women and the body

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this is what i posted on ilm to the recent "you are free" thread.

the threads in question have made me sad because - granted i know fuck all about chan, i only know her from some of her albums - the photo strikes me as being very pisstakey of "erotic" photogrpahy. no-one has examined it as a photo on here. the uncomfortable way she is holding the cigarette and the t shirt. and who forgets to put their undies on under their jeans??!!
what makes me sad is that every comment on the photo is re: her pubes or how much viewer finds her attractive. am i to deduce that no matter HOW women fuck with the conventions of "erotic" photogrpahy/film/whatever, Woman will always be The Object? (serious question - i'm not decided on this issue at all and probably never will be)

the thing is i probably think about this stuff too much. i wish that women could have it both ways - that we be viewed as much as active performers of our bodies as much as we are viewed as objects. one reading is still presently mostly at the expense of the other. why don't they co-exist yet? how can they be made to co-exist?

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 00:42 (twenty-two years ago)

every comment on the photo is re: her pubes or how much viewer finds her attractive

this isn't entirely true. there are also comments about her weight and whether the clothes she's wearing are liked. but these still stress her object status.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 00:50 (twenty-two years ago)

a thought: how different would the thread have been if it was X random woman rather than Chan Marshall, Musician?

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:00 (twenty-two years ago)

Jess, in the future, register your disgust with me directly rather than on something like ILM which I rarely read. Thanks.

Texas Sam (thatgirl), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:02 (twenty-two years ago)

I didn't think it was a pisstake exactly, I was trying to figure out why the odd pose, in fact, and the best I could come up with is - she's trying on clothes, this is obv staged, perhaps it was supposed to be a regular old fashion shoot, and so she is changing outfits & holds up the Dylan shirt to see how it'll look, or 'cause someone has surprised her maybe.

I think her expression is cool. usually you'd get the same old bored model stare. Why does it make me think of Jennifer Herrema?

daria g (daria g), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:05 (twenty-two years ago)

i don't know how or if it would have been different, jim. do you think it would have? if so, why?

xpost - yeah daria, thats sort of why i read the photo as drawing attention to the photo-shoot process. its very posed and doesn't try to efface that.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:10 (twenty-two years ago)

this is that cat power pic? its subverting rather than taking it somewhere else? like its playing within pre-ordained parameters, but twisting it maybe?

i didnt like the pic. but maybe im not supposed to. this is ok i guess

my main problem was that it was in black&white. this implies things that are totally odds with my outlook, if this pic was colour i think i would think of it differently, but the lack of colour alienated me immediately, it made me think it was trying for a 'something' i was not interested in, and could never relate to. faux-gravitas is something that irritates me, i always think, if the pic needs to be drained of colour to make an emotional impact, then it is not a good pic, and is relying too much on signifiers of importance i cannot grasp.

perhaps it is for a different audience to me, but the black&white strikes me as lazy and trite

gareth (gareth), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:11 (twenty-two years ago)

would this picture have the same impact in colour? if not, why not?

gareth (gareth), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:12 (twenty-two years ago)

daria - "sort of" meaning i didn't interpret it exactly as you did. but yeah i like your point, and i could have worded things better.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:15 (twenty-two years ago)

I like black and white pictures b/c I think color is garish sometimes. I like old things.

Texas Sam (thatgirl), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:16 (twenty-two years ago)

is there a difference between old black and white pics where colour was not an option and new black and white pics where the rejection of colour is a conscious decision? i think so yes, and i dont like, but why?

gareth (gareth), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:19 (twenty-two years ago)

i don't know how or if it would have been different, jim. do you think it would have? if so, why?

i do think it would have been different. if i was just any x-random-girl i really think people would think more than twice before judging/objectifying them. because Chan Marshall, Musician is not the sister/daughter/best friend/whatever of anyone here (i'm assuming), that seems to make a difference..

