Forms of documentation in contemporary photography by Laura Moro
Transcript
Forms of documentation in contemporary photography by Laura Moro
Forms of documentation in contemporary photography by Laura Moro Corpi di reato (Bodies of Evidence) is a visual research project. It represents an act of denunciation, but it is not limited to that. Rather it is an invitation to reconsideration, to “confront the naked truth”. Only photography permits the capture, studied concentration and contemplation of what exists, and of what definitely is now gone. More than any analysis, account or summary, the photograph fixes a moment and presents us with an incontrovertible fact: this is what we are. Certainly we are aware that computerisation of digital photography in some way, perhaps in an ontological sense, alters what was the original role of the photograph: above all to serve as document. However this is not what we wish to explore here. This shift of recent years in various theoretical dimensions does not detract in any way from the documentary work that many photographers still continue to conduct. Much less from the Corpi di reato, that continue to testify to places that exist, but that we no longer know how to see. Alessandro Imbriaco and Tommaso Bonaventura are not witnesses of a reality caught in the act: rather they are archaeologists. They excavate, bringing to light the objective, material fact, outlining the stratum to which it belongs, documenting its connections to various contexts. Bit by bit, exposure after exposure, the material fact thus takes on form as an element of history. Photography for documentation? The Corpi di reato project has no objection to this definition. It does not attempt to distinguish itself by self-identification as artistry, as if artistry were somehow in contradiction with documentary work. We are well aware that documentation photography is no longer in style, and is seen simply as a relic of a society that needed to classify phenomena in order to understand them. Now at the most we speak of photography “in documentary style”, where objectivity is prevalently an expressive code and documentation is not the final aim. Thus landscape photography too, will have had its day. Yet I believe that if there is indeed an emergency in Italy today it is related to the landscape and to capacities of elaborating a new concept of it, constantly with the idea at heart that it is a part of cultural heritage, and that these are to be preserved together. It is almost compulsory that we once more cite Luigi Ghirri, considered a master, and thus no longer a man of dangerous opinions: “I believe that behind the environmental disasters, apart from the mechanisms inherent in a certain type of development, man has developed a disaffection in reference to his environment over the past 30 or 40 years, with 8 a corresponding fundamental incapacity to relate with it through its depiction. Thus the recovery of visual depiction, other than through written and ‘technical’ media, as instrument for relation with the world, of rapport with the environment, can have great cultural weight and effectiveness.” The consequences of the disconnection described are before us: the interest on the part of certain photographers beginning in the 1980s – Ghirri first among others – for “ordinary” places, has dispensed with the aestheticizing approach to reading the Italian landscape, but has not succeeded in influencing the logic of government decision-making for the territory. Thus the “Bel Paese” has become elitist and sham and the ordinary places ever more untended and abandoned - with the further paradoxical aggravation of substituting the dominant aesthetic of beauty with a dictatorship of non-beauty, thus making the perverted processes of territorial use more acceptable. I feel that the strength of the images in Corpi di reato is precisely this: the use of photographic documentation methods (time/space units) to represent reality in its historicsocial dynamic. The photographs are a thesis on what our country is today, on what has happened and where it has happened. The exhibit, hosted by the Institute in its new exhibit space, is the first stage of a reflection on the contemporary meaning of documentation photography. The ICCD, titular to this great tradition of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities, intends to proceed with an examination of the many meanings that documentary photography has had in Italy, beyond labels and intellectual associations. Corpi di reato offers us a point of departure of high standard: it is a visual narration composed of documentary material which is exactly what our immense photographic archives have to offer. 9
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