blackbird online journal spring 2002 vol.1 no. 1

 

RICHARD ROTH | Collecting Myself

The language of things is constructed by narratives which are always in flux. The language of things is often blunt, vulgar, and predetermined; but it is also magical, poetic, vital, and sensual. In any case, the language of things is spoken here, it is our lingua franca.

Photography provides a good vantage point from which to observe people engaged in the act of observing the world and collecting phenomena. In William Henry Fox Talbot's Calotypes—The Library (1845) and The Breakfast Table (1840), and Daguerre's Shells and Fossils (1839)—we see illustrated the curatorial nature of photography—a medium concerned, to a large degree, with preserving the present (no matter how ordinary) and cataloguing phenomena. From Daguerre to Bernd and Hilla Becher, the ideology of the photographer as collector, and the collector as savior, has played an important role in shaping the nature and history of photography, and consequently of our perception of the modern world.

The "series" is the backbone of photo-sensibility, and like the collection, it implies a belief in scientific method. "One" example is not sufficiently evidential ("one" might be a coincidence), but "many," repeatedly, are compelling——they become proof.

 William Henry Fox Talbot, The Library, Calotype, 1845.

 William Henry Fox Talbot, The Breakfast Table, Calotype, 1840.

 Daguerre, Shells and Fossils, 1839.
 
 



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