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:20 (twenty-two years ago)

er that didn't come out as clearly as i would have liked

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:20 (twenty-two years ago)

does that not suggest closeness to subject clouds critical faculties?

gareth (gareth), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:20 (twenty-two years ago)

not at all. but maybe it stops you voicing them because you realise it's kinda weird..

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:23 (twenty-two years ago)

hadn't thought of it as a pisstake but, um, I know *lots* of people--men and women both--who don't wear underwear under their jeans

M Matos (M Matos), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:24 (twenty-two years ago)

famous people in pictures ARE objects.

ryan (ryan), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:26 (twenty-two years ago)

jim what exactly do you mean by "random x-girl"? yeah i think if the photo was of someone we knew we MIGHT (being the operative word, though the lechfests that are ilx photo threads suggest otherwise - and yes i know i am perfectly capable of being lecherous myself but as i stated in the initial post i am trying to consider the options rather than come to conclusions) be more reticent to comment on her body. but if its someone we know then its not random.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:27 (twenty-two years ago)

but if it's just some total stranger, nobody famous, i don't think any of us would be as quick to start commenting on aspects of the photo for fear of coming across as creepy

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:29 (twenty-two years ago)

uh gareth Richard Avedon, to my knowledge, doesn't take portraits in color.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 01:34 (twenty-two years ago)

i.e. the world's most famoust living portraitist has been using the same method for, what, 40 years now?

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 01:35 (twenty-two years ago)

jim i see what you mean now. i can't conceive of this - not because i think you're wrong, but because i haven't been in a situation with which i could compare it.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 01:38 (twenty-two years ago)

what's your point stencil?

Mary (Mary), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:02 (twenty-two years ago)

um maybe a little more familiarity with the artist might um well nevermind.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 02:09 (twenty-two years ago)

maybe gareth just doesn't like black and white photographs.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:10 (twenty-two years ago)

i find it a bit odd, to be sure, but also kinda fascinating.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:10 (twenty-two years ago)

If I can throw in another tangent here, what is meant by "object" and to objectify, exactly?

I ask it b/c I never had before, which is strange 'cause I definitely did my share of complaining about objectification since I first self-identified as a feminist several years back. And yet.. strangely, it doesn't seem very important to me any more.

daria g (daria g), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:17 (twenty-two years ago)

black and white is not the rejection of color.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:24 (twenty-two years ago)

Interesting, I suppose from the aspect of challenging our expectations of Chan Marshall - but she's such a minor figure, was that really the goal? (ie how many people even have a conception/expectation of Chan Marshall and how many of them read the New Yorker regularly)

It doesn't connect or illuminate who Chan Marshall is (or what we know/think we know about her from previous interviews/articles/photos), but on the flipside it doesn't challenge popular conceptions of who she is (see above), because no popular conceptions exist.

The photograph, in effect, objectifies Chan Marshall more than any ILX pube-talk could ever do, she's used as a fashion model like any other. At least ILX pube-talk came in relation to who she is as a person or what ILX-in-generals thinks she is as a person.

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:24 (twenty-two years ago)

but if it's just some total stranger, nobody famous, i don't think any of us would be as quick to start commenting on aspects of the photo for fear of coming across as creepy

The fact it's a published photograph makes it have a fame anyway, despite the fact she's famous - thus to my mind, if the same photo had been in the New Yorker but of an unknown woman, I am sure people would still make stupid comments about her pubic hair or whatever. Maybe not on this board, but I know for sure there are other places online where men and women both would be highly critical. I don't approve of the criticism, I just know it exists.

Gareth: your comment on it being a black and white pic interests me, because it brang to my mind the idea that when the human body is photographed in black and white, more compromising/erotic/etc poses can be "gotten away with" so to speak, as it seems thats percieved more as "art" (think Black&White magazine for example). Put it in colour and suddenly it's a trashy softcore porn shot, rather than art.

I'm not suggesting thats neccesarily my view, more that this perception exists, and is it possible thats why in this case B&W was used?

This and the linked threads are interesting and sad. She sounds like a really messed up woman, I know nothing about her.

