shamed, whereas Mcginley's work seems to feature people that happen to be naked. This may sometimes be in a snapshot nature and reflect the person as they were at the given time, and thus a portrait, or may be actively naked but in a way to reflect purity and intimacy as opposed to a study of the human figure.

It is also important to notice that most writings on portraits or nudes are written in relation to painting, in The Nude Clark goes on to explain that the invention of photography in portraiture results in an exact representation and that 'we are immediately disturbed by wrinkles, pouches and hoer small imperfections which in the classical scheme, are eliminated.' (Clark, 1960, pg2). This is to say that these imperfections show a person as they truly are and not as they want to be presented, this is an example of photographic practice challenging the previous conceptions of nudes and portraits within painting.

However McGinleys work takes this a step further and often focusses on these items such as missing teeth, black eyes and scars etc, and outright presents and even celebrates them as opposed to hiding them, this is apparent in the photo Laura, 2010. This conflicts directly with Kodak's How To Take Good Pictures, a somewhat dated and rigid source that reels off various hints and tips explaining the basics of photography from choosing a camera and a lens to lighting and composition with pretty much everything in between. It states that 'a portrait calls for soft, even lighting that will play down wrinkles/or other complexion irregularities.' (Kodak, 1984, pg69) This is and interesting statement and again a point at which McGinley's photographs start to challenge the rules, his series Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, from which our example is taken, is very softly and evenly light but this not to draw attention away from these irregularities. It is these irregularities that are actually central focal points of his images and in turn the soft lighting actually results in complimenting these elements and showing them almost as a different kind of beauty. This is a direct example of how his work challenges preconceptions, of both nudes and portraits, as he ignores the idea of capturing a persons best side or favourite features and favours more of a candid or snapshot ethic that people would normally choose to avoid or disapprove of.


This manual continues with explaining that 'your subject will be more relaxed and comfortable if involved in one of his or her normal activities' (Kodak, 1984, pg69) and again I think this is where McGinley's photographs start to differ. For most of us it is not a an everyday activity to run naked through a field or jump up and down in a brightly lit studio for the purpose of taking photographs, however the expressions shown in the faces of his subjects often portray happiness, excitement or a sense of freedom that seems to frequent his work. However this can go both ways and I feel that due to the specific subjects he chooses he is also curating a group of free spirited people that will comply to his ideals and therefore are people that are comfortable and relaxed in these otherwise outlandish situations. This brings to my next point of photographing an identity as opposed to an individual.

Gerry Badgers states that 'In the celebrity portrait, we acknowledge an individual, in the social portrait we study a type.' (Badger, 2010, pg58) This train of thought implies that the subject of a portrait becomes devoid of individuality unless they are in a position to be recognised by all and thus seen as their own person. This in turn this bring us to the function of a portrait, Arts in Society states that 'the function of the portrait painting was to underwrite and idealise a chosen social role of the sitter. It was not to present him as 'an individual' but, rather, as an individual monarch, bishop, landowner, merchant and so on.' (Berger, 1977, pg47). This confirms my previous statement and although it is written specifically in relation to paintings I feel that it still applies as it obvious that McGinley is presenting a certain youth culture in his images as opposed to individuals.

This certain type of youth is present throughout his work, past and present, and shows both males and females running wild, climbing trees, jumping of cliffs and appearing somewhat feral on occasion. This is even still present in his series of black and white photographs Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, although the sitters are presented in a much more sombre manner they are still directly noticeable as a certain collection of people and not a cross section of society. This is apparent in the way they wear their hair, their tattoos and or piercings and the expressions they convey, we get the impression that these are young adults that still and want to be young.

This presentation of a particular crowd brings me back to another of Berger's points in the way he states 'We never look at just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves' (Berger, 2008, pg1). This train of though applies to McGinley's subjects in that we categorise them and either identify with them or separate them from ourselves. This is our way of seeing and links directly again with another of Berger's points, 'an image is a sight which has been recreated or reproduced. It has an appearance, or a set of appearances, which has been detached from the place and time in which it made its appearance and preserved - for a few moments or a few centuries. Every image embodies a way of seeing. Even a photograph.' (Berger, 2008, pg2). I would argue that this should end saying especially a photograph, as opposed to even, as the exact documentary of photography shows an event or person exactly as they were at the given time and not as they are always. By photographing and showing his subjects in the way that he does McGinley is presenting a very linear collection of people, detaching them from their individuality and forcing them into a collection where they are seen together, as mentioned earlier in a certain class or category.

