Essay 2

How do photographers Doug DuBois and Robert Clayton represent social divisions in their work?

Society – “the aggregate of people living together in a more or less ordered community.”

Within society, members of the public domain are continually categorized and divided by their characteristics, a feature of a person in order to identify them, which is out of their own control to an extent, for example, their race. Societal politics serves economic categorization among people in order to accommodate for the different classes, altering their contribution to society or providing financial support so nobody is disadvantaged. However, society’s judgement upon receiving government help is generally interpreted sourly, creating an image of these people as inferior to those who work or those who don’t live in council housing. Society’s pretensions are detrimental for those on the receiving end of government provided benefits as it is places them into a social disadvantage in terms of acceptance and equality. Due to my parents being fifteen and seventeen when I was born, financial aid was paramount in our unique situation as both my parents were still in school, one way or another. Both my mother and father have accepted that “the odds were against them” in sculpturing and raising a child to be a good son, successful student and socially inline, meaning, I spent a significant amount of time of my life in the lower sector of society where “irresponsible” accusations commonly fell upon my parents. I have my own shameful experiences of embarrassment as I became more conscious to the fact my parents were young when I joined primary school and that our financial situation or home life was different to others. Although my time in state accommodation was limited, I do have experience and memories of living in social housing but it is more so the fact I was deceitful when people had asked where I lived, often not mentioning that particular area in case I was thought upon or treated in different fashion. The documentation work of Robert Clayton in Estates and Doug DuBois in My Last Day at Seventeen gives a valuable insight into the lower class lives, ranging from characters found within these regions to the buildings in which they live, all staying very loyal to stereotypes. However, what I appreciate the most about these two illuminating photobooks is the beautifying of what we expect to be Western slums, for instance, Doug DuBois’s crisp shots enriches the ugliness of these surroundings, giving a more accepting and warming perception of council housing. My intention with this complementary essay to my book production is test the social stigma I was once a part of in order to demonstrate that human identity and emotion remains despite divisions within society. In my personal investigation, I photographically documented my friends, my family, my girlfriend, my dog, the houses I either live in or visit, and the environments that have made me who I am today and who I am becoming. Having experience of two social classes, I aim to create a bridge between the social divisions in order to show the importance of unification, fundamentally appreciating one another’s differences and allowing equal opportunities despite alternative, inherited socio-economic statuses.

Image result for my last day at seventeen

Doug DuBois is an American photographer based in New York who was sent to Ireland via invitation to attend Sirius Arts Centre in Cobh. In an interview with Lens Culture, Doug DuBois revealed how he had almost turned down the opportunity which actually became a five year project, his second most prolific to date. Frustrated by a lack of progress, DuBois requested to his two students they take him back to where they live for some photographic inspiration which is when the photographer first arrived at Russell Heights, the council estate photographed within the book. Following on from looking around and getting a feel for the surroundings, Kevin (a student of DuBois’s), showed DuBois his house where he “made a photograph of Roisin in her bedroom and realized almost immediately that this was his “entrée into a compelling and complex corner of Irish life”. In terms of provenance, I personally think it is refreshing and fair photography for DuBois, a member of the middle-class, to capture life upon Russell Heights as he is not attempting to show some sort of savagery among the lower classes that an upper class documenter would have portrayed, or promote life in these regions like the lower class would have. DuBois has initially entered an unknown area, meaning he would have documented what he saw using a technique I call the “transparent lens”, meaning you directly capture what you see. Although, DuBois confesses “only a handful of photographs in the book … aren’t posed”, reinforcing this sense of tableaux, and as consequence, the meaning behind each image remains the same and as yet there is a lack of imitation, which can detected in Steve McCurry’s The Imperial Way (1985). Despite being an individual council estate, the images portrayed stay loyal to a council estate’s stereotypes with young girls in short, semi-revealing clothing, unorthodox graffiti and hooded, smoking teenagers.

