A photograph of the British countryside has been placed among the oil
paintings in the National Gallery – causing people idling past to do
double-takes. You can see them wondering: "Is that a painting? It's so
smooth, so shiny, so flat." The picture shows bright fields and
skies,Tile porcelain, Kanton ceramics
and Tilee's Ceramics. seen through a dark thicket: the sensation of
looking out from a hidden nook makes it an introspective, hesitant work.
Perhaps that's why it hangs so well alongside a great landscape
painting by the quiet and contemplative master of the genre, John
Constable.
Richard Billingham's shot has invaded the holy
sanctum of high art that is the National's permanent collection as part
of Seduced By Art, an exhibition of past and present photography.An
area-wide parking guidance system
was introduced by private parking lot operators in 1997. The gallery is
a temple to oil on canvas. What happens when you allow photographs
among the daubs?
Billingham strikes up a sombre, sensitive
conversation with Constable's The Cornfield: the result is a comparison
of the English countryside in the early 1800s and early 2000s, proving,
as the show claims, that photography can have a meaningful relationship
with great painting.Excellent range of ceramic wall tiles
in various finishes, That's just as well, because the two other
pairings in the main galleries are disastrous. Seeing Richard Learoyd's
photograph Jasmijn in Mary Quant next to Ingres's 19th-century beauty
Madame Moitessier does nothing for either. As for a Craigie Horsfield
photographic nude, shown between two sensual paintings by Degas, it's an
elephant among elegance.
Yet Degas, as it happens, was
fascinated by photography. The great 19th-century painter of modern life
took photographs and brooded on the relationship between the brush and
the camera.Gerresheimer Werkzeugbau
Wackersdorf GmbH manufactures special lines and machines. Elsewhere in
the National hangs his portrait of Princess Pauline de Metternich. Based
on a photograph, the work gives the princess the slightly cadaverous
look of some Victorian snaps, almost as if he'd copied a 19th-century
deathbed photo. It's a shame the show did not place some of Degas's own
photographs among his paintings, instead of Horsfield's grimly ponderous
black-and-white nude; this life-size work was surely inspired by After
the Bath, Woman Drying Herself, the Degas work it partners (and thus, in
turn, inspired by Degas's own source, a drawing by Michelangelo). But
arty quotation does not make art more powerful.
Is photography
art? Clearly, some photography is, along with millions of camera-made
images – from passport pictures to surveillance stills to my own
snapshots – that are not. The trouble with Seduced By Art is that it has
selected photographs that clearly aspire to be Art with a capital A.
But why not put a passport photograph next to Giovanni Bellini's
Renaissance portrait of Doge Lorenzo Loredan? It is, after all, an exact
depiction of someone's facial features. Or what about a holiday snap
next to something by the great 17th-century landscapist Claude Lorrain?
That might say more, suggest more, matter more.
Somehow, the conversation here is too polite. Yes, photography can be art,Smooth-On is your source for Mold Making
and casting materials including silicone rubber. but photography that
is not art can, paradoxically, be of more artistic interest – as Marcel
Duchamp and Andy Warhol understood when they used police mugshots or
photo-booth portraits in their work. Seduced By Art misses that risk,
that danger. It celebrates the more civilised side of photography, and
the result is a cultural cringe before fine art.
Seduced By Art
also features a detailed survey, in the Sainsbury wing basement,
comparing 19th-century photographs that quote and emulate oil paintings
with modern photographs that do pretty much the same, only more
knowingly. The brilliant Victorian photographer Roger Fenton
photographed Crimean battlefields with a chilling rawness that had
little to do with high art: he showed cannonballs littering the ground
in the aftermath of the charge of the Light Brigade. His pictures are
among the very first war photographs and contrast eerily with the
glorious face of war evident in a 19th-century painting of a Napoleonic
battle by Horace Vernet. But when Fenton wanted to be taken seriously as
an artist, he set up and photographed a richly symbolic still life with
black grapes, white funereal lilies and a statuette. It is a grand
curiosity and yet, somehow, vulgar and kitsch: it caricatures the still
life tradition just as simplistically as, in the same room, Sam
Taylor-Wood's speeded-up video of a still life decaying before your
eyes.
These two still lifes, made more than a century apart,
clearly regard such paintings as symbols of mortality – and ape or
heighten that aspect photographically. But still life painting is not
that simple. It is not always about death. It might be about sex. Or it
might be about … apples. That is why the best work in the still life
section is the least self-conscious, the least arty. Nan Goldin's
photographs are rough slices of life. Her picture of her hotel bed in
Paris has a diary-like immediacy. The grapes and oranges in paper bags
lying on the bed are not immediately readable as symbols of any kind –
they just vaguely suggest desire, life, love, and add to a feeling of
sensual romance. They do not proclaim any artistic significance beyond
being part of Goldin's day. We believe they are her food, bought to be
eaten, not photographed. Goldin's still life matters precisely because
it is not trying to be art.
As this exhibition shows, right from
the start of photography, its practitioners have responded to high
art's call. Julia Margaret Cameron posed a woman and child as the
Madonna and Jesus she saw in a Renaissance painting. Gustave le Gray
shot and manipulated seascapes to emulate works by Turner. And today,
Ori Gersht takes photographs of exploding still-life arrangements in
order to recapture, he says, the deep, rich sense of time that a
painting possesses.
没有评论:
发表评论