spencer tunick & quality vs. originality

Sombra

A
Sombra

  • 0
  • 0
  • 10
The Gap

H
The Gap

  • 5
  • 2
  • 55
Ithaki Steps

H
Ithaki Steps

  • 2
  • 0
  • 74
Pitt River Bridge

D
Pitt River Bridge

  • 6
  • 0
  • 81

Forum statistics

Threads
199,004
Messages
2,784,486
Members
99,765
Latest member
NicB
Recent bookmarks
0

jwchayse

Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Salem, OR
Format
Medium Format
I was recently thinking of the documentary "naked world" and the particular part in which spencer was taking an individual nude of a woman on antarctica. The interesting thing to me was on the boat back after the shoot an assistant commented on how spencer only spent 3 or 4 minutes finding his composition and in general just didnt seem to be thinking about it much at all. He said he felt that it was basically a snapshot and anyone could have taken it.
The suprising thing was that spencer didnt argue this, he agreed! He validated his effort by saying the technical aspects of the shot werent the point, but the fact that nobody had done a project like his is what made his work notable.
In another shot (female in front of the eiffel tower) he commented on how literally a handfull of other photographers had taken basically the same shot.
So to differentiate his work he had the model give the camera the finger as if to say " i know this is really isnt groundbreaking but im doing it anyway so f*** you"
My point to this is that in my opinion I dont think work should be elevated to genious status based just on the fact that no one had done it before, even if the technical mastery of medium or the idea itself are nothing special.
Any thoughts ?
 

Roger Hicks

Member
Joined
May 17, 2006
Messages
4,895
Location
Northern Aqu
Format
35mm RF
My point to this is that in my opinion I dont think work should be elevated to genius status based just on the fact that no one had done it before

I completely agree with you. This is like the old camera club argument that 'difficult' pics are worth more, viz., complete crap.

Cheers,

Roger
 

AgX

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2007
Messages
29,973
Location
Germany
Format
Multi Format
There are two aspects into it.
First Tunicks work itself. I had the chance to to be one those figurants. I did not apply, I neither liked the way Tunick approached the people he wanted to be figurants, nor did I see much in those photographs I found on the net. Nakedness on itself does not make an intriguing photograph but with that event feature he gets a lot of publicity.

The more general approach: A lot of those historic photos of those great masters don’t look that unique to me now. So were they praised because they did something new, or because their photographs were really fascinating then. And what about today, why do we still praise them?
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

Membership Council
Subscriber
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
4,793
Location
Montréal, QC
Format
Multi Format
I was one of the thousands of naked ones in Montréal when he did his session a few years ago, and the question of value regarding his work has always nagged me.

From the point of view of the subject, the experience is truly unique. In my case, being naked in a public space with innumerable numbers of strangers was an unsettling and surprisingly cheerful experience. It was as if everyone was honest for the first time of their lives. That is the payoff for all the remaining academic complexities.

The issue of skill is the main one: whither the skill? As you said, he took only a few minutes to compose, snaps, and walks away. In the Montreal case, the setup was a bit more elaborate: the crowd was directed to two or three different setups (random mass of bodies; ordered bodies, etc). But judging from the print I got in exchange, the light is so-so, the printing is at ordinary commercial level, and the composition could have helped some thinking through. All of this to say that for craftsman-type printers, his work could look highly suspicious.

But the real question about skill is: Which skill matters the most? Is it originality? After a few shots, no, because it ceases to be original in the sense of "not having been done before." Originality does not seem to be a good long-term goal anyway. Material medium-related skills? Not really, see above. The models's skill? It depends: in many of his photos, there are so many that they are indistinguishable. In other ones, there is only a small number. Organizational skills? Maybe: getting people with enough cojones to pose naked is sometimes a legal nightmare, or a practical nightmare (cops, passerbys, time of the day, or the sheer energy to coordinate 20,000 people on the Zocalo).

If you take a slightly more abstract conception of medium, as being not the material you work with (paint, words, silver, etc) but rather the network of conventions you deal with (subject matter, taste, etc), then I think we might find some understanding. The pictures of a thousand naked bodies we're most familar with could be those taken at the liberation of the concentration camps; some of Tunick's arguably share many pictorial similarities with these. As to what is the meaning of such echoes, I will leave each one to their interpretations, but I think there is some intent to revert the meaning of such pictures to something less horrible.