Image result for my last day at seventeen

Crucially, the work of Doug DuBois is a valuable insight into the life within an Irish council estate in Cork as we, the audience, are exposed to a unique sub narrative which the majority of the world would not experience. Dubois’s photographic work upon Russell Heights in My Last Day at Seventeen (2015) breaks social boundaries as an American photographer from a middle-class background can stroll into an Irish council estate and request their photographic co-operation over the course of five years, demonstrating that this anti-socialable behaviour that is commonly recognised or associated with council estates is actually down to the role of the individual, rather than the collective. Due to relativity of DuBois’s piece, his sub narrative becomes reflective of other council estates and therefore an example of the grand narrative’ almost becoming a social protest against society’s pretensions. The mere fact that a stranger with a camera, an intrusive tool of documentation, can be welcomed onto a council estate indicates to me that the lower class lack guidance and opportunities as when instructed, teenagers we’d expect to disobey DuBois’s wishes, follow what he asks. As DuBois’s heritage does not stem from an Irish lower-class, we’d expect that DuBois would adopt a voyeuristic or objectifying approach to his photobook, acting as an “outside” to Russell Heights. In contrast, DuBois embraces the qualities Abigail Solomon-Godeau deems as “inside”, for example, “trusting” and “engaged” which he reinforces by clarifying he made a “handful” of “friends” during his time documenting the estate. DuBois’s attitude and accepting mind-set is a factor or trait the majority of the population need to adopt, as when the photographer gave the residents of Russell Heights a polite and respectable response, there was clear unity, something general society lacks.

 

 

 

 

In the same spontaneous fashion that DuBois discovered his own photography project, I discovered mine. The art of communication enlightened me as one night in my kitchen, I informed my mother of how I was struggling to meet deadlines with my photography course as I could not find a sufficient photography topic to develop and progress with. As a result of long conversation and me explaining a vague outline of the photography course, my mother concluded something “personal, something that shows who you were and who you have become”. I conjured up numerous plans and envisioned a multitude of photo-shoots in my head, ‘picturing him there and that there with that in the background’. Finally, I thought photographing everything that I felt was meaningful around me would give a clear perception and image of me and my journey of endless self-acknowledgment, almost like how the sub narratives of my friends, my step-brother and my girlfriend create my own grand narrative, yet my narrative is a sub narrative. Admittedly, I spent a lot of time photographing my social milieu, carrying my camera around with me on nights out, taking it to people’s houses with me and even following my friend’s playing golf, however, when it came to narrowing my vast selection of images down, they always seemed to fit the same sort of category. Problems inherent with social housing and stigmas our society possess always cropped up, perhaps a mental reference to the issues in my own life I have ignored and been embarrassed of. The images I had taken under this bracket seemed to be distant and taken from long-range, meaning the methodology of how I captured these images were reflective of how I dealt with these difficulties. Other underlying issues were also incorporated, for example, my father’s departure when I was aged three meant I no longer lived with him and as a boy; my dad was my hero so it was rather detrimental to not have such a paramount figure always present in my life. Thus, there were a lot of close-up images in his bedroom to establish this sense of my father’s absence and closeness that I believed I craved as a child, as well as any suggestion of our unification or instances of me present in his life.

Robert Clayton is a British photographer whose vernacular work rarely drifts beyond his 1991 production of Estates, a photographic documentary based upon the life in a particular council estate and how the setting is disturbed by the government’s decision to renovate the properties. The analysis of the Lion Farm Estate shows the government’s power and demonstrates how it trivialises the tenants of the high rises as Clayton captured Lion Farm on the eve of its calamitous invasion which would result in the partial destruction of the estate. In this scenario, the term “estate” is personified to be a living entity; it is the home to a multitude of tenants, a place of joy and an example of a certain time period. Within my own work, I aim to elevate the settings in question in order to show how these buildings, despite their negative connotations, can be important for members of society and contain their own account of events with every tenant having a different story to the next. Fundamentally, Clayton’s work lacks colour and is rich in vision as it portrays a setting that is worn and far-from perfect, yet still embraced by its residents, giving significant importance to the ugly. Clayton tests society’s questions of the aesthetics of the estate and its occupants civility as they are questioned themselves as he aspires to humanise the tenants and the live they lead. The estate is in the Black Country region, one of the most populated areas in Britain yet Robert Clayton has the ability to make it feel segregated and secluded to the rest of the country, even deserted to desolation. There are two reasons for this; the first being to depict the independence of the tenants that occupy the buildings, attempting to demonstrate that they don’t need to government’s aid. The second interpretation is that the government have deliberately isolated the estate, leaving the tenants who quite clearly need help, whether this personal or financial, alone. This factor coincides with my work and reinforces why I chose to analyse this book as I believe the governmental upper class is not too concerned with the lower class’s welfare and their alleged system which is supposed to improve lower class lives lacks a sense of personal. As I have eluded with analysis of Doug DuBois’s My Last Day At Seventeen, the people of these estates need more than a roof and financial aid, with a genuine care for their future crucial for social development.