This confirms that the way we relate to a picture is reliant on the way it was created, due to the exact nature of photography we are not relying on a painter's skill and as is suggested in The pleasure of Good Photographs 'we gaze not at the painter's work but at the photographer's subject.' (Badger, 2010, pg57) This is to say that the photographer is presenting a certain subject, and as previously mentioned we do not present individuals but types, and this is a point at which McGinley definitely conforms to the conceptions of portraiture. However he conforms to this as much as he challenges this in the way that his portraits of types happen to be of naked people, thus making them fall into some kind of middle ground between portraits and nudes. The nakedness of his subjects is not accidental and they are neither in their own environments or presented as individuals, however they are relaxed and appear to be free of any anxieties and at peace with themselves. Individually his photos can be seen as a celebration of an individual, however as a set we know that they are part of a certain group that he has chosen to portray.

Essentially we have come to a conclusion that he conforms to some conventions while simultaneously ignoring elements of both trains of thought, logically this brings us to how a photo is presented. A strong example of this is that of Paul Strand's Blind Woman ­in which we have a photo of a woman that is not obviously blind to look at but is holding a sign that reads 'BLIND'. Between this and the obvious title of the image we are not simply shown a portrait of a woman, we are shown a portrait of a blind woman because she is presented as this. This is a very simple point but I feel that if McGinley's works were presented as portraits of people then they would be that, in the same way that if they were presented as nudes they could well be that too. However I feel that in his work the definitions of these words can become somewhat irrelevant, for instance a portrait in its simplest form is an image of a person and a nude is the naked subject of an image. A nude and a portrait are fundamentally different by definition, however the title of nude portrait allows for room to manoeuvre and means that we don't have to follow such rigid trains of thought.


This brings my discussion full circle to the definition of both words, it seems they can easily be manipulated to apply to a given image and thus the border between the two may seem seem hazy at times. Because of this I feel that McGinley's photographs can be seen in either light and thus defined as either one, there is nothing to say that a nude cannot be a portrait and vice versa and I think this middle ground of disambiguation is ideally where his photos sit. Overall I would argue that he still complies with traditional techniques but does this in a different way to present something new, but by doing this he is still presenting a certain type regardless of wether his photos are received by the individual as nudes or portraits. Therefore I would argue that he challenges and accepts conceptions from both of these types of photograph resulting in refreshing but still classic themes that give his photographs a distinct visual style and sense of intimacy in terms of both portraits and nudes.



Bibliography

Books:
Arts In Society – Reynold Benham, John Berger, etc
Berger, J. (1977). No More Portraits. In: Barker, P Arts in Society. Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co. 45-51.

Berger, J. (1977). Sight and Sex. In: Barker, P Arts in Society. Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co. 51-57.

Berger, J. (1977). The Worst is Not Yet come. In: Barker, P Arts in Society. Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co. 66-73.


Kodak (1984). Hot To Take Good Pictures. Glasgow: Berger, J. (1977). The Worst is Not Yet come. In: Barker, P Arts in Society. Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co.

Gefter, P (2009). Photography After Frank. Hong Kong: Aperture Foundation.

Badger, G (2010). The Pleasures of Good Photographs. Hong Kong: Aperture Foundation.

Clark, K (1960). The Nude. Great Britain: Pelican Books.

Berger, J (2008). Ways of Seeing. 6th ed. London: Penguin Books.


McGinley, R(2009). Moonmilk. United Kingdom: Morel Books. 00.

McGinley, R (2010). Life Adjustment Center. New York: Dashwood Books.

McGinley, R(2010). Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. New York: Dashwood Books.

Websites:
Oxford Dictionaries. (2012). Portrait. Available: http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/portrait?q=portrait. Last accessed 25t January 2012.

Ryan McGinley. (2011). Ryan McGinley. Available: http://ryanmcginley.com/. Last accessed 25th January 2012.