Finally, there's also the no-skill interpretation: yes, he has no skill whatsoever in exposing film and printing photos; yes he has no skill whatsoever at the pictorial level, his composition is nothing outstanding and imparts little extra meaning to the work. But his work is still valuable nonetheless because everything happens at the level of performance: the sheer fact of putting naked people in certain places, and making a photographic record of it from a decently competent point of view.

I personally think that the value lies somewhere between the pictorial and the performance. The images are effective because of their relationships to other existing images, and also because their making is a unique event.
 

gr82bart

Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2003
Messages
5,591
Location
Los Angeles and Toronto
Format
Multi Format
When I was a young'n on the construction site, one of the site supers told me "Lots of people have balls, but only a few people have the balls to do something with it."

Whether this is genius or not, he did it and no one in this thread did. Maybe making something out of nothing ala Seinfeld is the genius part? I dunno the answer.

Regards, Art.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

grahamp

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
1,708
Location
Vallejo (SF Bay Area)
Format
Multi Format
The large group compositions are interesting because the scale and the numbers of people involved break some of the conditioned responses. You could replicate some pictures with mannekins or logs (though having self-positioning subject matter is a great logistical advantage), but it wouldn't have the same response.

Having seen three documentatries on Tunick (Naked states, Naked World and Positively naked), I do think he does his thing very well. A little lacking in charm sometimes. The trouble is, I don't think the photographs are really the work. It is the event. Photography is just the means to provide a record and way of viewing the event later.

There are other artists whose work is ephemeral and needs photography to record it.

Since Tunick chooses to use large numbers of nude people in unconventional locations he is going to get the same attention anyone doing nudes receives. Times N thousand times :cool:
 

Roger Hicks

Member
Joined
May 17, 2006
Messages
4,895
Location
Northern Aqu
Format
35mm RF
Whether this is genius or not, he did it and no one in this thread did. Maybe making something out of nothing ala Seinfeld is the genius part? I dunno the answer.

Dear Art,

Then again, no-one else has done an arsehole album. At least, not in the name of Fine Art. Does that mean that the first person who does so is a genius?

Cheers,

R.
 

Joe Lipka

Member
Joined
Sep 24, 2002
Messages
908
Location
Cary, North
Format
4x5 Format
The trouble is, I don't think the photographs are really the work. It is the event. Photography is just the means to provide a record and way of viewing the event later.

You have revealed the essence. I consider it performance art, not photography. There are a lot of these type of projects where the real art (if it can be defined as such) is the creation of a situation or structure and photography is just a small part of it.

Maybe it's like the "anti-Cristo", instead of wrapping things, he unwraps things.
 
OP
OP

jwchayse

Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Salem, OR
Format
Medium Format
Its not that his work as a whole isnt important. On the contrary, anyone who can assemble 18,000 people at all, especially nude in front of a place which gives the photograph political meaning, is remarkable. I actually like alot of spencer tunicks work. I should have started this in the ethics forum because wasnt necesarilly about him.
My critique was aimed more at placing value on an idea while disregarding the mastery of technique to which the idea was carried out.
Were the " white pantings" or 4' 33'' masterpieces? I dont think so. Im sure many people had considered the thought of producing blank canvases or composing silence. And while they made very strong statements about what art is and/or should be, I dont agree with those who would consider rauschenberg or john cage geniuses for being the only ones to materialize those thoughts.
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

Membership Council
Subscriber
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
4,793
Location
Montréal, QC
Format
Multi Format
Dear Art,

Then again, no-one else has done an arsehole album. At least, not in the name of Fine Art. Does that mean that the first person who does so is a genius?

Cheers,

R.

The closest I know of is Ellen Jong's "Pees on Earth," a collection of her worldwide outdoor pissing session.

Seriously, I like it.
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

Membership Council
Subscriber
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
4,793
Location
Montréal, QC
Format
Multi Format
You have revealed the essence. I consider it performance art, not photography. There are a lot of these type of projects where the real art (if it can be defined as such) is the creation of a situation or structure and photography is just a small part of it.