Trayce (trayce), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:24 (twenty-two years ago)

re daria's qn:

One of the most obvious methods of objectification on ILM recently is to use a woman performer's appearance as an opportunity to denigrate her talents (see: every Calum thread ever). I think there's a lot more to it than just this though.

chester (synkro), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:26 (twenty-two years ago)

i'm not very good with definitions but here goes: the reduction of a representation of a human to something less than human, to something passive, to an object. NB this isn't of itself a bad thing, you have to take into account the spectator position of the viewers, which vary of course. but when a group of people are objectified routinely and on such an overwhelming level it can be problematic.

about four years ago i was quite idealistic and i stopped seeing objectification as important because i thought that women can and do subvert it. but maybe there are dominant positions to take when viewing a picture which are an obstacle to the success of this project. if so, how can they be tackled? should they be tackled?

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:34 (twenty-two years ago)

um I think B&W was used because that's Avedon's schtick.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 02:37 (twenty-two years ago)

is there a difference between old black and white pics where colour was not an option and new black and white pics where the rejection of colour is a conscious decision? i think so yes, and i dont like, but why?

There's always a choice of medium. Some would argue still photography is obsolete in the video age.

i'm not very good with definitions but here goes: the reduction of a representation of a human to something less than human, to something passive, to an object.

What is the "active performer" then? I mean, from the auidence : performer relationship; I certainly see some overlap in looking at a posed picture of Chan and listening to her cd. In both, she is calling the shots.

bnw (bnw), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:38 (twenty-two years ago)

the active performer is someone who is engaging with their representation - which is what i see chan as doing. my point is that few others perceived the photo that way.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:45 (twenty-two years ago)

or at least if they did they saw fit to emphasize a different aspect of the photo.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:47 (twenty-two years ago)

But hstencil I think that's what Gareth meant by "faux-gravitas".

chester (synkro), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:47 (twenty-two years ago)

well the guy takes photos of people like Kissinger and Nixon and Clinton and Blair too, so what if he's gets a l'il faux-gravitas with some barely-known indie rock chick everyonce in a while?

(I actually like that he uses a similar method for all of his subjects - be they heads of state or pop stars or coalminers.)

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 02:52 (twenty-two years ago)

i think a big point that's going unnoticed here is that this is gareth's personal preference in photography.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:53 (twenty-two years ago)

um if it was going unnoticed, nobody would've said anything about it.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 02:55 (twenty-two years ago)

stence do you have a schtick (or a point) other than pedantry?

plus di:

the active performer is someone who is engaging with their representation - which is what i see chan as doing. my point is that few others perceived the photo that way.

why? i don't see this inherently at all, so i figure there's got to be something about cat power the "artist" that's elevating her above the average modeling shoot here.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:57 (twenty-two years ago)

jess I wouldn't be such a pedant if you wouldn't be so sloppy.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 02:59 (twenty-two years ago)

jess: the general mood of her music for one thing?

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 02:59 (twenty-two years ago)

i'm trying to imagine bill callahan in a string vest as comparison

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:00 (twenty-two years ago)

(bad comparison)

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:00 (twenty-two years ago)

stencil pedantry isn't necessarily a bad quality if you bring something else to the table as well.

jim isn't that just a reinvocation of of old expressionist fallacy re. "I YAM AN TRUE ARTISTE, therefore i will not be used."

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:01 (twenty-two years ago)

no, no i'm more commenting on the sexlessness of her music (my perception of it anyway)

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:01 (twenty-two years ago)

the active performer is someone who is engaging with their representation - which is what i see chan as doing. my point is that few others perceived the photo that way.

I don't know how much that matters. Maybe the fact the audience doesn't know they are being manipulated says something about the art at hand. I think you're making a subjective judgement on an objective process, if that makes any sense. Can an audience react incorrectly?

i think a big point that's going unnoticed here is that this is gareth's personal preference in photography.