Team Gallery. (2010). Everybody Knows This is Nowhere. Available: http://teamgal.com/exhibitions/171. Last accessed 25th January 2012.

Wikipedia. (2012). Depictions of Nudity. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depictions_of_nudity. Last accessed 25th January 2012.

Wikipedia. (2012). Portrait. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait. Last accessed 25th January 2012.

Wikipedia. (2012). Ryan McGinley. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan_McGinley. Last accessed 25th January 2012.

Images:
McGinley, R (2010). Laura, 2010. Available: http://ryanmcginley.com/Everybody_Knows_This_Is_Nowhere. Last accessed 25th January 2012

Strand, R (1916). Blind Woman. Available: http://www.all-art.org/history658_photography13-15.html. Last accessed 25h January 2012

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Exhibitions & Events

Here is a handful of exhibitions and events I have visited in the past few months that I feel have been relevant to my research and practice:

Ryan McGinley - Wandering Comma

Taryn Simon - A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters

National Portrait Gallery - Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2011

Holy Ghost - Six Six Six

Leeds College of Art - Messages Across Leeds

Mexico - Title To Be Decided

Project Space Leeds - Glamourie



COMING SOON:
Emblemen - Precious

Also as part of a live project I will be part of a large team hosting this:
The Independent Photographers Union Presents Blood of the Young

Friday, 2 March 2012

Contemporary Art

Madeleine Newman

‘Art, when vital, is about setting the teeth on edge, of reminding us that we are alive for a span, and that the ugly and wholly unavoidable fact of death is never very far away. Art is about the beautiful. It is also about the nasty, the unpalatable.’ -Michael Glover

Rachel Whiteread - House, 1993
Tracy Emin - My bed, 1998
Michael Landy - Breakdown, 2001

Modernisms (Dada and Duchamp vs. Modernist painting)
Conceptual Art
Postmodernism
YBAs- Art in the 1990s
Art Now- Themes and Issues in Contemporary Art

Marcel Duchamp - Fountain, 1917
Sherrie Levine - Fountain after Marcel Duchamp, 1991

Modernism vs Postmodernism
- ‘High Modernist’ art aimed to ‘hunt’ art down to its medium
- new forms of abstract art
- abstract expressionism and post-painterly abstraction;
- ainters became interested in the characteristics of painting
- modernist painting was self-defining

Jackson Pollock - Action Painting
Mark Rothko - The Seagram Murals, 1958

Greenbeergian Modernism
- American art critic Clement Greenberg promoted the work of the modernist painters
- associated with a concept of Formalism/New Criticism - the dominant idea and criteria for ascribing value to modern art until the 1960s

Modernism to Postmodernism
'All Art (after Duchamp) is conceptual in nature because art only exists conceptually

'One will have to wait fifty or one hundred years to meet one’s real audience, but it is this audience alone that interests me'
Marcel Duchamp, 1955

Conceptual Art- 1960s/1970s
Dematerialisation - Lucy Lippard & John Chandler -‘The Dematerialisation of Art’ in Art International - February 1968

Conceptualism
- challenge to the ‘visual’ and the status of the art object
- systems, series and structures as concepts for art
- analytical art
- institutional critique and museum intervention
- global conceptualism

‘A work of art is a tautology in that it is a presentation of the artist’s intention, that is, he is saying that that particular work of art is art, which means, is a definition of art’ - Joseph Kosuth - Art as Idea as Idea, 1967

Art in the 1990's
the YBA's - Sarah Lucas, Marc Quinn, Damien Hirst

Concluding quote - ‘a worldwide system for the production, distribution and consumption of art on a spectacular scale….the art it shows, sells and talks about is non-medium specific ‘conceptual’ postmodernism…..the work of art is, in short, entirely dependent on the institution of the museum for its continued existence - inside the whale: an introduction to postmodernist art

Friday, 24 February 2012

Feminism

Madeleine Newman

Oxford Definition:
‘The advocacy of women’s rights on the ground of the equality of the sexes’

Tate Glossary: Feminist Art
‘May be defined as art by women artists made consciously in the light of developments in feminist art theory since about 1970’

1st wave feminism - 19th and 20th century

2nd wave feminism - late 20th Century 1960s-1980s

3rd wave feminism - 1980s- today?