Maybe it's like the "anti-Cristo", instead of wrapping things, he unwraps things.

Do I hear an echo here? I think we all reached the performance conclusion (cf. my own post...)
 

jmal

Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2006
Messages
529
Location
Kansas
Format
35mm
Roger,

Years ago, a female friend of mine did a film on/of "arseholes." Pretentious, but amusing.

Jmal
 

Roger Hicks

Member
Joined
May 17, 2006
Messages
4,895
Location
Northern Aqu
Format
35mm RF
Roger,

Years ago, a female friend of mine did a film on/of "arseholes." Pretentious, but amusing.

Jmal

Dear Jmal,

She must have been a genius, then...

And for Michel: a couple of Arleses back (the Rencontres, that is), I saw a book called 'Pisseuses'. To my surprise, it was exactly what it said on the cover -- in close-up.

Maybe I chose a bad example.

Cheers,

R.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2004
Messages
2,360
Location
East Kent, U
Format
Medium Format
Dear Jmal,

She must have been a genius, then...

And for Michel: a couple of Arleses back (the Rencontres, that is), I saw a book called 'Pisseuses'. To my surprise, it was exactly what it said on the cover -- in close-up.

Maybe I chose a bad example.

Cheers,

R.

Take a generous portion of bad taste, stir in as much chutzpah as possible, and it's AMAZING what some people can get away with!

Regards,

David
 

smieglitz

Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2002
Messages
1,950
Location
Climax, Michigan
Format
Large Format
...The pictures of a thousand naked bodies we're most familar with could be those taken at the liberation of the concentration camps; some of Tunick's arguably share many pictorial similarities with these. As to what is the meaning of such echoes, I will leave each one to their interpretations, but I think there is some intent to revert the meaning of such pictures to something less horrible...

This is exactly what Tunick's staging reminded me of when I first saw one of the documentaries.

I also don't recall hearing him vocalize such a noble intent for these images. Rather, from viewing the film it struck me that he was driven solely by a quest for celebrity and fame.

Joe
 

Maris

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2006
Messages
1,574
Location
Noosa, Australia
Format
Multi Format
For Roger Hicks.

Arseholes, an photographic exhibition by Lee-Anne Richards was exhibited at the Photo Technical Exhibition Space, Sydney from 1-29 September 2001. The subject matter? You guessed it!
 

Ed Sukach

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2002
Messages
4,517
Location
Ipswich, Mas
Format
Medium Format
I was recently thinking of the documentary "naked world"...
... My point to this is that in my opinion I dont think work should be elevated to genious status based just on the fact that no one had done it before, even if the technical mastery of medium or the idea itself are nothing special.
Any thoughts ?
Just one, at the moment... "Genius status"??

I don't know of any photograph I've ever seen that I would label (worthy of) "genius status"

Can you give an example?
 

Roger Hicks

Member
Joined
May 17, 2006
Messages
4,895
Location
Northern Aqu
Format
35mm RF
For Roger Hicks.

Arseholes, an photographic exhibition by Lee-Anne Richards was exhibited at the Photo Technical Exhibition Space, Sydney from 1-29 September 2001. The subject matter? You guessed it!

Shit! (What else can I say?).

Thanks for the enlightenment. I realized later that it might not have been the best example, and you have proven this.

Cheers,

Roger
 

mcfactor

Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2006
Messages
183
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Format
Med. Format RF
I consider Tunick to be a (bad) conceptual artist, rather than a photographer. The reason the quality of the photos that are produced by his work dont matter is that they are more a byproduct of the work; an attempt to record the event (photojournalists dont fall under this category because they dont create the event, they record it). For fine art photographers, the event is the image. Tunick is more in line with artists like Vanessa Beecroft or even Niki Lee.
 

DrPablo

Member
Joined
Aug 16, 2006
Messages
814
Location
North Caroli
Format
Multi Format
I just read a quote in a magazine called Stop Smiling. I forgot the name of the photographer, but he said that the most original photograph he's ever seen was the one of the earth floating in the darkness. Shows how originality is in part tied to circumstance. He also said that you don't need to know the intentions of the photographer for a photograph to be effective.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom