Syllabus for Roster(s):

  • 15F ARTH 3591-002 (CGAS)
In the UVaCollab course site:   15F ARTH 3591-002 (CGAS)

Colloquium: Photography and Culture

Art History Colloquium: Photography and Disappearance

 

Professor Claire Raymond scp2u@virginia.edu

Fayerweather Hall, Tuesdays and Thursdays, and Fridays, by appointment—just email or speak with me before or after class to set up a time to meet.

 

Required texts

Roland Barthes Camera Lucida

Jae Emerling Photography History and Theory

Course Packet from N& K Print and Design http://www.nkprintdesign.com/

 

Images

Graham MacIndoe “Missing Persons”

Matika Wilbur “562” Project

Photographs by Francesca Woodman

Photographs by Mark Ruwedel

Photographs by Ralph Meatyard

Photographs by Ana Mendieta

Photographs by Nan Goldin

Photographs by Carrie Mae Weems

Photographs by Sally Mann

Spirit Photography (various photographers)

Photographs by Jeff Wall

Photographs by Gregory Crewdson

Photographs by Ryan McGinley

Rebecca Belmore, “The Named and the Un-named”

Paula Luttringer El Lamento de Los Muros/the Wailing of the Walls

*All images on our class Collab site unless otherwise noted

Course requirements: (1) regular attendance and active participation in class (class participation including attendance is 40% of your final grade, therefore you really must keep up with readings) please bring a one page commentary, hand written or typed and printed, on each reading with you when you come to class, responding to the reading assigned that day—these write ups can be absolutely casual but they will fold into your participation grade; (2) a Five page prospectus describing clearly and fluently your topic and plans for your term paper—this counts for 10% of your grade and is due at the midterm; (3) a formal presentation of about 12 to 15 minutes describing some aspects of your term paper; this presentation counts for 10% of your grade; (4)a term paper on the topic of your choice related to the themes of this class. You must meet with me to ratify your term paper topic. That means you need to meet with me before midterm. The term paper is to be fifteen pages and counts for 40 % of your grade. The page length is exclusive of images and works cited, ie, fifteen pages of writing.

Note: I ask that you come to class with paper, pen, and the book (or course packet) from which the day's reading is assigned. Please do not use a computer, laptop, tablet, iPad, cell phone or any electronic equipment during class. If this policy poses a hardship to you, please speak to me about that. 

August 25th, first class day, introductions, discussion:

Why photography and disappearance? Discuss early photography, heliography, and discuss facebook, and the culture of the internet shared image

 

Thursday August 27th

Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, please read pages 1-12

Graham MacIndoe “Missing Persons”

http://grahammacindoe.com/missing/1/

 

Tuesday September 1st

Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, please read pages 13-27

Edward Curtis, and Gertrude Kasebier, photographs

Photographs by Matika Wilbur “project 562”

http://www.matikawilbur.com/blog/

 

Thursday September 3rd

Mortuary photography, 19th century, on Collab; please read Jae Emerling, pages 17-42

 

Tuesday September 8th

Spirit photographs, please read from Collab “Faces of the Living Dead” and “Ghost Dialectics”

 

Thursday September 10th

From collab, images by Paula Luttringer. For Thursday, please read from Collab "Los Desaparecidos" read each part of the file; also please read Paula Luttringer Aperture article, on Collab. See, Images from Paula Luttringer, “The Wailing of the Walls” http://prisonphotography.org/2010/06/11/recovering-remembering-returning-the-wailing-of-the-walls-by-paula-luttringer/

 

 Tuesday September 15th

From course packet please read Agamben, The Melancholy Angel; see, Francesca Woodman photographs, On Being an Angel

Thursday September 17th

Francesca Woodman photographs, Collab; please read for Thursday Emerling, pages 48-82

 

Tuesday September 22nd

Images from Felix Gonzalez Torres (on Collab) http://felixgonzalez-torresfoundation.org/; also see, http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/articles/genteel-iconoclasm; Also please read for Tuesday Virillio, from course packet, The Aesthetics of Disappearance

 

Thursday September 24th

Mark Ruwedel Images, from Collab; please read for Thursday Emerling, pages 82-102

 

Tuesday September 29th

Images by Ruwedel, from Collab; please read for Tuesday Ranciere, Aesthetics as Politics (from course packet)

 

Thursday October 1st

Images by Ana Mendieta, on Collab; also, Please read Emerling pages 102-120

 

Thursday October 8th

Please read Barthes, pages 28-52, from Camera Lucida, and Continue photographs of Ana Mendieta

 

Tuesday October 13th

Rebecca Belmore, images on Collab and film, and for today please read Adorno, Extracts, from course packet.

 

Thursday October 15th

Five page prospectus due TODAY: in this prospectus you must describe in detail your paper topic, as well as indicate what research your paper topic will entail. Bring the five page prospectus printed to class. During class today, each student will very casually present her/his topic to the class. In what time remains after these presentations, we will discuss the reading for today, which is Barthes, pages 52-75, from Camera Lucida

 

Tuesday October 20th

Carrie Mae Weems photographs from Collab; please also read for today Blanchot, The Original Experience, from course packet.

