I’ve been thinking about abstract photography lately - both the actual work, but also its current resurgence. This fall I wrote a piece that is now featured in the latest issue of Lay Flat that addressed this subject. More specifically, the piece addresses the ways in which certain histories of photography obfuscate and confuse contemporary and historical practice. While I don’t want to rehash my essay from Lay Flat, and encourage you to read it, I was thinking about these issues again when I read the latest Artforum and read Matthew Witkovsky’s essay “Another History.” While there are many things that I liked about the piece, and I admire its attempt to sketch an alternative to certain readings of photo history, it still falls victim to some recurrent problems in these current discussions.
Witkovsky opens his argument with an important and oft neglected point that photography has always been closely bound to its own technological limitations and obsolescence. As he notes,
Abstraction, however, is not photography’s secret common denominator, nor is it an antidote to “traditional” photography – if photography has conventions local or long lasting enough to be thought of in that way. And it seems equally mistaken to suggest that abstraction is more relevant today because it offers awareness of photography’s passing (and therefore of our own passing into a new historical age). Against present talk of extinction, we should remember that photography has since its first days always been “ending,” it technological bases continually displaced through the actions of (truly abstract) economic and historical forces, couple with shifts in popular habits of consumption and social interaction. No matter how refined or forward-looking in its individual instances, photography as a class of imagemaking is profoundly marked by the enforced obsolescence characteristic of the industrial and postindustrial eras.
Considering this fraught relationship, Witkovsky sets out to sketch his own “short history,” to borrow a phrase from Benjamin, of photography that navigates the relationship between the photograph as image and object.
Any history, curatorial effort or critical argument relies on exclusion. While this is accepted and necessary, the exclusions can often be as revealing and illuminating as what is included. After tracing a history beginning with the Polish artist Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp, Witkovsky jumps to Mel Bocher, Jan Dibbets, James Welling, Liz Dechenes, Moyra Devey and Walead Beshty. While these artists are linked in various ways in terms of their practice, what fails to be asked is what is at stake in such a reading and narrative?
For example, in his transition to a discussion of Welling’s work, Witkovsky states “for more than thirty years now, abstraction has been an encrusted subspecialty of artistic academe.” Welling is once again positioned as the crucial link. The exclusions and jumps implicit in this statement as well as others are troubling and do little more than to reinforce accepted dogma. While I appreciate the attempt to trace a “another history” and cast a different light on the current discussion of abstraction, what the essay fails to do is reveal how truly messy and contaminated the long history of abstraction is within photography. It is also troubling how beholden the history is to the current accepted critical discourse on the subject.
As I was mulling over these issues, I was reading the latest issue of The Brooklyn Rail and read a wonderful op-ed by the Artseen Editors, where they reflect on, and praise, Roberta Smith’s recent article “Post-Minimal To The Max” in the New York Times (2/10/10). As they state in their op-ed,
… many of our institutional guardians have sought a prescriptive approach to ensure that visual art works “properly.” These gatekeepers want to dwell in the more easily manageable world of ideas, rather than in the messiness of reality and the tangled threads of aesthetic impulses. They want art that can be domesticated by criticism…
It is the historian and curator’s job to look beyond artist statements and read the artists work against the historical and contemporary landscape in which they work – not merely rely on the dominant critical discourse of the time or the machinations of the marketplace.
In my essay for Lay Flat, I too sketch a brief history of abstraction, but do so to begin the task of revealing not only the truly messy history of photography that is not only intermingled with the other visual arts, but also the parallel, and at times, convergent histories of the medium. Photography and photo histories are too often ghettoized and bound by master narratives. What is troubling are the ways in which particular narratives are repeated, reinforced and eventually accepted wholesale in ways that are not always transparent or seem to reflect the market rather than real practice. It is important to note that artists are constantly restaging, reinterpreting and reshaping the history and historical models of the past, and in doing so shape the way we understand the medium and its history. Any examination of this long history needs to acknowledge and explore that fruitful dialog.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Saturday, March 20, 2010
The Unreasonable Apple
So what is the issue? The broader art world has no problems with the work of Jeff Wall, or Cindy Sherman or James Casebere or Thomas Demand partly because the creative process in the work is clear and plain to see, and it can be easily articulated and understood what the artist did: Thomas Demand constructs his elaborate sculptural creations over many weeks before photographing them; Cindy Sherman develops, acts and performs in her self-portraits. In each case the handiwork of the artist is readily apparent: something was synthesized, staged, constructed or performed. The dealer can explain this to the client, the curator to the public, the art writer to their readers, etc. The problem is that whilst you can discuss what Jeff Wall did in an elaborately staged street tableaux, how do you explain what Garry Winogrand did on a real New York street when he ‘just’ took the picture? Or for that matter what Stephen Shore created with his deadpan image of a crossroads in El Paso? Anyone with an ounce of sensitivity knows they did something there, and something utterly remarkable at that, but... what? How do we articulate this uniquely photographic creative act, and express what it amounts to in terms such that the art world, highly attuned to synthetic creation -the making of something by the artist- can appreciate serious photography that engages with the world as it is?
-Paul Graham, The Unreasonable Apple
from presentation at first MoMA Photography Forum, 16th February 2010-Paul Graham, The Unreasonable Apple
The other night I had the honor of attending the 2nd of a series of MoMA forums on photography. The series is entitled the "Contemporary Photography Forum" and is attempting to address the state of the medium. The first session was on Feb 16th and addressed where the medium of photography was going, while the one this week explored how historical models and practices inform contemporary practice. Each forum has 6 or so presenters and then opens the discussion to the room. While the forum rehashed a lot of older arguments that have dominated the medium and just got warmed up when we ran out of time, it was nevertheless lively and interesting.
In the first session, Paul Graham argued passionately for the value of "straight photography." Graham was a presenter for the first session and has posted his written piece on his website. He has made these points before at artist talks and lectures. I've posted an excerpt above, but it is worth reading in full here.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Lay Flat 02: Meta