Simone de Beauvoir - The Second Sex, 1949
Betty Friedan - The Feminine Mystique, 1963
Germaine Greer - The Female Eunuch, 197-

feminist art history & theory
- feminist analysis suggests that the art system and art history have institutionalised sexism, just as with society
- feminist analysis argues for a total re-evaluation and reinterpretation of art history

Griselda Pollock - Old Mistresses: Women, Art and Ideology, 1981

Challenging traditions of representation and 'The Gaze"
‘Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at' - John Berger - Ways of Seeing, 1972
Who is looking?

Mary Kelly - Post Partum Document, 1973-79.

Challenging Institutions and Ideologies
The Guerrilla Girls
- formed in New York, 1980
- aim to expose discrimination in the art world

Defining feminism today - Tracy Emin, Sarah Lucas etc

Defining 'Post Feminism'
- not dealing with one perspective but many
- represents a shift in feminist theory from 1968 onwards
- pluralistic viewpoint/political position that argues feminism has achieved a deconstruction of patriarchal discourse.
- reaction to 2nd wave feminism.

Conclusions
- feminism is a response to society and culture.
- aims to highlight gender as a social construct
- set of ideas and perspectives about how we understand destabilise dominant ideologies in society and history

Friday, 10 February 2012

Psychoanalysis

Psychoanalysis
Dr Madeleine Newman

What is it?
A discipline founded by Freud
- a method of investigation focussing on the unconscious meaning of words
- psychotherapeutic model

Sigmund Freud 1856-1939
- Austrian Psychiatrist who revolutionised psychology
- office filled with antiquities from ancient Greece, Rome, Egypt etc
- moved to London to live and work for the last year of his life – resulted in Freud museum
- collection is important as it is linked to the idea of psychoanalysis itself as a kind of archaeology

Sexuality and Development
- Alfred Hitchcock – Spellbound, 1945

Studies on Hysteria
- 1885-1886 Freud worked in a French hospital with neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot working on their interest in neuroses
- Charcot also investigated hypnosis as a diagnostic tool
- Freud used hypnosis until 1896
- Josef Breuer developed the concept of catharsis – the location and replacement of a certain event in ones memory
- Albert Londe – photograph entitled hysterical yawning

(see powerpoint for dictionary definitions of neuroses and catharsis)

Repression
- Freud concluded that sexual emotions that were repressed could cause neurotic symptoms
- lead to investigations into sexual desire

Free Association
- the unconscious mind is seen to be a reservoir for repressed memories of traumatic events that continuously influence conscious thought or behaviour
- psychoanalysis seen as 'the talking cure'

Salvador Dali, Lobster Telephone, 1936
- according to the Tate gallery 'Lobsters and telephones had strong sexual connotation for him, he drew a close analogy between food and sex'

Paula Rego, The Family, 1988

The Three Stages of Infantile Sexuality
- psychoanalysis suggests that as children develop they sense data in the world around them by connecting their bodily sensations to emotions – fear, frustration, satisfaction, anger etc
- for the infant this would be the family unit – the mother as they develop and are weaned

3 Stages – Oral, Anal, Phallic
here the infant's sexual development related to changes in their own body – auto-erotisism


Mary Kelly, Post Partum Document, 1973 1979

The Oedipous Complex
- the concept of being in love with ones mother and jealous of their father
- early childhood emotional relations come into conflict wit each other, producing loving and hostile wishes
- on a basic level this is a desire for the death of the same sex parent and a sexual desire for that of the opposite

Louise Bourgeois - with Filette, photographed by Robert Mapplethorpe, 1968
- The Destruction of The Father, 1974

The Structure of the Mind
The Unconscious
- created when a very young child's drives and instincts start to be disciplined by the cultural rules and norms of society
- the boundary between the conscious mind and the unconscious is breached – dreams, parapraxes etc

Mapping the Mind
- conscious, preconscious and unconscious also followed by the ego, id and super-ego
- Freud's conception of the human psyche in the iceberg diagram
(see vle for full descriptions on these)

Relationship with the external world
- Jacques Lacan – The Mirror Stage (self actualisation) and Lacanaian Psychoanalysis

