Showing posts with label visual culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label visual culture. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Filming what cannot be seen...on seeing, watching, and reading...


For a long time, I have been interesting in how film communicates things that really aren't visual. The quintessential example is a mention in an essay, "Romans on Film", of how cinema depicts the act of thinking. Roland Barthes, wrote the piece in the early 1950s, notes that when Romans in movies have to think, they sweat. We still have a lot of these kind of signs in movies - to show someone has died, a trickle of blood will often drop from the corner of the mouth or ear, even if the injuries they sustain don't seem to indicate such a possibility...



So I was super excited to see this post from "Every Frame a Painting"..you can see text messages, but it's boring to read them. What the filmmaker is getting at is super interesting - how editors create new images that we can understand in movies...images that describe the passing of time, images that show people reading or writing. The question seems near the heart of my studio's big problem-what is the difference between seeing and reading? - only here the problem of watching is introduced. Watching allows for reading to take place. It is clearly of a different duration and focus than 'seeing'...what else?

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Dangerous minds, continued

Hulk Leader, one of the few bad guys to get an outfit that has primary colors....

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Unseen

There's no photo in this post because I'm talking about images that are withheld from our sight. I was reminded of this by Tom Junod's piece in on the Esquire website, The Falling Man. Many of us will immediately know the picture Junod is talking about. Taken by photographer Richard Drew it ran in newspapers on September 12, 2001, and depicted a man plummeting to earth after having leaped from a soon-to-collapse World Trade Center tower.

That happened to be my first day of work at the University of the Arts, where a friend had gotten me a job teaching Senior Photo Seminar. I brought in every newspaper I could get my hands on that morning, and we spent the class examining the role of photography in understanding what, at the time, was so overwhelming and incomprehensible that we seemed to have no vocabulary for addressing it.

It was at that moment I really appreciated having known George Roeder.

George had been kind enough to serve one of my mentors in my MFA at School of the Art Institute of Chicago. At the time we met, he was putting together the Visual Critical Studies program that would launch after his untimely death in 2004. He was a great teacher and a great person and I looked forward to our regular meetings. I remember at one point I was studying something that George had been over and he shared his notes; an act of generosity and modeling from which I learned about research and scholarship more than I had learned in any grad seminar.

George's major work was The Censored War: American Visual Experience During World War II, which described the way photographs of casualties were withheld from public view ans strategically deployed through the media to built up sentiment for the war when necessary. I took away two principles I still teach from working with George: what you don't see is as important as what you do see (if not more), and don't ask what an image means; ask how's being being used.

If we think about the falling man images in those terms, what happens? The media consensus that such images shouldn't be shown (and if they are shown, only on websites that cater to violent or pornographic images) can be seen in light of what else cannot be shown. Controversy has plagued images of the draped coffins of American soldiers, despite the fact that those images in no way revealed the identities of the deceased. We are routinely shown images of dead opponents in war, not to mention photos of civilians that are often used to motivate engagement in conflicts that seem remote to our interests (as we recently saw with the photos of victims of Syrian chemical weapon attacks). But images of our own dead - especially our civilian dead - threaten our resolved and might prompt us to ask why we are fighting in the first place. Therefore, the must be kept out of sights, and if decorum is the means of doing so, then so be it. We live under a tyranny of decorum; my seven year old sin routinely tells us what is 'apprpriate' or 'inappropriate'...

What about meaning and use? Roeder's book was explicit about the usefulness of the images it discussed. They were seen as potent motivators. Photography has long used this claim as a shield against accusations of voyeurism; documenting tragedy isn't just observing it, the photojournalist would have us believe, it is doing something to end it. Like Susan Sontag, I have never bought this ethical hide and seek argument. It is somewhat undermined by Junod's recounting of Richard Drew's efforts to identify the falling man and to confront his family in search of conformation of his theories. In this rather horrible episode we see the true power of images - they motivate all right, and what they bring about can be cruelty in the name of seeking truth.

