ART REVIEW: "Family Portrait"-Philadelphia Museum of Art
Perhaps it was some latent homesickness for my own family rising
to the surface, or maybe I was just seeking a different visual experience from
the kinds of art I had been seeing recently, but when I was looking online for
something to see at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, “Family Portrait” caught my
eye.
While the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Perelman building, located
adjacent to the West Entrance of the main building, lacks the same sort of
pseudo-classical ostentation and grandeur, it has a charm and elegance of its
own. The exterior of the building is pure Art Deco, the stairwell leading to
the restrooms could fit right in with the Main Building’s dimly lit,
restrained, old-school design, and upon entering the Perelman, I was shocked to
be faced with a rough-hewn stone wall and a light-filled, thoroughly
contemporary-designed hallway. I only regret I was not able to see more
of the building to take in what is sure to be a veritable encyclopedia of
architectural movements.
The show juxtaposes photographs of
families from as early as the 1800s to as recently as 2009, weaving together
vivid portraits of all kinds of families both real and fictionalized. The
photographs display a range of techniques: photographs both small and large, in
black and white, in glossy color and in faded sepia-tinted silver prints. Each
work addresses the ideas and the psychology of families and of being a part of
a family in different ways. Some works are staged as traditional family
portraits, where the viewer has to look deeply into the eyes of the figures
depicted to gain access to their thoughts. Other works appear more spontaneous,
or at the very least are less traditionally staged, and the gazes and postures
and body languages of the figures spell out a unique and poetic story about how
each person fits into their family and how each individual story plays off one
another to form a cohesive whole.
As I considered how all of the works I saw
inform and play off one another, I began thinking about what kind of artwork is
created when a photographer chooses to depict their own family members, versus
what kind of baggage a photographer can bring to a family not their own.
How much of the photographer’s own psyche is visible in a photograph, and
how much of what we see, rendered in such a lifelike way, is staged, and what
if, anything, is spontaneous and real? Photography, more than any other
art form, provokes this debate.
Some of the earliest photographs on
display are tiny, impossibly delicate silver prints by Lady Lucy and Lady
Charlotte Bridgeman from the mid 1800s. These works were created when photography
was still a new, unpredictable medium. The resulting outdoor photos depict
Bridgeman family members in a variety of settings: solo portraits, family
clusters, and husband-and-wife double portraits. Given how old these
photos are, I expected them to be posed and stiff. Yet I found myself
surprised: “Davenport Dance”, which dates from 1853-8, depicts a group of
children and a woman, likely a governess, taking a moment on an outdoor set of
stairs. What delighted me in this tiny sepia work was the endearing and
adorable behavior of the children interacting with one another on the steps.
Instead of consciously posing for the camera, they appear largely not to
notice the presence of the photographer, engrossed instead in whatever they are
doing. This work seems to have truly captured a fleeting moment.
A work that made me consider the
relationships of not only the subject, but between the photographer and
subjects, was “The Daughters” by Tina Barney, dating from 2002-4. A
large, vivid color photograph, it depicts a family of five (mother, father,
three young daughters) in a lavish interior (reproduced below). The variety of emotions and
the keen psychology of the family members in this photograph blew me away,
reminding me of John Singer Sargent’s masterpiece “The Daughters of Edward
Darley Boit” (1882). The allusion is surely intentional. In this
photograph, the mother and daughter stand at the foreground. The mother gazes
upon her little girl, who seems apprehensive at her surroundings, her face
tremulous and reactive. She holds her mother’s hand for support and seems
to shrink away from us, from the photographer, her gaze looking to our right.
In contrast, the daughter in the middle ground holds our gaze, her
hands folded delicately. She is clearly posing for our benefit, while her
mother and little sister appear to be caught in a fleeting moment. In the
background, slightly blurred, stand the father and oldest sister, who looks
down at the ground, hunching her shoulders slightly. Her apparent discomfort
with this situation echoes her youngest sister’s, but manifests itself
passively. She stands by her father’s side, refusing to engage with her
family members, with the photographer, or with us, the audience.
(gallery339.com)
The startling jumble of emotions radiating
from this work made me wonder how much of what I was seeing was of the family
itself, and how much of it was posed or staged by the photographer? How
much was I reading into this family’s body language, and how much of it was
something the photographer purposefully wanted me to see?
A truly haunting work by Diane Arbus
titled “Identical Twins, Roselle, New Jersey, 1967” (reproduced below) also addresses this theme
of potential voyeurism and the perceived discomfort of the subject. The twin
girls depicted in this black and white photograph have identical faces and are
dressed the same. On the surface, their identical features bear identical
expressions. Yet as the viewer looks closer, it is easy to see the girls’
vastly different reactions to being photographed. The twin on the left
looks grim, her mouth set in a tight line, while her sister’s mouth is forced
into a smile, her eyes large and frightened-looking. Twins are a strange,
fascinating subject for photography because the experience of twin-hood,
especially identical twin-hood, creates stunning contrasts in minute details
about each twin that allow them to be distinguished, and that is what is on
display in this work. Who are these girls? How does their twin-hood affect
their posting for this photograph? Again, am I only seeing what the
photographer wants me to see, or could it be that I am seeing the young girls’
suppressed emotions? What many of these works seem to depict
is the ambivalent feelings many of the subjects have concerning being
portrayed. Is the photographer necessarily a voyeur?
(apieceofmonologue.com)
One last highlight are three glossy
black and white photographs in the back of the room from Carrie Mae Weem’s
“Kitchen Table Series”, dating from 1990. According to the blurb, these
large, evocative photos are part of a fictionalized series about the life of a
successful woman. In these theatrical works, a woman and her husband are
arranged around the kitchen table. While her husband remains seated,
looking down at a newspaper in all three photographs, the wife moved about the
space. In the first photograph (reproduced below), the air is thick with tension and unsaid
words as a cigarette smolders in her hand. In the second photograph, the
wife is standing behind the husband, obscured in shadow. In the third
photograph, she is embracing her husband’s seated form. While she has
occupied different spaces over the course of this photo-story, her husband has
barely moved. What has transpired in this fictional relationship and
story? How is the wife’s success affecting her relationship with her husband, who appears less successful?
(carriemaeweems.net)
This powerful last set of photographs
invites more questions than answers. If this fictionalized photo-essay
can evoke such powerful feelings and such a potent reaction to a staged set of
interactions, how can should we view photographs that depict real life?
If we cannot distinguish the real psychology from the staged psychology
of a work, how can we hope to read into a work of art?
“Family Portrait” runs through November 10.
I love this review! You have really posed some great questions about the nature of photography and the purpose of the photographer. Is it to portray reality as it is or is it to create the reality he or she wants us to see. I am glad you went to see something a little bit outside if your regular choice of art...branching out!
ReplyDeleteinteresting, even to those who generally just like the rides... :)
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