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"Snap Judgments": International Center of Photography, New York.


AFRICA Africa (ăf`rĭkə), second largest continent (1997 est. pop. 743,000,000), c.11,677,240 sq mi (30,244,050 sq km) including adjacent islands. Broad to the north (c.4,600 mi/7,400 km wide), Africa straddles the equator and stretches c.  AND PHOTOGRAPHY have a tangled history. Can the medium that has depicted Africa for the West since the moment of the camera's invention, during the colonialism of the nineteenth century, escape this troubled past? The thesis of "Snap Judgments: New Positions in Contemporary African Photography" was that this possibility exists not only in theory but in practice among contemporary African artists, who are all too often ignored beyond their homelands. In his impressive introduction to the catalogue, curator Okwui Enwezor Okwui Enwezor is an American educator, writer, and curator specializing in Art history. He lives in New York and San Francisco. Educator
Okwui Enwezor is currently Dean of Academic Affairs and Senior Vice President at San Francisco Art Institute.
 states that Western photographic depictions have either aestheticized and exoticized Africa (he cites the work of Leni Riefenstahl and Peter Beard) or represented it as a place imprisoned im·pris·on  
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.



[Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en-
 in a never-ending cycle of famine and political mayhem. "Afro-pessimism" is Enwezor's term for imagery of the last category, typified by Kevin Carter's ghastly 1993 photograph of a starving Sudanese child stalked by a vulture vulture, common name for large birds of prey of temperate and tropical regions. The Old World vultures (family Accipitridae) are allied to hawks and eagles; the more ancient American vultures and condors are of a different family (Cathartidae) with distant links to  (published in the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times). According to Enwezor, Afropessimistic pictures construct an Africa that is the West's entropic double, deserving of charity and piteous pit·e·ous  
adj.
1. Demanding or arousing pity: a piteous appeal for help. See Synonyms at pathetic.

2. Archaic Pitying; compassionate.
 regard, even as they mystify the West's longstanding exploitation of the continent's human and natural resources.

In a particularly withering passage, Enwezor describes how the singer Bob Geldof leveraged a B-list musical career into an A-list philanthropic one, and details the complicity of photography in Geldof's self-transformation. (Angelina Jolie's much-recorded "Lady Bountiful" tour of sub-Saharan villages, a bewildered Brad, Maddox, and Zahara in tow, is a new, grotesque twist on the phenomenon.) The star guest at the 2005 Live 8 Concert organized by Geldof was Birhan Woldu, a survivor of the 1984 Ethiopian famine and subject of yet another notorious newspaper photograph, in which she appeared near death in her mother's arms; this image was dramatically projected onto a large screen during the concert in London's Hyde Park. Suddenly, the actual Woldu emerged onstage, a well-nourished and well-groomed adult, as if recalled from the dead by the beneficent be·nef·i·cent  
adj.
1. Characterized by or performing acts of kindness or charity.

2. Producing benefit; beneficial.



[Probably from beneficenceon the model of such pairs as
 Sir Bob himself. Enwezor bristles at such exploitation, recounting his own childhood tenure in the refugee camps of Biafra at the end of the 1960s: "I count myself lucky [not only] to have survived the harrowing experience but also to have escaped from the picturesque capture of the news reporter's autistic autistic /au·tis·tic/ (aw-tis´tik) characterized by or pertaining to autism.  lens."

He proposes a second mode of depiction as an antidote to the first--an African photography produced by Africans. In the exhibition "In/sight: African Photographers, 1940 to the Present," shown at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum: see Guggenheim Museum.  in New York in 1996, Enwezor and colleagues Clare Bell, Danielle Tilkin, and Octavio Zaya presented an entire tradition of African portrait and documentary imagery that had until then been little known in the West: the work of Seydou Keita, Malick Sidibe, Samuel Fosso, and David Goldblatt, among others. It is Enwezor's claim that the photographs by these artists and the younger generations of photographers featured in "Snap Judgments" escape Afro-pessimism by affording a far more complex view than the sensationalist sen·sa·tion·al·ism  
n.
1.
a. The use of sensational matter or methods, especially in writing, journalism, or politics.

b. Sensational subject matter.

c. Interest in or the effect of such subject matter.
 Western photojournalist seeks.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In her catalogue text, assistant curator Vanessa Rocco describes "Snap Judgments" as a sequel to the revelatory Guggenheim show. The contemporary African work by thirty-five artists featured at the ICP (1) (Internet Cache Protocol) A protocol used by one proxy server to query another for a cached Web page without having to go to the Internet to retrieve it. See CARP and proxy server.  differs considerably from that of the prior generation both in form and content. Much of it is shot with a digital camera and digitally manipulated; a good portion is polychromatic polychromatic /poly·chro·mat·ic/ (-krom-at´ik) many-colored.

pol·y·chro·mat·ic or pol·y·chro·mic or pol·y·chro·mous
adj.
Having or exhibiting many colors.
 and self-consciously staged. Where modernist photographers countered the ethnographic image of themselves through portraiture, contemporary artists extend this self-representation with pictures of individuals in their social environments. Most of the photography in the exhibition was unabashedly un·a·bashed  
adj.
1. Not disconcerted or embarrassed; poised.

