Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Tina, I read your post this morning. It's an important one. Part of me wants to reply to it, and another part of my is saying, "God stop me before I post again." Think I'll type on because you have struck a chord which resonates with me. I'll probably get flamed for what follows. So be it. I may well want to flame myself by the time I'm done. The exhibition which you attended did exactly what it was supposed to in the world of contemporary art. The guide's comments weren't helpful, and point to the core of one of the central problems with "art" in our times. No, I didn't smoke anything for breakfast. Please permit me a disclaimer before I continue. I am middle-aged, with formal training in physical science, arts, and theology. It's been a long time since I have been in the academy. So long, in fact, that, particularly by modern standards, my education is quite classical and traditional. I say this not as a value statement, but so that you will know, as they say, "where I'm coming from." I'm Irish, and I was raised in a home where my Father and Grandfather tossed a coin to see who would take which side in an argument, and they would both fight to the death, as it were. I am a round-earther, but I can, and will, teach it round or flat. For our purposes here I am going to try to give an even handed presentation of two different sides of an argument. My innate sentiments are on the "classical" side of the fence. I was taught that art, in its classical sense, has to do with the deliberate application of pre-agreed upon conventions. We, as photographers, have things such as the Zone system, pre-visualization, and "one strong center of interest," as examples. I'm sure we all can provide examples from other fields such as music, dance, painting, etc. Using this definition of art solves some problems, and also buys some real trouble. I was also taught that Modern art is based on a communications model, along the lines of Aristotle's "speaker, speech, audience." If you, as the creator, and I as the viewer, get together and agree that it is art, then it is art. This solves some of the issues people have with the classical definition of art, but it also buys another, different, truck load of problems. Contemporary art is more of a process than it is single, specific works. Modern art is concerned with finding out what it is supposed to be about. This isn't a problem which J. S. Bach had, to name a musician. The rules of modern are art that you are supposed to be working out what the rules are. The content is that it is trying to figure out what the content is supposed to be. The language is that you are supposed to be inventing the language. The world of contemporary art is made up of a collection of small communities, each with its own viewpoint, each advocating that art is what that community says it is. Here's the punch line -- We. as Leica users, out making the best "traditional" images we can, are, by definition, doing contemporary art simply because we are members of a community with a view point, which we advocate. Zen, huh? In many ways the modern and the classical worlds are like alternate quantum realities...you can live in one sometimes, and the other at other times, but it is hard to live in both of them at once. The problem with "classical" art is that it has rules, and sooner or later that gets us into the question of authority. How many lines does a sonnet have? Says who? The pope? the guy paying the bills? The head of the art department at the university? The second half of our century has been, for good and proper reasons, one huge, richly deserved revolt against authority. Classical just doesn't work for some people. Modern Art's supposes an aesthetic kind of dialectical movement...Leica meets Holga, and out of the conflict comes a new vision. The problem here is that although you can make statements like, "That's not a good example of a symphony," or that's a great novel. You can't, IMHO, make a persuasive case that a statue is superior to a poem. It finally has to resort to the same appeals to authority which it started by finding objectionable. So what? When it is viewed in these terms we have a situation wherein both arguments have strengths and weaknesses. Both have fatal flaws. Neither can win the fight, so we all go round and round. Let's look at it in a slightly different way. Let's compare in to the struggle between poets and grammar books. Language has rules, says one side, and they have a point. But, say the poets, language, like old coins, gets worn out and we need to mint new. They have a point, too. Times do change. Progress does come from this conflict, but we all have stomach aches because we are in the trenches, helping to slug it out. The exhibit you saw did what it was intended to...two communities, two viewpoints, two languages side by side where they can be compared. You did what you were supposed to. You decided which language worked for you, and you were able to re-affirm your commitment to classical photography. That's a good thing, and an afternoon well spent, IMHO. The guide failed by judging rather than guiding, and by falling into the "authority" trap. Having said all this I also gotta say that there is such a thing as junk. The out of focus stuff may have been hard to access because there was nothing to access. You have to decide if that makes it bad, or if it just makes it a failed experiment, which is the fate of most experiments. And we all have to decide how open or how hard we want our hearts to be. There is a middle ground. The fact that something has no meaning to me may mean that it has no meaning, it may mean that it simply isn't to my taste ( which is hardly a hanging offense), or it may also be a chance for me to learn something. Barney barney@sun1.wwb.noaa.gov