If that's gareth's point, why is he asking us to explain his preference to him?

bnw (bnw), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:02 (twenty-two years ago)

do YOU always know exactly why your personal aesthetic has developed in the way it has, bnw?

just because someone sounds "depressed" or "manic" or "emotional" or "real" on record i just don't buy that they can't be bought and sold in the exact same way as someone who doesn't.

x-post: i have found the cat power music i've heard to be quite sexual in it's way.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Gareth can defend himself when he awakes from his drunken stupor, but Stencil, Gareth is not required to like Avedon because he is Avedon.

X-post

Gareth asks us to explain everything to him, including why we are Angry.

Mary (Mary), Friday, 22 August 2003 03:04 (twenty-two years ago)

heroin rumours are never relevant.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

realvent to chans persona and avedons depiction of it, no ?

anthony easton (anthony), Friday, 22 August 2003 20:52 (twenty-two years ago)

no, anthony, NEVER.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 20:52 (twenty-two years ago)

because fashion and attendant photography has never played on the idea of anything called "heroin chic". never.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 22 August 2003 20:53 (twenty-two years ago)

maybe, but probably more relevant to a discussion on the bizarre reasons why people start such rumours and what insecurities and problems they have that prompt them to do so. I'm sorry, but I really vehemently despise hearing about such things. 99% of the time they're untrue and cause nothing except hardship for the subject of the rumour.

hstencil, Friday, 22 August 2003 20:54 (twenty-two years ago)

And yet your pet fashion photographers actively encourage these rumours.

Mark C (Mark C), Friday, 22 August 2003 22:12 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm an Amboy Duchess.

rosemary (rosemary), Friday, 22 August 2003 22:19 (twenty-two years ago)

arrrrrg wrong thread

rosemary (rosemary), Friday, 22 August 2003 22:19 (twenty-two years ago)

strongo - you didn't make it clear what your "why?" was referring to, so i didn't answer your question.

tracer i totally didn't read the picture the way you did ie as post coital. i just thought a lot of things about it were strange. you don't hold a cigarette between your thumb and index finger, and not in that direction. and as for the way she holds the t shirt over herself, the way she holds it doesn't suggest "shyly clutching t shirt to chest after sex" to me, it says "look my t shirt is a bob dylan t shirt". the fact that she isn't actually wearing the t shirt and the jeans are showing a faint whiff of muff is suggestive of porn, yeah, but porn is generally very different. porn is a contrived situation where women are supposed to appear in their "natural" state (requires a total suspension of disbelief for someone), its a fantasy that we are supposed to believe in because its "happening before our eyes". the agency chan has - to me - is that of subverting that convention and confounding the viewer (obv meaning me), with an unnatural pose and a somewhat wry grin. thus she is actively performing a subversion. (i have a very broad definition of performance, to me wherever there is human interaction there is performance - but we don't always consciously perform, we don't always think about and question what we are doing, a necessary requirement for active performance)

i probably don't need to state this for the millionth time but that is MY reading of the photo based on knowing fuck all about art and nothing about the new yorker or the photographer. what she was actually trying to do may have been quite different.

i'm really happy about the diverse contributions to this thread. makes it clear that it IS possible to interpret a picture in ways other than the obvious.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Saturday, 23 August 2003 03:10 (twenty-two years ago)

i'm not happy with the second paragraph but i'm way too tired to make amendments to it.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Saturday, 23 August 2003 03:43 (twenty-two years ago)

having re-read the thread, i see what jess was trying to ask now. i think its perfectly possible for a model or a pop star to be subversive and to actively engage with their representation. a bit silly to assume i don't seeing as i love the spice girls (as an artful deployment and subversion of gender roles) more than everybody on this board (except maybe justyn dillingham) put together. chan being indy has fuck-all to do with my interpretation of the photo.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Saturday, 23 August 2003 03:59 (twenty-two years ago)

And yet your pet fashion photographers actively encourage these rumours.

