demands | consumptive.org


demands

In peri­ods of social cri­sis, pho­tog­ra­phy as art can seem an inhu­man escape. It is so often appar­ently dis­tant from the spe­cific cat­a­stro­phes in the day’s news. Think of Stieglitz mak­ing, dur­ing the worst years of the Depres­sion, his coldly beau­ti­ful views of New York City from the heights of the Sher­a­ton Hotel — or of Ansel Adams pho­tograph­ing in the Sier­ras as the worst of World War II was being fought in Europe.

In response to jux­ta­po­si­tions like these there are crit­ics who have asked for “con­cerned pho­tog­ra­phy,” by which they mean pho­tog­ra­phy that deals directly with social ills. Few pho­tog­ra­phers them­selves have, how­ever, sup­ported the use of the adjec­tive “con­cerned” as a way of dis­tin­guish­ing one artist from another; they know first­hand that all art is the prod­uct of con­cern. They believe as a con­se­quence that it has social util­ity — it is designed to give us courage. Soci­ety is endan­gered to the extent that any of us loses faith in mean­ing, in con­se­quence. Art that can con­vinc­ingly speak through form for sig­nif­i­cance bears upon the prob­lem of nihilism and is socially con­struc­tive. Restated, pho­tog­ra­phy as art does address evil, but it does so broadly as it works to con­vince us of life’s value; the dark­ness that art com­bats is the ulti­mate one, the con­clu­sion that life is with­out worth and finally bet­ter off ended. Which is to say that art addresses an inner strug­gle whereas jour­nal­ism more often reports on the out­ward con­se­quences of it. Per­haps this is what William Car­los Williams meant when he wrote that “It is difficult/to get the news from poems/yet men die mis­er­ably every day/for lack/of what is found there.” We have all had the sad oppor­tu­nity to watch that. And though poems and pic­tures can­not by them­selves save any­one — only peo­ple who care for each other face to face have a chance to do that — they can strengthen our resolve to agree to life.

- Robert Adams, from Pho­tograph­ing Evil col­lected In Defense of Tra­di­tional Val­ues

posted by James Luckett
consumptiveATgmailDOTcom