Tuesday, June 15, 2010

The Adventure of a Photographer

Italo Calvino (1923-1985) was a Cuban born writer who lived and worked in Italy. He worked as a journalist as well as becoming well known for writing short stories and novels. This short story ‘The Adventure of a photographer’ is from a collection of his short stories ‘Difficult Loves’ that are all based around themes of love and loneliness.


In this story Calvino presents the idea of truth in photography. He demonstrates that often when taking photographs, the motivation is not to document reality but to produce an image of your ideal. The idea is that photography is the framing of part of a particular moment in a particular way.


The first way this is demonstrated in the text is through the discussion of family photography specifically “new parents framing their offspring” (222). He talks about the desire for parents to photograph their children saying that “The photograph album remains the only place where all these fleeting perfections are saved and juxtaposed, each aspiring to an incomparable absoluteness of its own.” (222).


Initially Antonio (the main character, a bachelor) feels excluded from the family photography of his friends. Calvino mentions Antonio being asked to take the “family group or multi family picture” (223) as not having a family he is seen as an outsider. He says that initially “an awkward stiffening of his arm would make the lens veer to capture the masts of ships or the spires of steeples, or to decapitate grandparents, uncles, and aunts. He was accused of making a joke in bad taste.” (223). This quote expresses the desire for parents to have a photo that documents not reality but an idealised version of the moment. Antonio also observes something similar when he says “If you take a picture of Pierluca because he’s building a sand castle, there is no reason not to take his picture while he’s crying because the castle has collapsed, and then while the nurse consoles him by helping him find a sea shell in the sand.” (224)


When Antonio takes up Photographing Bice in the story he talks about “the ideal postcard in his mind” (229) that he is trying to photograph. Then he goes on to question whether he wants to photograph a fantasy (230). Antonio comes to the conclusion that “Whatever person you decide to photograph, or whatever thing, you must go on photographing it always, exclusively, at every hour of the day and night. Photography has a meaning only if it exhausts all possible images.” (233) So, he photographs Bice constantly and then when this obsession drives her away he photographs the absence of her. He ends the story photographing photographs. This seems as if perhaps he was obsessed with the process of photography more than his subject. By this I mean that I see the character as trying to make photography capture some kind of truth and I think that this is impossible so to end by photographing the photographs implies a realization or acknowledgement that the photograph is itself an object that has its own version of the ‘truth’.


So the idea that I have drawn from Calvino’s story is that photography is the framing of a moment in an attempt to produce an ideal image. However this is just a concept drawn from a short story; how does it relate to personal photography in reality and photography as a creative medium?


In the article ‘Imagination and Memory’ Maryanne Garry and Devon L.L. Polaschek discus the scientific studies that support the theory that imagining false events (especially repeatedly) can lead to the development of actual memories of the imagined event. The reason I bring up this article is that I want to discus how creating idealised images of particular moments in our personal histories could possibly affect our autobiographical memory.


This article summarises some of the important research in the area of memory. The research shows that “imagining the past differently from what it was can change the way one remembers it.” (6) The article shows that memories can not only be altered but entire false memories implanted through imagination alone (7). They say that “These studies show that false memories can be created when people think about (and probably imagine) childhood events in an attempt to remember them.” (7) and that “repeatedly examining ones past can change the way one remembers it.” (8).


So if we relate this to the process of personal/family photography we could draw up a hypothesis that repeatedly examining an idealised version of an event in your past could actually affect the memories that you have of that event. One of the keys to altering memory that Garry and Polaschek identify is repetition. This means that the repeated exposure to a photo that displays a particular version of the truth could lead to the memories of the event to become confused with the version of the event in the photograph. As many of the studies they discus deal with implanting entire false memories into subjects as well as altering details of existing memories it does not seem a huge jump then to assume that memories could be altered through repeated exposure to the idealised representations of events that we often see in photography.


Patricia Holland discusses Family photography. She expresses the view that in family photography “memory interweaves with private fantasy and public history.” (1). She also asks whether photography is about people looking to produce their own ideal image (7). She concludes her discussion by saying that “Family photography can operate at this junction between personal memory and social history, between public myth and personal unconscious. Our memory is never fully ‘ours’, nor are the pictures ever unmediated representations of our past. Looking at them we both construct a fantastic past and set out on a detective trail to find other versions of a ‘real’ one.” (13-14)


So we can conclude that family and personal photography can be an act of recording a fantastic or idealised version of an event or moment. However does this relate to photography as a creative medium in art? I think that it has implications in that people can often view photography as a truthful medium. These writers lead me to conclude that photography is more of an ideal or fantasy than a truth. Should this then affect the way we take photos, as Antonio tried to photograph constantly in an attempt to capture truth? Or perhaps it should instead affect the way we view photographs?



References:


Italo Calvino, “The Adventure of a Photographer”, in Difficult Loves, William Weaver, Archibald Colquhoun and Peggy Wright (trans.), San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984, pp 220-235. Print.

Garry, Maryanne and Polaschek, Devon L. L. "Imagination and Memory." Current Directions in Psychological Science. Vol. 9 (2000): pp. 6-10. JSTOR. Web. 07/06/2010.

Holland, Patricia. "Hisory, Memory and the Family Album." Family Snaps: The meaning of domestic photography. Ed. Spence, Jo and Holland, Patricia. London: Virago, 1991. pp. 1-14. Print.

2 comments:

  1. Hana, I really like your analysis of this piece. Particularly this idea of constructing fantasy through photographs. Looking through peoples family albums you would think everybody is manically happy most of the time. I think it’s really interesting to compare this with the brain, and how we edit our memories to subconsciously write the best possible ‘auto-biography’. Perhaps in people suffering from depression the opposite is true.
    There are certainly different levels of truth in photography, the willingness or knowledge of the subject plays a part, as does the intentions of the photographer, some are out to capture the ideal, some for gritty realism.

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  2. Your inclusion of research about memory is significant I think with this text and the relationship between photography and idealisation. Along with false memories being implanted and memories being altered, there is also the situation of people who suffer from dissociation due to traumatic events. For example, maybe a child who has been abused grows up with large gaps of memory, years for instance, or maybe only having partial memories of what happened just before they were about to be abused. Presumably because it is some subconscious coping mechanism, but it can also be looked at as yet another way of idealising the past. Family photos of those who have grown up in unstable environments are highly unlikely to capture any of it; rather than being a slightly distorted documentation of the past, they become like a black and white contradiction to reality.

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