Uh Mark I think I spent almost the entire thread posting about how Avedon is not a fashion photographer, so I have no idea what you're talking about.

hstencil, Saturday, 23 August 2003 23:26 (twenty-two years ago)

I've decided to "read" the photo as an anti-American statement just like her Rockets song because all American women shave their pubes right?

Jackie (Jackie), Sunday, 24 August 2003 00:13 (twenty-two years ago)

Whatever, Stence. Take out the word fashion and start again. Using pedantry to win arguments is a bit lame.

Mark C (Mark C), Sunday, 24 August 2003 09:11 (twenty-two years ago)

I need some 'background' on when and how Richard Avedon has promoted 'heroin chic'

Andrew L (Andrew L), Sunday, 24 August 2003 10:37 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, could somebody clue me in as to that?

hstencil, Sunday, 24 August 2003 18:23 (twenty-two years ago)

Mark C makes it sound like Stencil should start again by patiently explaining that Richard Avedon is in no way a photographer, which strikes me as being a very funny thought.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Monday, 25 August 2003 00:38 (twenty-two years ago)

Could someone link to the picture please?
Search still doesn't seem to work so I can't find the previous thread.

Thanks.

mei (mei), Monday, 25 August 2003 06:47 (twenty-two years ago)

you are free

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Monday, 25 August 2003 07:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Ta!

mei (mei), Monday, 25 August 2003 10:50 (twenty-two years ago)

Mmmm there's a few random things I think about this. I know nothing about the photographer and I'm not a Chan/Cat fan, though I've heard Moonpix a few times.

No one's directly stated that Chan and the photographer are joint authors of this photograph. It's about them both.

First thing I noticed is how unlike the other pictures I've seen of her it is. I wouldn't have known it was her.

She looks ten years older. The cigarette, jewelery and haircut contribute far more to an unwholesomeness than the low riding jeans do.

To me she looks like a Rolling Stones groupie from the 70s, or what I think one would look like.

Other people have mentioned that context is important, the fact that it's in a certain publication and by a certain photographer, but can someone answer the vital question, was it the only photo of her that went with the article? Or was there a more 'usual' representation of her there too? To us who've seen her before that picture will have a totally different impact to those who see her here for the first time.

TLML said:
. am i to deduce that no matter HOW women fuck with the conventions of "erotic" photogrpahy/film/whatever, Woman will always be The Object? (serious question - i'm not decided on this issue at all and probably never will be)

Surely in this case Chan is aking that we pay particular attention to an object, a photograph, rather than her inner person. She dressed and posed in a certain way for this photo but I bet she didn't adopt the persona for her day to day life.

mei (mei), Monday, 25 August 2003 11:33 (twenty-two years ago)

does it have to be so clearcut? why must she be either object or chan marshall? i never said that objectification was bad, btw. i like your point about chan AND the photographer being joint authors.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Monday, 25 August 2003 19:53 (twenty-two years ago)

her awkwardness w/cigarette almost makes me feel like she's HOLDING it for somebody. anyway it is absurdly overdetermined - "this is your fantasy groupie" - but the pieces don't hang right, it's all a set-up, but i'm not sure that makes it any less objectifying, or her any more of an agent within (or outside of) the frame

btw richard avedon is foursquare a fashion photographer. yes he does all those portraits for the New Yorker but he got his start w/Vogue. he INVENTED fashion photography as we know it today (bringing models out of the studio and into the street, getting them to pose "naturally", busting out of showroom dummy mode). check out Funny Face or the Pirelli calendars.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Monday, 25 August 2003 20:12 (twenty-two years ago)

yes he started in fashion photography but he's something different from that now.

hstencil, Monday, 25 August 2003 20:15 (twenty-two years ago)

but his aesthetic is arguably rooted in fashion photography. (hurrah tracer hand, you have saved this thread.)

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 25 August 2003 20:29 (twenty-two years ago)

Has Avedon done anything but his B&W/large-format/white-background/no props work for the last 20 years?