Image result for estate robert clayton

The problems with government handling of the lower class is not a recent affair as Charles Dickens, a renown social critic discredits social policy on attaining information regarding the less fortunate and how they deal with this data. In his 1854 production of Hard Times, Dickens explains how the government is obsessed with “fact” and how they use “tabular statements” to deal with social ills, yet these methods are quixotic and lack personality. The government’s prevention to intervene and aid lower class lives on a personal level means there will always be social injustices in terms of equality as children from lower class backgrounds don’t have the same opportunities as children from the middle and upper classes. In 2018, Professor Green, a UK rapper brought up on a council estate by his grandmother admitted university was never a possibility for him due to his financial circumstances but when offered the chance to go to Saint Paul’s, a highly selective independent school, he knew by the age of eleven that people from his socio-economic background did not attend that school. Green developed upon this by granting the fact there was a stigma for “Working Class White Men” to attend university, clearly distinguishing that there is a social divide in terms of acceptance of the lower class.

Image result for estate robert clayton

Of paramount relevance, I analysed the work of Doug DuBois and Robert Clayton in order to examine how they portray the lives of the lower class against what society’s pretensions are. As stated, there is clear imbalances between the classes and not only in terms of finances as children, that are productions of their class, do not have equal opportunities regardless of their abilities. The leading classes tends to be less accepting of the lower class being successful, however, these photographers crucially question these pretensions and humanise the bottom of society’s pecking order. Throughout my photobook “Over the Fence”, I incorporate characters that represent a low socio-economic status that still achieve in the activities they do and the lives they lead both socially and in terms of sport. My work also includes daunting images of large high-rises to create the perception of the challenges facing thw lower-class, I even revisited where I lived in order to remind myself of my heritage and the difficulties my family faced. When embarking on this photographic expedition, I paid particular attention to detail in a fit of nostalgia as I used this opportunity to heal and accept where I came from; shrugging off any embarrassment I had previously felt. A factor I did not achieve when undergoing the creation of my photobook was a current notion of social protest as I should have used my tableaux orientated skills to enquire with residents of council housing about photographing them and perhaps their homes, much like Doug DuBois did in his My Last Day at Seventeen. Although the images would not have been personal, like the photographs produced in Ray’s a Laugh by Richard Billingham, it would be atmospheric and provide a stronger protest against the detrimental divisions within society.

“Knowledge is power. Information is liberating. Education is the premise of progress, in every society, in every family.” – Kofi Annan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Critical Image Analysis (Matt Eich)

This post will outline a critical image analysis of a chosen photograph from Matt Eich’s diaristic project following the journey of his family through their time a time of distress and grief surrounding his parents divorce. It is entitled ‘I Love You, I’m Leaving’ and is one of two parts of my personal study for my coursework; LaToya Ruby Frazier being the other – whom I have already carried out a critical image analysis of.


Describing – FORM – What is here? What am I looking at?

The image above, which I will be analysing in detail, is taken form Matt Eich’s series entitled ‘I Love You, I’m Leaving’. The insightful project follows the life of Matt Eich and his family as he documents, as a photographer, his relationships, as he serves as a father to his children, a husband to his wife and a son to his just divorced parents. It is a poetic and diaristic expression of love and what attachment and detachment can do to a family. Eich, in his statement for the project, taken form (website) expresses that the series was “created during a time of personal domestic unease. I made this work when my parents separated after 33 years of marriage and my wife, children and I had moved to a new city.”

The photograph in question is a very simple yet well executed and elegant image full of character. The image frames one person – and this subject is actually unknown and the only part of the subject’s body that we can see, informing us that it is a photo of realism, is the subjects feet poking out of the bottom of the silk sheet which falls gracefully, and rather ghostly over the shape of the body underneath. Looking at the feet of the subject it looks like it could be a little boy’s feet due to the size of them and the body underneath the cover.

However, observing Eich’s family which is revealed in the rest of the images in the project, their son only looks very young and the size of the body looks more suited to that of the their daughter’s height.

The little girl huddles lonesomely in the corner of her bed underneath a silk sheet which drapes gracefully over her body contours. There is certain glow and glaze which provides body to the image.

It is an image I really like because it is quite eerie in its ghostly state – with the shadow of the feet casting against the wall and the silk texture of the sheet providing a certain glow and shine to the overall look. Furthermore, the head is completely covered under the sheet and the only evidence of a human body is shown in the the feet which hand out the end. The girl is curled up in a semi-ball shape as though  she is scared of something. Connotations of ghostliness is reiterated in the relationship between the way she is curled up, huddled under a cover, like a child would when scared, as well as the fact that she, in her own form looks ghostly.

Interpreting – MEANING – What is it about?

