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Diane Arbus: The wonderful wizard of Odds or the poetics of the I (eye)

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Diane Arbus’ photographs are mainly about difference. Most of the time she is trying ‘[…] to suppress, or at least reduce, moral and sensory queasiness’ (Sontag 1977: 40) in order to represent a world where the subject of the photograph is not merely the ‘other’ but also the I. Her technique does not coax her subjects into natural poses. Instead she encourages them to be strange and awkward. By posing for her, the revelation of the self is identified with what is odd. This paper aims at understanding the geography of difference that, at the same time, is also of resistance, since Diane Arbus reveals what was forcefully hidden by bringing it into light in such a way that it is impossible to ignore. Her photographs display a poetic beauty that is not only of the ‘I’ but also of the ‘eye’. The world that is depicted is one in which we are all the same. She “atomizes” reality by separating each element and ‘Instead of showing identity between things which are different […] everybody is shown to look the same.’ (Sontag 1977: 47). Furthermore, this paper analyses some of Arbus’ photographs so as to explain this point of view, by trying to argue that between rejecting and reacting against what is standardized she does not forget the geography of the body which is also a geography of the self. While creating a new imagetic topos, where what is trivial becomes divine, she also presents the frailty of others as our own.
Autores principais:Duarte, José
Assunto:Arbus, Diane, 1923-1971 Photography Freaks Identity Performance
Ano:2010
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
Descrição
Resumo:Diane Arbus’ photographs are mainly about difference. Most of the time she is trying ‘[…] to suppress, or at least reduce, moral and sensory queasiness’ (Sontag 1977: 40) in order to represent a world where the subject of the photograph is not merely the ‘other’ but also the I. Her technique does not coax her subjects into natural poses. Instead she encourages them to be strange and awkward. By posing for her, the revelation of the self is identified with what is odd. This paper aims at understanding the geography of difference that, at the same time, is also of resistance, since Diane Arbus reveals what was forcefully hidden by bringing it into light in such a way that it is impossible to ignore. Her photographs display a poetic beauty that is not only of the ‘I’ but also of the ‘eye’. The world that is depicted is one in which we are all the same. She “atomizes” reality by separating each element and ‘Instead of showing identity between things which are different […] everybody is shown to look the same.’ (Sontag 1977: 47). Furthermore, this paper analyses some of Arbus’ photographs so as to explain this point of view, by trying to argue that between rejecting and reacting against what is standardized she does not forget the geography of the body which is also a geography of the self. While creating a new imagetic topos, where what is trivial becomes divine, she also presents the frailty of others as our own.