The Gaze
Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still 6, 1977

Dreams/Surrealism
- ideas of dreams as 'disguised hallucinatory fulfillments of repressed wishes'
- dreams are a balance between censorship and expression
- 'The Dream-Work' – the process of understanding dreams and the metaphors and meanings then contain, this is in relation to 'the latent content' and 'the manifest content'

Automatic Writing
The Exquisite Corpse – method of combining words and images.
By Man Ray, Joan Miro and Ybes Tanguy

Paul Nouge, The Subversion of images, 1929-1930
images of sleepwalking, trance-like states and automatic writing in action

As a tool for analysis
- it becomes a critical perspective or tool for analysis within the remit of cultural theory

Conclusions
'For Freud, psychoanalysis is about memories, thoughts, feelings, fantasies, intentions, wishes, ideals, beliefs, psychological conflict and all that stuff inside what we like to call our minds' – Ward and Zarate

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Task 5 - Lefebvre & Space

Social Space - Photographic Studio based in Leeds College of Art

'Every space is already in place before the appearance in it of actors: these actors are collective as well as individual subjects inasmuch the individuals are always members of groups or classes seeking to appropriate the space in question. This Pre-existence of space conditions the subject's presence, action and discourse, his competence and performance; yet the subject's presence, action and discourse, at the same time as they presuppose this space, also negate it.'
Lefebvre, H (trans 1991) The Production of Space. Oxford, Pg 57

The above quote from Lefebvre is a basic explanation of his Spacial Triad Theory, in this he attempts to explain the way that a space is assigned a purpose and a certain level of character regardless of the current state of it and the people in it, for example a photographic studio is always a photographic studio, regardless of whether a photo shoot is currently taking place or not. This partially comes down to the contents of the room and the layout, the lighting, white backdrops and organisation of the space ensure that one person or item is the focal point of the room and thus all people, lights, cameras or other objects are pointed at them. However if you walk into an empty studio, the lights, backdrop and empty space still define the room as a studio and thus we feel we must behave, or 'act' as Lefebvre puts it, in a way that would be acceptable in this space; this may be through making as little noise as possible and attempting to not make a mess or even jumping and flailing in the open space as a celebration and something to be looked at. Given an empty studio people will make the choice to either be the centre of attention and act as if the studio were currently in use or the polar opposite and stay quiet and close to the walls attempting not to disrupt an event that may not even be happening at the time. This is to say that the representation of a space and the implications of it have a long lasting effect on the inhabitants of the room, be it a crowd of people or an individual they convince themselves to act accordingly in regards to the room, this is elevated furthermore over time as people become more familiar with the space. A photographic studio is presented as that and during its use it is exactly that, this is coupled with our interpretations and assumptions of what it should be and thus results in the aforementioned behaviour. Overall a photographic studio is a space that denotes a certain response and regardless of your role in the studio, be it photographer, model, assistant etc, you still respond to the environment in a way that you feel is appropriate; this is a strong example in terms of Lefebvre's Spacial Triad but also of panopticism and the effect of a space on a person's behaviour.

Friday, 27 January 2012

Space, Place and the Body

Dr Madeleine Newman
madeleine.newman@leeds-art.ac.uk
(see handout and moodle for more notes)

Michael Landy, Semi-detached, 2004
the meaning of home and a presentation of his childhood and father's life

Architecture and the Body

Rachel Whiteread, Ghost, 1990
interior cast of her own studio – memories and experiences

Gordon Matta-Clark, Splitting, 1974
intervening in the architectural structure, subversie connotations about relationships in the home

The homely vs the 'unhomely'
homely – unhomely
domestic – haunted house
family and childhood – surreal
sanctuary – subversive
memory- psychic
nostalgia – fragmented
experience – dostorted
lived space- nightmare

structure – form - body
architecture – 'the complex or carefully designed structure of something' OED
however a hiatory of architectural theory and practice is keen to draw attention to the actual 'lived experience' of this space
the inhabitant – us – who experience the architecture through our bodies

place
'noun 1. a particular position, point or area in space; a location'

space
'noun 1. continuous area or expanse which is free, available or unoccupied'

Theory & Philosophy
Michael Foucault: Relational Space/Social Space
Gaston Bachelard: Relationship between space and time