Lay Flat 02: Meta
104 pages, perfect bound
7.75 x 10 in. / 19.7 x 25.4 cm.
ISSN 1948-2876
ISBN 978-0-9842973-1-3
Published February 2010
Edition of 2,000
$30 + S&H | Now available!
The newest issue of Lay Flat is now out. As I wrote before, I'm honored to have an essay in the latest issue. Get it here.
P.S. My essay specifically addresses the rise of photographic abstraction, but more specifically it discusses what could be dubbed "photography about photography." The most recent issue of Artforum also has an article about this subject. While I liked aspects of the essay, there are more than a few things I don't like about the essay and hope to post a response soon.
Tuesday, March 09, 2010
Colors Dying Light

Unfortunately, I missed his show this month at Higher Pictures, but I finally got a copy of Sam Fall's Color Dying Light published by Hassla. Simple yet enigmatic, the book is a treat. Like Adam Schrieber, who I wrote about earlier, and Hannah Whitaker, who also has a great show up at Kumukumu, and other conceptually minded photographers, Fall's work playfully defies easy categorization. You can see more of his work here.
In addition to his book with Hassla, Sam has also self-published a number of new books which are available at Dashwood books.

© Sam Falls/Hassla, All Rights Reserved

© Sam Falls/Hassla, All Rights Reserved

© Sam Falls/Hassla, All Rights Reserved
Friday, March 05, 2010
New Address
As you've noticed, I've taken the plunge and moved my blog over to my new url - http://adambellphoto.blogspot.com. Due to changes at Blogger, they no longer will be supporting FTP blogs or subdomains.
While I deliberated long and hard about moving to Wordpress, I decided I wanted my blog to have a degree of autonomy from my main site. I was also being a little lazy. The migration will also redirect all links to the new site and preserve search inquiries. I'm still not sure about this, but was the easiest solution at the moment. Please update the feed so you can get any posts.
Thanks for reading,
Adam
While I deliberated long and hard about moving to Wordpress, I decided I wanted my blog to have a degree of autonomy from my main site. I was also being a little lazy. The migration will also redirect all links to the new site and preserve search inquiries. I'm still not sure about this, but was the easiest solution at the moment. Please update the feed so you can get any posts.
Thanks for reading,
Adam
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