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Monday, 25 August 2003 20:42 (twenty-two years ago)

This is a fantastic thread, so I apologize for the irreverent urges that are tempting me to post a "women and the booty" thread.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 26 August 2003 13:01 (twenty-two years ago)

It is your kind and polite nature that endears you, sir. (And yus, grand thread)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 26 August 2003 13:53 (twenty-two years ago)

Yes, it was the only photo of her that went with the article. It takes up a full page towards the back of the magazine.
-- Ben Boyer (heavensmout...), August 25th, 2003.

In that case, I wonder did Chan realise that the readers of the New Yorker would end up wihth a totally different impression of her than people who knew something about her before?


TLML said:

does it have to be so clearcut? why must she be either object or chan marshall?

I don't think it's clear cut at all. Even dressed up we know she's not really the character she's playing, but someone who has chosen to dress up like that.

I'm never sure what people mean exactly by 'the object'. TLML, do you mean just how she looks?
Or looks + voice ?
Or looks + voice + actions + everything else externally measurable ?


Also why, when none of us can read minds or really know what another is at core, is it women that people say are objectified?

mei (mei), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 10:39 (twenty-two years ago)

Has Avedon done anything but his B&W/large-format/white-background/no props work for the last 20 years?

Why this insistence—this hope—that Avedon's "not a fashion photographer?" What would change about The Lady Miss Lurex's question were this assertion true? What would change about your answers? What difference does it make for you? Anyway, since you asked:

http://www.6bears.com/pirelli5.jpg
http://member.hitel.net/~k2hdd/adjani69.jpg
http://www.omero.it/images/avedon.JPG
http://djuna.nkino.com/christy/86/86-10-01.jpg
http://www.schirmer-mosel.de/bildkat/7VBASchifferMontage.JPG

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 14:53 (twenty-two years ago)

Where's the other shoe?

rosemary (rosemary), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Ha!

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:06 (twenty-two years ago)

i think i really dislike avedon's photography, disregarding the q of whether or not he's a "fashion photographer." its playfulness is so leaden, it ultimately seems to presume a kind of importance for itself.

amateurist (amateurist), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:20 (twenty-two years ago)

The last one is Nicole Kidman right?
Who are the others?

mei (mei), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:41 (twenty-two years ago)

The last one is Claudia Schiffer.

rosemary (rosemary), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:46 (twenty-two years ago)

That's right. The first one is Christy Turlington, as is the next-to-last one, I believe. The second one is Isabelle Adjani. The guy I don't know.

I agree with you, amateurist. When I look back at the Cat Power photo I realize it's far more elastic and playful in my memory that it actually is.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 15:52 (twenty-two years ago)

Oops.

mei (mei), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 16:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Why this insistence—this hope—that Avedon's "not a fashion photographer?" What would change about The Lady Miss Lurex's question were this assertion true? What would change about your answers? What difference does it make for you? Anyway, since you asked:

Huh?

I never said Avedon wasn't a "fashion photographer."

I asked if Avedon had done anything but his (really fucking boring most of the time) white-background/B&W/no-props/large-format work. That's all I asked.

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:38 (twenty-two years ago)

If the answer were "no" how would it be different than if the answer were "yes"?

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:39 (twenty-two years ago)

Where did I say it would be.

Avedon and Avedon's style was being discussed. I asked a question about Avedon - because all of his work I've ever seen was the same style.

I. Asked. A. Fucking. Question.

That's it.

Where you suddenly think I've argued that Avedon's not a fashion photographer and whether or not he is changes anything, I have no clue.

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:42 (twenty-two years ago)

So your question was irrelevant to the discussion?

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:46 (twenty-two years ago)

Did it relate to Chan Marshall's pubic hair directly? No, it didn't (like most of this thread).

Did it relate to Richard Avedon and Richard Avedon's style, which is/was being discussed? Yes.

As to that whole attributing motives and beliefs to me that don't exist thang. Did you just have me confused with someone else or what? Was it perhaps just a knee-jerk reaction?