Interpreting this image beyond its face value and deeper into the psychological meaning of it, it could mean much more relating to the grief the family may be going through. Eich states that the project was made during a time of personal domestic unease; during a time where the unwelcomed separation of his parents came after 33 years of marriage and, as well, at the inconvenient time at which Eich, their son, had began to create his own family and they were ready to move to a new city to begin their lives elsewhere with his own wife, and three children. The fact that one of the children, whom we don’t know, is tucked away under the blanket, with a deliberate hidden identity may signify that they may feel quite isolated from family life at the moment with the relatives she once knew to be happy and cohesive, now broken and full of upset. Eich reiterates this feeling of unease and makes it clear that it was personal unease but this internal feeling, although tempting to keep in and hide from others, often has to be expressed. This may, in-turn affect the whole family.

Although the little girl may only be playing around with her father as she hides under the sheet in a game of hide-and-seek, it is useful to look further into it to infer and interpret another meaning that could also be realistic. The fact that we cannot see the body underneath the sheet may represent a feeling a lost identity in the new life the family leads. Eich, along with his wife has made the joint decision that it would be best to move away to start a new life, to create more memories with their new-found family. The children likely wouldn’t have got s say in this and the move may have been sprung on them at the last minute. Because of this, it likely that the children may begin to feel a sense of lost identity that the home they once lived in and begin their live sin has now been taken away. I am aware of this feeling from personal experience when I moved from house to house to visit my dad wherever he was staying st the time. After moving out of his, once known home, he had to find a place to live which came as a struggle at the time and as his son, I felt quite confused but found ways to make the most of the new surroundings I found myself in when visiting him.

As a child, you look for a certain spots in your home to act as a den-type area – where you can go to be yourself – to be a kid, sit and do nothing – like I used to – I used to make dens out sofa cushions and find nooks in the house that I could fit into and sit for the fun of it because I was young and my mind had the ability to imagine and wonder off. The image above could represent  this same concept – under the sheets on this bed – she may find comfort or enjoyment out of hiding underneath it and it could be her own way of isolating herself from the family to allow herself mental room to imagine, as a kid should.

Evaluating – JUDGEMENT – How good is it?

In my personal opinion, knowing the type of photography I enjoy, I would say that this image is very good and is the exact type of image that attracts me to look at the rest if the series is I was to spot this in an exhibition etc.

Because of it obscurity, I believe that is a very attractive and intriguing image that would draw me in to know more about the photographer as well as the project.

The image would have been taken with a fixed lens in order to get a close to to the subject and the fact that it is black and white adds ot the quality, in my opinion – because it is not heavily reliant on contrasts between heavy blacks and luminant whites and instead focuses on the neutral to provide body to the photograph. Furthermore, there are several leading lines within the photograph; from the feet hanging out the end of the sheet, these lead the audiences eyes along the top of the body, over the legs and to the head which is also under the covers and on centered on a hotspot, if I was to apply the rule of thirds.

As well, I often say this with Eich’s images, each and every one, within this particular project, I believe could work on its own, in solitary from the other images because every one is so powerful and poetic in its expression. This may be why Eich puts only one image to two pages throughout his book because he feels like they would be best appreciated one at a time – as opposed to other photographers who may use two or even three to a page. The size of the images in the small portrait book also reiterate the fact that they are delicate images which hold meaning in more than one way.

Theorizing – CONTEXT – Is it art? How does it relate to the history and theory of photography, art and culture?

Eich’s image capturing this particular moment in time of his daughter’s life at home is an image which works perfectly in his series looking at the fragility of family contrasting its ability to unite a collective of people within the familial circle.

The simplicity that lies within his photography is what makes it so beautiful and captivating because it is the thought behind each and every photo as well as the tones achieved from black and white film – all aspects come together to create meaningful and natural, very organic looking documentary images – and because of this, Eich’s work lends itself to the particular art movement of realism and straight photography because it captures life it most arwwst from – the camera is used as a witness to create memories of intimate moments int time in between the hustle an bustle of daily life – a style of work I enjoy experimenting with in my own projects – the reasons being, for personal reasons and it is the same for any documentary imagery, is that it creates a very truthful and realistic sense of emotion and makes it very easy to tell a story because you are capturing people in their natural forms. Catching people off guard with your lens makes for great results to show a series or a sequence. Eich’s imagery encapsulates the whole meaning of documentary work because it focuses less on post-production and alterations to improve an image an more on the subject and content matte to create a “good” image.

Eich borrows from personal experiences to stimulate his photographic work and his artistic eye – making for a very personal insight into what we, as the audience often tend not to see because it is regarded as personal business to be kept to oneself. The state of acting as a fly-on-the-wall looking in on family life of others, in both Eich and Frazier’s projects is what intrigues the audience, myself included.