What are the critical perspective and methodologies that we have available to think through them?
- The Carayaid Porch of the Erechtheion, Athens, 412-407 BC
- Leonardo da Vinci, Vitruvian Man, 1487

The body and the city
- Fritz Lang, Metropolis, 1927
- Archigam, Walking City, 1964
- Le Corbusier, Le Modular, 1948

Mapping intersections between body and space in At Practice:
minmalism – body, object, space, 1960s
gender and space – the feminist critique of gendered space, 1970s
postmodernism – changing the status of space and experience, 'non-place', global and collective space, 1980s onwards

Minimalism
America – 1960s – reaction to modernist painting
aimed to reduce art to abstract themes of space, shapes, materials etc

Robert Morris, Untitled (mirrored cubes), 1965
mirrors used to extend space

Minimalist object
Robert Morris, Installation Green Gallery, New York, 1964
Bruce Nauman, Green Light Corridor, 1970
Mary Miss, Perimeters/Pavillions/Decoys, 1978
Robert Smithsom, Partially Buried Woodshed, 1970
Andrea Zittel, Fifty-four-ton Floating Island, A-Z Pocket Property

'Lived Space'
focussing on the bodies relationship to space – movement, boundaries, experience
Rebecca Horn, Scratching Both Walls at Once, 1974-5
Bruce Nauman, Walking in an Exaggerated Manner Round the Perimeter of a Square

Phenomenology
- tells us that we experience the world through our body – we are an extension of it, it is only by having a body that we experience the world
- Philosopher Edward Casey – 'The places we inhabit are known by the bodies we live'
key theorist – Maurice Merlaeu-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception, 1945
- 'there would be no space at all for me if I had no body'
Robert Morris, The Present Tense of Space, 1978
Shepard Fairey, Phenomenology of the City, Manifesto, 1990\
- The OBEY sticker campaign can be explained as an experiment in phenomenology

Gender and Space: Critical Approaches
Doreen Massey, Space, Place and Gender, 1994
Louise Bourgeois, Femme Maison, 1946-7, ink on linen

Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro, Womanhouse, Los Angeles, 1972
Helen Chadwick, In the Kitchen, 1976

Postmodernism:
non-place, collective space, liquid modernity – Zygmunt Bauman, deterritorialisation, globalisation

Non – Places
Marc Auge , Non-Places: An introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity, 1992
Andreas Gursky, 99 Cent, 1999
Andreas Gursky, Terminal Five, Heathrow Airport

Reclaiming Space and Place?
Mariko Mori, Body Capsule Project, Beginning if the End: Past, Present, Future, 1995-2006
Lucy Orta, Refuge Wear – Habitent, 1992-3
Lucy Orta, Nexus Architecture X 50, Intervention Koln, 2001
Ineteriority: Psychic Space/ Surreal Space
exploration of relationship between space, place and the body in the visual arts
two key exhibitions
- Hayward Gallery, Walking in My Mind: Adventure into the Artist's Imagination, 2009
mental and psychic space, interiority, experience, creativity, alternate places, escape, intersections between art and architecture
- Barbican Art Gallery, The Surreal House, 2010
surrealism, psychoanalysis, feeling, fractured entity, the container object

'The Surreal House' – performance and film
Jan Svankmajer, The Jabberwocky, 1971
Maya Deren, Meshes of the Afternoon, 1943
Lucy Gunning, Climbing Around My Room, 1993

Friday, 20 January 2012

Cities and Film

Helen Clarke
helen.clarke@leeds-art.ac.uk

The city in modernism
The possibility of an urban sociology
The city as a public and private space
The city in postmodernism
The relation if the individual in the crowd in the city

Georg Simmel 1858-1918
- German sociologist
- writes Metropolis and Mental life in 1903
- influences critical theory of the Fankfurt School thinkers
- asked to lecture on the role of intellectual life in the city but instead reverses it and writes about the effect of the city on the individual

Urban Sociology
- the resistance of the individual ti being levelled or swallowed up in the social-technological mechanism – The Metropolis and Mental Life
example – Lewis Hine 1932

