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Humankind lingers unregenerately in Plato's cave, still reveling, its age-old
habit, in mere images of the truth. But being educated by photographs is not
like being educated by older, more artisanal images. For one thing, there are a
great many more images around, claiming our attention. The inventory started in
1839 and since then just about everything has been photographed, or so it
seems. This very insatiability of the photographing eye changes the terms of
confinement in the cave, our world. In teaching us a new visual code,
photographs alter and enlarge our notions of what is worth looking at and what
we have a right to observe. They are a grammar and, even more importantly, an
ethics of seeing. Finally, the most grandiose result of the photographic
enterprise is to give us the sense that we can hold the whole world in our heads
-- as an anthology of images.
To collect photographs is to collect the world. Movies and television programs
light up walls, flicker, and go out; but with still photographs the image is
also an object, lightweight, cheap to produce, easy to carry about,
accumulate, store. In Godard's Les Carabiniers (1963), two sluggish lumpen-peasants
are lured into joining the King's Army by the promise that they will be able to
loot, rape, kill, or do whatever else they please to the enemy, and get rich.
But the suitcase of booty that Michel-Ange and Ulysse triumphantly bring home,
years later, to their wives turns out to contain only picture postcards,
hundreds of them, of Monuments, Department Stores, Mammals, Wonders of Nature,
Methods of Transport, Works of Art, and other classified treasures from around
the globe. Godard's gag vividly parodies the equivocal magic of the
photographic image., Photographs are perhaps the most mysterious of all the
objects that make up, and thicken, the environment we recognize as modern.
Photographs really are experience captured, and the camera is the ideal arm of
consciousness in its acquisitive mood.
To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself
into a certain relation to the world that feels like knowledge -- and, therefore,
like power. A now notorious first fall into alienation, habituating people to
abstract the world into printed words, is supposed to have engendered that
surplus of Faustian energy and psychic damage needed to build modern, inorganic
societies. But print seems a less treacherous form of leaching out the world,
of turning it into a mental object, than photographic images, which now provide
most of the knowledge people have about the look of the past and the reach of
the present. What is written about a person or an event is frankly an
interpretation, as are handmade visual statements, like paintings and drawings.
Photographed images do not seem to be statements about the world so much as
pieces of it, miniatures of reality that anyone can make or acquire.
Photographs, which fiddle with the scale of the world, themselves get reduced,
blown up, cropped, retouched, doctored, tricked out. They age, plagued by the
usual ills of paper objects; they disappear; they become valuable, and get
bought and sold; they are reproduced. Photographs, which package the world, seem
to invite packaging. They are stuck in albums, framed and set on tables, tacked
on walls, projected as slides. Newspapers and magazines feature them; cops
alphabetize them; museums exhibit them; publishers compile them.
For many decades the book has been the most influential way of arranging (and
usually miniaturizing) photographs, thereby guaranteeing them longevity, if not
immortality -- photographs are fragile objects, easily torn or mislaid -- and a
wider public. The photograph in a book is, obviously, the image of an image. But
since it is, to begin with, a printed, smooth object, a photograph loses much
less of its essential quality when reproduced in a book than a painting does.
Still, the book is not a wholly satisfactory scheme for putting groups of
photographs into general circulation. The sequence in which the photographs
are to be looked at is proposed by the order of pages, but nothing holds readers
to the recommended order or indicates the amount of time to be spent on each
photograph. Chris Marker's film, Si j'avais quatre dromadaires (1966), a
brilliantly orchestrated meditation on photographs of all sorts and themes,
suggests a subtler and more rigorous way of packaging (and enlarging) still
photographs. Both the order and the exact time for looking at each photograph
are imposed; and there is a gain in visual legibility and emotional impact. But
photographs transcribed in a film cease to be collectable objects, as they still
are when served up in books.
Photographs furnish evidence. Something we hear about, but doubt, seems
proven when we're shown a photograph of it. In one version of its utility, the
camera record incriminates. Starting with their use by the Paris police in
the murderous roundup of Communards in June 1871, photographs became a useful
tool of modern states in the surveillance and control of their increasingly
mobile populations. In another version of its utility, the camera record
justifies. A photograph passes for incontrovertible proof that a given thing
happened. The picture may distort; but there is always a presumption that
something exists, or did exist, which is like what's in the picture. Whatever
the limitations (through amateurism) or pretensions (through artistry) of the individual
photographer, a photograph -- any photograph -- seems to have a more innocent, and
therefore more accurate, relation to visible reality than do other mimetic
objects. Virtuosi of the noble image like Alfred Stieglitz and Paul Strand,
composing mighty, unforgettable photographs decade after decade, still want,
first of all, to show something "out there," just like the Polaroid owner for
whom photographs are a handy, fast form of note-taking, or the shutterbug
with a Brownie who takes snapshots as souvenirs of daily life.
While a painting or a prose description can never be other than a narrowly
selective interpretation, a photograph can be treated as a narrowly selective
transparency. But despite the presumption of veracity that gives all photographs
authority, interest, seductiveness, the work that photographers do is no
generic exception to the usually shady commerce between art and truth. Even when
photographers are most concerned with mirroring reality, they are still haunted
by tacit imperatives of taste and conscience. The immensely gifted members of
the Farm Security Administration photographic project of the late 1930s (among
them Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, Ben Shahn, Russell Lee) would take dozens of
frontal pictures of one of their sharecropper subjects until satisfied that they
had gotten just the right look on film -- the precise expression on the subject's
face that supported their own notions about poverty, light, dignity, texture,
exploitation, and geometry. In deciding how a picture should look, in preferring
one exposure to another, photographers are always imposing standards on their
subjects. Although there is a sense in which the camera does indeed capture
reality, not just interpret it, photographs are as much an interpretation of the world as paintings and drawings are. Those
occasions when the taking of photographs is relatively undiscriminating,
promiscuous, or self-effacing do not lessen the didacticism of the whole
enterprise. This very passivity -- and ubiquity -- of the photographic record is
photography's "message," its aggression.
Images which idealize (like most fashion and animal photography) are no less
aggressive than work which makes a virtue of plainness (like class pictures,
still lifes of the bleaker sort, and mug shots). There is an aggression implicit
in every use of the camera. This is as evident in the 1840s and 1850s,
photography's glorious first two decades, as in all the succeeding decades,
during which technology made possible an ever increasing spread of that
mentality which looks at the world as a set of potential photographs. Even for
such early masters as David Octavius Hill and Julia Margaret Cameron who used
the camera as a means of getting painterly images, the point of taking
photographs was a vast departure from the aims of painters. From its start,
photography implied the capture of the largest possible number of subjects.
Painting never had so imperial a scope. The subsequent industrialization of
camera technology only carried out a promise inherent in photography from its
very beginning: to democratize all experiences by translating them into images.
That age when taking photographs required a cumbersome and expensive
contraption -- the toy of the clever, the wealthy, and the obsessed -- seems remote
indeed from the era of sleek pocket cameras that invite anyone to take pictures. The first cameras, made in France and England in the early 1840s, had
only inventors and buffs to operate them. Since there were then no professional
photographers, there could not be amateurs either, and taking photographs had no
clear social use; it was a gratuitous, that is, an artistic activity, though
with few pretensions to being an art. It was only with its industrialization
that photography came into its own as art. As industrialization provided social
uses for the operations of the photographer, so the reaction against these uses
reinforced the self-consciousness of photography-as-art.
Copyright © 2000 Susan Sontag
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