 

Thursday October 22nd

Ralph Meatyard images; please also for today read from Emerling pages 165-190

 

Tuesday October 27th

Gordon Parks images, from Collab; please also read from course packet Prosser, Gordon Parks’s Taking a Life

 

Thursday October 29th

photographs by Jeff Wall and Gregory Crewdson; please read from Course packet, Cixous, The Last Painting

 

Tuesday November 3rd

Photographs by Ralph Meatyard, Carrie Mae Weems, Francesca Woodman; and read from Camera Lucida, pages 76-100

 

Thursday November 5th

Sally Mann images, please see Collab; from course packet please read Prosser, Light in the Dark Room

 

Tuesday November 10th

Please read Prosser, from Course packet, Light in the Dark Room; and view photographs of Sally Mann

 

Thursday November 12th

Photographs by Ryan McGinley and Nan Goldin; please complete reading Barthes' Camera Lucida

 

Tuesday November 17th

Presentations of student research projects—please note, the order in which students will give their presentations will be determined once the class roster is set, and it will be random—I will just draw names from the proverbial hat. I will post this schedule as an attachment on our Collab site. Preparing for your presentations, please see my announcement--on Collab-- giving details.

 

Thursday November 19th

Presentations of student research projects

 

No classes—Thanksgiving recess—

 

Tuesday December 1st

Presentations of student research projects

 

Thursday December 3rd

Presentations of student research projects

 

Tuesday December 8th

Photography of Hiroshi Sugimoto, and concluding lecture, no preparation required from students

Term papers are due in class TODAY, December 8th. Please note, the term papers must be printed, 12 point Times New Roman font, standard margins. Place all illustrations at the end of the paper and these images do not count toward page length. I am very happy to discuss your term papers with you during the semester; do not leave matters to the last minute, and you will be fine. I grant extensions only in conjunction with your Academic Association Dean. It is appropriate to speak with your dean if you are facing a serious health, mental health, or personal/family crisis.

 

Other Notes:

 

Course Rationale Colloquium on Photography and Culture, ARTH 3591

From its inception, photography has been used to save things that vanish, to memorialize the dead, to stop time in the frame of the image. This course explores connections between photography and vanishing. We begin by considering the very earliest photographic images, Henry Fox Talbot’s “fairy pictures” and then look at spectral trends nineteenth-century photography, especially spirit photography-- photographs that people believed showed ghosts-- and then delve into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, looking at photographers who invoke disappearance by different means: Ralph Meatyard, Francesa Woodman, Graham MacIndoe, Paula Luttringer. multi-media works by Rebecca Belmore, Sally Mann, Ana Mendieta, Carrie Mae Weems, and others. The course is partly about theories of photography and also closely follows this cultural theme of disappearance. Some of the material we cover contends with violence, insofar as violence is often a precipitate of certain kinds of disappearance. For example, Graham MacIndoe, Paula Luttringer, are 21st century photographers whose work contends with missing persons, the aftermath of war, and state sponsored violence. Our course, then, explores in depth how photography creates an image of what vanishes, and how those images shape the cultures of modernity and postmodernity.

 

Plagiarism, the copying of words or ideas from other people, books, or sources, without citing them, is an offense punishable by a failing grade and appearance before the university’s Honor’s Committee. Written texts, and spoken texts (such as lectures) must be cited if they are incorporated into your paper. Ideas as well as verbatim quotes must be cited. When in doubt: cite it!

Late papers will be graded down one half letter grade per day late. 

 Mandatory Reporter: per new laws that affect the University of Virginia, as a faculty member I am bound by law to report any crimes, including sexual assault, against a University of Virginia student of which I am made aware. If you are a survivor of sexual assault, I strongly urge you to contact S.A.R.A. 434.977.7273 They are good people and will help you. If you tell me that you have been sexually assaulted, I cannot keep that information confidential and will be bound by law to report the crime.

 

Thank you! Looking forward to this semester!

CR

 

 

 

 

 

Course Description (for SIS)

Colloquium on Photography and Culture, ARTH 3591

From its inception, photography has been used to save things that vanish, to stave off the passage of time, to memorialize the dead, to stop time in the frame of the image. This course explores connections between photography and vanishing. We begin by considering the very earliest photographic images, Henry Fox Talbot’s “fairy pictures” and then look at spectral trends nineteenth-century photography, especially spirit photography-- photographs that people believed showed ghosts-- and then delve into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, looking at photographers who invoke disappearance by different means: Ralph Meatyard, Duane Michals, Francesa Woodman, An-My Le, Graham MacIndoe, Paula Luttringer. multi-media works by Rebecca Belmore, Sally Mann, Ana Mendieta, Carrie Mae Weems, and others. The course is partly about theories of photography and also closely follows this cultural theme of disappearance. Some of the material we cover contends with violence, insofar as violence is often a precipitate of certain kinds of disappearance. For example, Graham MacIndoe, Paula Luttringer, and An-My Le are 21st century photographers whose work contends with missing persons, the aftermath of war, and state sponsored violence. Our course, then, explores in depth how photography creates an image of what vanishes, and how those images shape the cultures of modernity and postmodernity.