2. Not concealed or disguised; obvious: unabashed disgust.
 documentary, following the examples of Keita and Goldblatt, if rarely as powerful. A different rhetorical mode was proposed by Tracey Rose's campy biblical scenes, Mohamed Camara's self-portraits in French Christmas tableaux, and Maha Maamoun's fabricated images of Egyptian beaches and parks, in which photography's effet du reel is subverted by a blatant narrativity. (Fosso is the godfather of this tendency.) This tension between a photography of fantasy and one of clear-eyed documentation was a major polarity of the exhibition and, it would seem, of contemporary African work in general.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The documentary picture's dominance raises questions. As at the Enwezorcurated Documenta 11 in Kassel, Germany, in 2002, the galleries of the ICP overflowed with images of poverty and social injustice. Certainly, a number of works, especially those depicting African cities--such as Jo Ractliffe's pan shots of Johannesburg or Hala Elkoussy's Dan Graham-like records of Cairene suburbs--were positively cool in tone. Yet consider Zohra Bensemra's wrenching pictures of Algerian women caught in the middle of a horrific civil war, Guy Tillim's chilling shots of Jo'burg housing projects, or Mikhael Subotsky's extraordinary triptychs of South Africa's Pollsmoor and Voorberg prisons (Subotsky's mastery of wide-angle perspective is impressive for an artist who is all of twenty-four years of age): None of these works would be out of place in the pages of a Western newspaper. Much like the photojournalistic images that Enwezor rightly decries, the success of these pictures lies in their capacity to horrify and to elicit sympathy. Which returns us to the problem of Afro-pessimism: Can documentary images of Africa, however well-intentioned, entirely escape this viewpoint? What is the line between an ethical image and a pessimistic one? What are the criteria that distinguish one from the other? Is the Western photographer condemned to perpetuate Afro-pessimism? Can the African artist escape this simply by being African? Or is the "difference" one of formal intention--the difference between photojournalism and art photography? (Enwezor's descriptions of Subotsky's and Ractliffe's rhetorical tactics suggest as much.) The supposition of a pan-African authenticity tied to locality underlies this thesis, holding in place the binary logic of Afro-pessimism itself, opposing Africa and the West as perpetual antagonists, even as globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
 fosters postidentitarian models of subjectivity and aesthetic production.

Enwezor raises important issues; his reflection on the ethics of photographic representation is a significant intervention in the tradition of writers such as Susan Sontag, Martha Rosler, and Douglas Crimp. In addition to the theoretical positions it offered, "Snap Judgments" confirmed the seriousness and variety of photographic activity throughout the continent. Moving from Yto Barrada's pictures of migrants in Tangier, to Romuald Hazoume's shots of indigent indigent 1) n. a person so poor and needy that he/she cannot provide the necessities of life (food, clothing, decent shelter) for himself/herself. 2) n. one without sufficient income to afford a lawyer for defense in a criminal case.  cyclists smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain  oil from Nigeria to Benin, to Nontsikelelo "Lolo" Veleko's portraits of sassy sas·sy 1  
adj. sas·si·er, sas·si·est
1. Rude and disrespectful; impudent.

2. Lively and spirited; jaunty.

3. Stylish; chic: a sassy little hat.
 Johannesburg teenagers, the viewer began to perceive the extraordinary heterogeneity of African society--that there is no one "Africa." Afro-pessimism is defeated in the cognizance The power, authority, and ability of a judge to determine a particular legal matter. A judge's decision to take note of or deal with a cause.

That which is cognizable to a judge is within the scope of his or her jurisdiction.
 of such difference.

JAMES MEYER IS AN ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ART HISTORY AT EMORY UNIVERSITY IN ATLANTA, AND A CONTRIBUTING EDITOR OF ARTFORUM. (SEE CONTRIBUTORS.)
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Author:Meyer, James
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Oct 1, 2006
Words:1087
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