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:51 (twenty-two years ago)

This thread isn't about chan's pubic hair, milo. Read the question again!

hstencil was adamant that Avedon's not a fashion photographer in the sense that most people recognize. You yourself questioned it. Why? What difference would it make to whether Chan is an "active performer of her body" in Avedon's photo of her? The very concern with Avedon's lineage and affiliation indicates to me that she is NOT an active performer of her body here for many people, since Avedon's hand&3151;and what kind of photog he may or may not be, etc—is overshadowing Chan's considerably.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 18:02 (twenty-two years ago)

This thread isn't about chan's pubic hair, milo. Read the question again!
*sigh*

Gee, my response re:pubes couldn't have been sarcastic, could it?

You yourself questioned it.

WHERE?

This has been the point. I never questioned Avedon's status as a "fashion photographer." Nowhere.

Even if his sole work was in the no-props/B&W/large-format/white background style - that wouldn't preclude him from being a fashion photographer.

I never said he was or wasn't, because he is a fashion photographer (sometimes) and isn't a fashion photographer (sometimes).

It's silly to place photographers as any one genre. Most work in multiple places - portraiture, pure fashion, editorial, on and on and on. Was Cartier-Bresson (to choose a famous example) a photojournalist? Documentarian? Street photographer? Portraitist? I'm sure we could find some architectural work in his negatives.

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 18:21 (twenty-two years ago)

Okay, so it's about whether he's done anything besides this one format. Well, he has.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 18:27 (twenty-two years ago)

Apart from the one with the red shoe and handbag none of these seem to go against the image of the subject.

Was Richard Avedon responsible for that Nike advert with the sprinter in high heels?

mei (mei), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 22:33 (twenty-two years ago)

Despite the increasingly blurry lines between art and fashion, I think there's a big difference between this picture and any other model shoot I've seen of Chan's. [hstencil]

WHY though? i really am curious. i mean, i guess i can see a certainly relaxed nature but models are trained to look any damn way at any damn time, so i'm not quite sure if they couldn't pull off the same relaxed vibe. [strongo hulkington]

portraiture seems to be about documentation while in fashion photography there seems to be room for role playing. if in art photography the photographer's job is to capture the essence of a person or situation on film, then how much room does the subject have for performance, other than being herself (which could be an art in itself)?

the active performer is someone who is engaging with their representation - which is what i see chan as doing. my point is that few others perceived the photo that way. [di]

I don't know how much that matters. Maybe the fact the audience doesn't know they are being manipulated says something about the art at hand. I think you're making a subjective judgement on an objective process, if that makes any sense. Can an audience react incorrectly? [bnw]

i think bnw has an interesting point here (if i understand him). fashion photography as art photography seems built on this illusion. except that the weird thing about the photo is that he has made her look old with the make up around her eyes and the rolling stones groupie paraphernalia. so then you get to thinking how much of an illusion is her indie girl persona? i'm thinking of the photo that someone posted on a different thread of her with a laptop on her bed composing songs.

youn, Sunday, 31 August 2003 13:04 (twenty-two years ago)

I figured she was playing Snake

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Sunday, 31 August 2003 13:12 (twenty-two years ago)

youn, I think what you're saying about Chan's indie girl persona is correct, but she's not unique or even at all unusual in adopting a persona.
Most non-famous(ish) ppl seem to go through this at some point, identifying as indie kid or goth or geek or adult or whatever and they, possibly subconciously, dress/act in a way that makes themselves better fit the stereotype.
They're making use of the powerful associations ppl have with certain looks and grabbing a bit of the prestige/cool for themselves.

mei (mei), Sunday, 31 August 2003 16:49 (twenty-two years ago)

sorry, i think i imagined the details of the other photo to go with my image of her. is Snake a computer game?

mei, yeah, i thought the interesting thing was how that interacts with how she is presented/presents herself in the photo, what it says about photography as a medium, etc.

youn, Sunday, 31 August 2003 18:08 (twenty-two years ago)


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