Contents
07
Foreword and Acknowledgements
09
Marking Time: Photography, Film and Temporalities of the Image
23
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Contents
07
Foreword and Acknowledgements
09
Marking Time: Photography, Film and Temporalities of the Image
23
Real Time: Instantaneity and the Photographic Imaginary
39
Stillness Becoming: Reflections on Bazin, Barthes, and Photographic Stillness
David Green Mary Ann Doane
jonathan Friday
55
Thinking Stillness Yve Lomax
65
Portraits, Still Video Portraits and the Account of the Soul joanna Lowry
79
Melancholia
2
Kaja Silverman
97
Posing, Acting, Photography
"3
The Film-Still and its Double: Reflections on the 'Found' Film-Still
David Campany
john Stezaker
127
Frame/d Time: A Photogrammar of the Fantastic Garrett Stewart
151
The Possessive Spectator
165
Possessive, Pensive and Possessed
Laura Mulvey Victor Burgin
179
Notes on Contributors
183
List of Illustrations
Foreword and Acknowledgem ents
The s tarting point for this book was a conference bearing the sa me title organised by Photoforum and held at the Kent Institute of Art and Design in Canterbury in 2004. Th e m ajority of the essays publis hed here were presented there for the first time. The thinking behind that ini tiative had been to open up a s pace for recons idering the relationship between photographic theory a nd the theory of the moving image as that has been articulated in th e study of fi lm. Each of these areas had developed a rich and sophi sticated body of ideas and modes of ana lysis during the 1970S and ea rly '980s, inAuenced by semiotics, Ma rxism, psychoanalysis, post-structuralism ;md phenomenology. Yet whil st in evitably there had been some degree of intercha nge between photog ra phy theory and fi lm theory each, neverth eless, rema in ed fairly di screte from the othe r. I ndeed, as the introd uctory essay in tli is book points out, the seminal writings by such figures as Walte r Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer, Andre Bazi n , Roland Barthes and Chris tian Metz te nded 10 focus upon wha t were seen as the essential diffe rences between the two ,"ediums of photography and film. Concepts of stillness, moveme nt and lime were articu lated in a manner in which those differences cou ld be both ide ntified and maintained. It seemed to us that thi s implicit understanding was in need of re<"valuation. The primary reason why s uch a re-evaluation was necessa ry and perhaps even made possible - is undoubtedly the impact of new image I<"chnologies. Technologica l developments and the emergence of the digital ,nl erface have seen the progressive e rosion of the bounda ries between th e sl il l and moving image. We now have the capacity at the Aick of a switch to s low or freeze the mov ing image, or to animate a still one. The equipment arollnd us is programmed for a bewildering multiplicity of tasks that makes il progressively difficult to identify the photograph itself as a stable entity wi lh a privileged existence_ The photograph no longer seems to cut into th e Ilow o f time itself: instead it seems to present us with a moment selected lrolll a te mporality that has already been digitally encoded. Thus ' the pllolog raph' now exists as only one option in an expanding me nu of lqlrl'scntatioml and performative operations presented by the technology.
Undoubtedly such technological developments demand new theoretical frameworks that a re based on a dramatica lly different culture of the image. Yet they are also the spu r to look back at the formation of a theoretical and cultural history that we had taken for gra nted, a nd explore elements of the relationship between photography and film (and by extension video) that might only now emerge as being significant. The essays in this book are largely concerned with this project of critica l retrospection. A number of themes stand out in the essays published here. On the one hand there is a sense, in all of the contributions, that if we are going to understand the impact of photographic and filmi c images in contem porary cu lture we may have to loosen our assumptions about where the boundaries between these two medium s are to be found ; whether that boundary be considered tech nologically, culturally or psychically. There is also a strong sense that we are searching for a term inology that might be more open to a phe nomenology of the image, to the way in which the image is experienced: concepts like 'becoming' and 'the event' return in these essays again and agai n, signalling an approach to the image that is perha ps more he rmeneutic than post-structuralist. Fina lly, it is also clear that wbat is at stake in our discussions about stillness and movement, and the different temporalities o f photography and film , does not ultimately rest with the issue of technology pe r se. Thus it is not as if different technologies might simply be thought of as mea ns of producing representations of time but as tech nological ap paratuses through which time itself is constituted and experienced in all of its multiplici ty. The conference Stillness and Time: Photography and the Moving Image, and henceforth this publication, was made possible by the generous support of the Univeristy of Brighton, the Kent Institute of Art and Design and the Surrey Institute of Art and Design University College (the latter two in stitutions si nce almagamated into the University College of the Creative Arts). We would like to extend our gratitude to these institutions for their continued support of Photoforum . We are also extremely grateful to Photoworks, and in particular David Chandler and Rebecca Drew, for their commitme nt, time and energy that have made this publication possible.
Joanna Lowry David Green
Ma rking Time: Photography, Film and Temporalities of the Image David Green
Since I976 Hiroshi Sugimoto has worked on an on-going series of photographs entitled Theatres which have as their setting and immediate subject matte r the ornate a rchitectural inte riors of cinema auditoria. r:ollowing a carefully prescribed formula Sugimoto sets up his large-format camera in an elevated position on the theatre's balcony, placed centrally and directly facing the scree n. While the film is projected the camera's shutter re mains open and the duration of the fi lm determines the exposure ti me of Ihe photograph . Acting as the only source of illumination, the light reAected from the screen reveals the space that surrounds it, drawing out of the dark ness the theatre's cavernous inte rior and its decorative encrusta tion s. Mthe same time the concentration of li ght from the film proj ector on the s