Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Alex Deliso -- Annotated Bib no.9, 10, & 11


Observation: There is an African woman with a shaved head wearing a Superman T-shirt. She has her arm behind her back, and lightly grips the bicep of her other arm with it. She is looking at the camera, but her body is angled slightly towards the right (from the camera’s perspective). Because of her shaved head and the position of her body, it is difficult to determine her gender unless closer observations are made.

Inference: What stands out to me the most about this image is how an African woman is invoking the symbol of an “invincible” white icon (Superman) that was created by white men. A part of me also thinks about how modern audiences are more inclined to accept heroes of different backgrounds nowadays, which has provoked Marvel to begin a storyline for an African American Spider-Man. As for the image in relation to the class’ topics, this appears to be a woman that is taking a bold move for self-expression. Despite this, her posture is conflicted—she almost appears to be proud, but there’s still hints of doubt in her stance. This even shows in the interpretations from others, as shown in the article Passing and the Politics of Queer Loss Post-Apartheidm where it says: “ ‘Contrary to media reports,’ she went on to claim, ‘I was not even aware as to whether the “bodies” in the images were of men or women or both for that matter.’ …Muholi’s photographs do trouble the distinctions between men, women, ‘or both for that matter,’ and there is a powerful sense in which lesbians can only enter recognizable representations as ‘crude misrepresentations of women masquerading as artworks’ ” (39) The inability to have a distinct role in society may be part of the conflict that is reflected in her works.  




Observation: This image appears to be set in a library that has many bookshelves lining the walls. On top of those bookshelves are statues of various men and women. The foreground objects are a fancy desk and chairs, and a number of men are standing/sitting in different spots around the room. Only one of them in African (American?) and he is facing off-screen, as if he is trying to ignore them. In a doorway on the rightmost side of the image, a few women (maids?) are standing and watching the scene.

Inference:

The African (American?) man in the center-rightmost part of the picture is the focal point because everyone is facing in his direction. Some of them appear to be mocking him with their apparent applause, because the look on his face does not look like a positive expression. Yet, at the same time, a part of me feels that this could be genuine applause, but the reception to it is negative and unwanted. In an interview that was published in Yinka Shonibare: on hedonism, masquerade, carnivalesque and power, Yinka discusses her vantage on this paradox of perspective: “…there’s a kind of complicity on my own part that I need to explain: what I’m doing is not so clear-cut. People might assume that I have a total critical distance from my practice, but I don’t think that’s the case; it’s more complex because, on one level, I challenge the denial of my African background. In other words, a part of my work has to do with visibility—with my own attempt to make my origin visible” (Enwezor 2). This “challeng[ing of] the denial” certainly is complex, and even when the creator intends an image to convey something, that message may be misconstrued or misinterpreted and turn out to be something else altogether.



Observation: There are three frames, each of which divide up a single image of a woman lying down on what appears to be a bed. Various kinds of patterns on the bed itself, and the main design of her dress is yellow and white stripes, while the lower part of the dress is pink with various colored patterns along it. The pillows and curtains are elegant and blend into the background. The woman is staring at the camera in the first frame, and her skin appears to be tattooed throughout.

Inference: What stands out to me is how this image is fragmented. Fragmented images indicate a movement along the whole, larger image—the eyes travel in between the gutter (a comic term for the gap in between panels) and sense a shift in perspective each time they see a new border. What this also does is draw more attention to each individual piece or part of the image. Essaydi even brings up this idea of confined spaces in her artist’s statement: “Traditionally, the presence of men has defined public spaces: the streets, meeting places, places of work. Women, on the other hand, have been confined to private spaces, the architecture of the home. Physical boundaries define cultural ones, hidden hierarchies dictate patterns of habitation. Thus crossing a cultural threshold into prohibited ‘space’ in a metaphorical sense can result in literal confinement in an actual space” (Essaydi, 1). In this sense, the artwork within the frame is also defined by the frame. The space that the frame is contained in can either accent certain qualities, or restrict them to the point that they begin to lose their function. In the case of this particular image, I believe that the frames accents each part of the photograph, because if the frame was centered and only the one ‘whole’ image existed, then we would lose the focus that each frame brings because our eyes would be trying to scan the whole image at once.

No comments:

Post a Comment