This international process defines a kind of homo
photographicus. The latter undoubtedly began as a realist. What mattered
most was that photographic representations rendered things not as they
physically behave, but as they appear to us after perceptual correction. In
shade, objects appear bluish, in the morning they are aglow and in the evening
they are strongly affected by the colors of neighboring objects. The same
column is large or small depending on our distance, and it is straight or
curved depending on whether it is located in front or to the sides. Our
perception regulates and rationalizes, by painting things in so-called 'local
colors' (independent of their environment) and according to an orthogonal
perspective with "corrected" measuring standards. No doubt, physical engineers
and chemists will continue spreading a wealth of ingenuity in order to conform
to this non-real and merely perceptual realism by fighting those "distortions"
in a spool or barrel lens, and by making use of filters to "improve" colors.
Especially in the west, man as technician, as well as technology are thus
subordinated to man as user-consumer.
However, the position of a planetary homo photographicus
also produced an inverse subordination, in which technology, changed by its own
logic, modifies the perceptual and mental habits of human beings. An example of
this concerns recent cartography, where one can see a photograph coupled to a
computer offering geographical and historical positins in curved space that are
neither subjected to orthogonal arrangements, nor to realistic colors, nor to
recognizable measuring standards. However, we are not disturbed; instead we
concentrate and treat it as obvious. Crossing cultural barriers, the
photograph, together with other planetary processes such as the computer,
sound, the car and the plane, has therefore given birth to a more
topological than geometric appropriation and understanding that activates
mental schemas in a an operative rather than conceptual or ideal fashion, where
data processing is pivotal and where the real has precedence over reality and
realism.
This is even more marked when considering the violent reaction
to Thirteen Portraits of Susan, put together quite some time ago for the
Swedish magazine X by Dieter LŸbeck, who had collaborated with a dozen research
laboratories and about thirty photographers for this project. What we have
under eyes here is definitely the result of the physical encounter of a living
young woman with various techniques, including radiography, Agfacontour,
thermal duplicators, stereophotogrammetry in the treatment of relief, holograms
and electronic microscopy for textures, ultrasonoscopy, barograms and
thermograms, "owl's eye" multipliers of luminous intensity, and many
more. Faced with these structures that by no means intervene in our perceptual
world, we are instantly aware that what the devices captured they have indeed
seen, and that we will never see it this way, and that even though the devices
transmitted them to us, we will never be able to actually perceive these
things. We may indeed perceive the imprints, but not the actual spectacle.
Perhaps we perceive the spectacle in an "other scene," a non-scene, an
anti-scene.
Alternatively, one needs to stress that this limit case only
pushes the provocations of ordinary photographs to extremes. We do not even
notice the barrel distortions in photojournalism anymore. It is undoubtedly
partly due to the fact that our eye-brain nexus makes the desired optical
"corrections." But it is surely also the case that the photograph has
accustomed us to curved space, where the viewer mentally, through data
processing, constructs without actually perceiving. The photograph has so
incisively changed our epistemologies and aesthetics that Bill Brandt's extreme
wide angles, whose photographic shots go well beyond the perceptual powers of
the eye-brain couple, have become popular classics. There, the "other scene"
runs alongside the everyday scene, interacting in a reciprocal domestication.
The initiative of technology is such that, for almost a
century, historians conceived of photography's history as a series of
discoveries and technical innovation, until Beaumont Newhall opened new
avenues. Even today popular magazines announce alternations to lenses and films
not only for commercial reasons, but also in a kind of monthly ritual
celebration. Anyone present at a convention of photographers, as if at an
ancient Church Synod, could see members of this semi-fraternal and
semi-aggressive movement passing around equipment from hand to hand, with
everyone touching, weighing and handling it, not so much so as to discover what
one already knows, but to participate in a ritual, in a cult. The camera is not
an object. It is a relay in a process or network, just like his acoustic
brother, the tape recorder. And the network, as Gilbert Simondon pointed out,
has become one of the places for the contemporary sacred. As we have
just seen, this is but one space amongst many others where the prophetesses
speak. We may hear them, but we do not understand.
In the ancient Cosmos-Mundus, of which man was the Microcosm,
material and instrumental initiatives were secondary to the extent that they
were not considered pertinent to representational systems. In the
information-noise and signs-indices of the Universe to which we are exposed,
the unrestrained excess of man's technical devices, or more precisely his
technical environment, which is not merely a means, is more often than
not the most pertinent to the system. Besides, what does one mean with pertinence
when studying luminous, possibly indicial and possibly indexed imprints?
Thus, the photograph is one of three or four spaces "together
with sound, lighting, the computer, car, and plane "that manifests the true
initiatory character of technology in our contemporary world. In this sense,
photography is not only technical, but also technological.