Architect – Louis Sullivan 1856-1924
- creator of modern skycraper
- coins the phrase 'form follows function'
- writer of 'The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered'
- detail in Guaranty Building – physical and visual organisation of the building

Carson Pirie Scott store in Chicago 1904
- skyscrapers represent the upwardly mobile city of business oppurtunity

Manhatta 1921 Paul Strand and Charles Scheeler
- unstructured as such – a series of shorts played consecutively and interrupted by quotes and stills

Charles Scheeler
- Ford Motor Company's plant at River Rouge, Detroit 1927 – hired to paint the building, celebration of the building's form as opposed to the work that happens within it

Fordism: Mechanised Labour Relation
- coined by Antonio Gramsci in his essay “Americanism and Fordism”
- essentially mass producing low cost goods and giving decent wages to buy the products they are making – constant cycle of making and buying

Modern Times – Charlie Chaplin 1936

Stock Market Crahs of 1929
- factories close and unemployment rises
- leads to 'The Great Depression'

Man With a Movie camera Dziga Vertov 1929
- silent film showing various new types of filming and editing skills that has otherwise been unused or unheard of
Flaneur
- the terms comes from a French masculine noun which has the basic meanins of stroller, lounger, saunterer, loafer etc which in turn comes from the French meaning of 'to stroll'

Charles Baudelaire
- extends this idea to give the flaneur a creative purpose
- 'a person who walks the city in order to experience it'

Walter Benjamin
- adopts the concept of the urban observer as an analytical tool and as a lifestyle in his writings
- Arcade Project 1927-1940 – book about Parisian city life in the 19th century, his final and unfinished work
- Berlin Chronicle - Berlin Childhood memoirs

Photographer as a Flaneur
- Susan Sontag On Photography
- ' the photographer is an armed version of the solitary walker...the flaneur finds the city picturesque'

Flaneuse
- The Invisible Flaneuse – Women and the Literature of Modernity
- Janet Wolff
- Theory, Culture & Society November 1985 vol. 2 no. 3 37-46
- the idea that the literature is based on and for men almost exclusively and that this should not be the way

Susan Buck-Morss
- the concept that the only 'lady' on the street is presented as either a prostitute or a homeless person
- one extreme or another

Arbus
- Woman at Counter Smoking, NYC 1962

Hopper
- Automat 1927

Sophie Calle – Suite Venitienne 1980
- essentially stalks a man around Venice, romanticises the story making a fictional attachment to the man

The Detective 1980
- wants to provide photographic evidence of her existence
- his photos and notes are on display next to her photos and notes about home
- set in Paris and again fictionally romanticised

Cindy Sherman Untitled Film Stills 1977-1980

Weegee Arthur Felig
- documentary of murder and injuries involved in police investigations in New York
- intercepted police radio signals in order to get to scenes quickly

The Naked City 1945 – collection of photos
The Naked City 1948 – Film Noire film based around the narrative from the previous photos
La Noire 2011
- the first video game to be shown at the Tribecca Film Festival

Cities of the Future/Past – Fritz Lang

Ridley Scott – Bladerunner

Lorca di Corcia Heads, NY 2001
-series of photos of police offers,criminals, businessman etc taken in secret with a tripwire set up for lighting and and taken from a great distance with a telephoto lense
- give the images a film still quality taking the individual out of the crowd and making them seem separate from the crowd
- One of the subjects, Ermo Nussenzeig an orthadox Jew, was against his photograph being taken and published against his view – this was taken to court and fell in favour of the photographer due to its presentation of art

Walker Evans Many Are Called 1938
- concealed cameras to take unknows pictures of city dwellers

Postmodern City
- suggests the city as a place to get lost in – not dissimilar to the example of Vencie mentioned earlier

Postmodern City in Photography – Joel Meyerowitz
- vivid colour and lack of composition gives an impression of being lost and enveloped in a city
- documenting the chaos of the city in some ways

9/11 Citizen Journalism – the end of the flaneur?
- Liz Wells talks about this and the effect of disasters or terrorism on individuals and the concept of citizen journalism
- results in the end of the flaneur and the unity of all of the people within the city

Surveillance City
- terrorism has resulted in much higher levels of CCTV and documentation, in theory for our safety but also as a means of constantly watching us – links with Panopticism