Junod only brings up Eric Fischl's work in passing in his article, but I was glad to see it referenced. You may recall Fischl was lambasted for a sculpture (Tumbling Woman) he exhibited in 2002. Junod excuses Fischl's actions by saying it was "a matter of timing", and he may be right. Fischl is not an artist known for his tact, and that's okay. But in Junod's essay, he appears to come in primarily to make the case that Drew is an artist (See? We can talk about a bona-fide artist in the context of this photograph and therefore rationalize it). The tactic seems transparent.

As the 50th anniversary of the death of John F. Kennedy approaches, I expect we'll see the stills from the Zapruder film that held me in a terrified spell as a child. I was not yet born when that event occurred; I stand in relation to it exactly as my seven year-old son stands in relation to 9/11. But access to the imagery of that historic and tragic moment has always been as easy as getting a hold of a can of soda. Junod spends a good deal of time talking about the way the feelings of families were protected by the concealment of images of those who fell to their death on 9/11. (He even mentions how some people deny the existence of 'jumpers', explaining that "if one calls the New York Medical Examiner's Office to learn its own estimate of how many people might have jumped, one does not get an answer but an admonition: 'We don't like to say they jumped. They didn't jump. Nobody jumped. They were forced out, or blown out.'")

A new generation will discover these images, and will invent a history in which their exclusion makes sense. What will we say when they ask us why they have been hidden? George Roeder's work suggested that all those in power would be able to say is that pictures are powerful and they needed to be used strategically. Pictures are powerful, and power shouldn't be concentrated in too few hands of constrained too tightly, less it becomes uncontrollable.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Yet more graphic violence...

Some time ago, I notices that hazard signs had become more specific about the consequences of misuse or ignoring warnings...I wonder if this is response to some kind of lull brought on by less explicit signs. Here are a few examples of rather specific hazard signs...










Thursday, March 31, 2011

Friday, June 11, 2010

Dangerous minds - part 2

In the first post on Dangerous Minds, I think I was too general when I moved away from exaggerated emblems for intelligence (big brains) to scientists...so here's a new attempt to get to the point.
First, a disclaimer. Most of these images were suggested by Fernando Vidal's essay Ectobrains in the Movies in the Getty's The Fragment: An Incomplete History. The above image comes from a 1953 film called Donovan's Brain (a trailer is on YouTube). In a nut shell, the brain of a deadman goes looking for a body to rule. Good times.
I've not yet seen the Brain that Wouldn't Die, but it sounds like a winner in this genre. Part of what I think creeps us out about brains is tied up in mortality. And if your decapitated girlfriend's brain must be kept alive at all costs, well there's a potent symbol for you...


 I'm sooo into this image from The Fiend without a Face (Science gone wild!). Too bad it seems the brains tend to go invisible when they hunt.

...one could only wish the brain in The Brain were a little less visible. I can see a few Spanish dub versions of the film have made it online, but it may be time for some Netflicks research...


Finally, when Vidal mentions Steve Martin in The Man With Two Brains, all I can think of this this more recent analog....



I have a few more up my sleeve, but they will require some video rentals. Meanwhile I hope you enjoyed this installation of Dangerous Minds....

Friday, May 28, 2010

Dangerous minds

For some time, I've been wanting to gather images of intellectual threats. My kids are very into superhero cartoons these days, and it's hard to ignore the number of arch villains whose identity is bound to intellect. This might be a sequel to last year's Lincolnpalooza...or maybe not. As someone who spends a lot of time in school, I'm curious about this whole smart and dangerous thing. Please suggest intelligent enemies in the comments, and enjoy....

Brainiac, from Justice League, wants to know about all things in the universe. His curiosity is consuming... planets.

The Brain, from Teen Titans - don't know what's up with him.

Who can forget Vincent Price, as Batman's nemesis - Egghead? "The World's Smartest Criminal", who seems to have fallen from between the lines of Richard Hofstadter's Anti-Intellectualism in American Life

I'm fairly sure this evil scientist is supposed to be Peter Lorre...a Frankenstein reference?

Syndrome wanted to use his brilliance to confer superpowers on everyone (after making himself rich and destroying Mr. Incredible)

Dr. Frankenstein is probably the archetypal evil genius - one whose pursuit of knowledge leads him beyond the pale of conventional ethics. Is that what people are afraid of?