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Laura Larson: Lennon, Weinberg, Inc.


"Who am I?" Andre Breton demanded in the opening lines of his novel Nadja (1928). "Perhaps," he suggested by way of an answer, "everything would amount to knowing whom I 'haunt.'" The same could be said of the notoriously elusive medium of photography, which, like Breton, stubbornly resists all attempts at categorization. "I am whom I haunt": This is clearly the definition of photography at which Roland Barthes Roland Barthes (November 12, 1915 – March 25, 1980) (pronounced [ʀɔlɑ̃ baʀt]) was a French literary critic, literary and social theorist, philosopher, and semiologist.  arrived in Camera Lucida (1980), his quest to discover the medium's noeme or essence through its ability to summon the spirit of his dead mother by offering an indexical in·dex·i·cal  
adj.
1. Of or having the function of an index.

2. Linguistics Deictic.

n.
A deictic word or element.

Adj. 1. indexical - of or relating to or serving as an index
 trace of her once living presence.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Although they are never mentioned in Barthes's account, one imagines he would be sympathetic, even susceptible, to the nineteenth-century spirit photographs that are currently exerting a strong fascination on a broad spectrum of the photographic community--from seasoned curators like Pierre Apraxine, whose display of vintage prints, "The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult," is currently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, to younger artists like Laura Larson, whose latest exhibition explored the genre through its contemporary restaging. If Larson's approach to spirit photography evinces an overtly Barthesian concern for the medium's indexical basis, it equally reflects an awareness of the challenges posed to photography's evidentiary ev·i·den·tia·ry  
adj. Law
1. Of evidence; evidential.

2. For the presentation or determination of evidence: an evidentiary hearing.

Adj. 1.
 status in the twenty-five years since Camera Lucida's publication, by both postmodern critiques of representation and the rise of digital imaging. By marrying the cheap effects and materials of their predecessors to state-of-the-art technology, Larson's latter-day spirit images generate an intentionally unresolved friction between the now widely acknowledged spuriousness of photographic objectivity and the medium's still compelling "reality effect."

This tension is perhaps most apparent in the five color photos from the series "Asylum," 2005, all of which depict the abandoned rooms of a nineteenth-century mental hospital. Shot large-format, with a view camera, these stunningly detailed images capture every speck of dust and bit of chipped paint. The place cries out for ghosts, and Larson obliges by dangling bits of white netting in front of her lens. In their obvious artificiality, these blurry forms both accentuate and undermine the intense verisimilitude of what surrounds them, particularly in those works where they less resemble supernatural beings than marks scoured scour 1  
v. scoured, scour·ing, scours

v.tr.
1.
a. To clean, polish, or wash by scrubbing vigorously: scour a dirty oven.

b.
 on the image's surface. Looking at these pictures, it's easy to conclude that a belief in photography is not so different from a belief in spirits.

A second body of photographs, from the series "Apparition apparition, spiritualistic manifestation of a person or object in which a form not actually present is seen with such intensity that belief in its reality is created. ," 2003, presents a lush forest that, in each shot, is cleaved cleaved (klevd) split or separated, as by cutting.  into a flattened foreground containing a vaporous haze--an emissary EMISSARY. One who is sent from one power or government into another nation for the purpose of spreading false rumors and to cause alarm. He differs from a spy. (q.v.)  from the beyond, or perhaps just a wisp (1) (Wireless ISP) An ISP that provides fixed or mobile wireless services to its customers. WISPs provide last mile access to rural areas and small villages as well as industrial parks at the edge of town. See ISP, fixed wireless and 802.11. See also WISPr.  of smoke--and a vertiginous ver·tig·i·nous
adj.
1. Affected by vertigo; dizzy.

2. Tending to produce vertigo.


vertiginous adjective Related to vertigo, dizzy
 background composed of multiple, conflicting orthogonals. What results is not so much the dispelling of illusion through an assertion of the image's flatness as the creation of a space that might be called hysterically impenetrable--one that simultaneously invites and rejects our ability to experience it as "real." In Larson's hands, photography emerges not just as a medium that haunts but one that is itself haunted by its own ghost.
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Author:Sundell, Margaret
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:506
Previous Article:Gardar Eide Einarsson: Team Gallery.
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