Not the hand!!!
Not the hand!!!
Sparrow said:
HBC would have cropped the hand from the left hand corner?
Crop the hand???
NOT THE HAND!!! That hand holding a spoon is what makes the photo! Makes it more of a participatory event!
HCB again: "Pour « signifier » le monde, il faut se sentir impliqué dans ce que l'on découpe à travers le viseur." (In order to "signify" the world, it is necessary to feel implicated in that which one cuts in half through the viewfinder).
I love that picture of Daffy Duck! Notice, too, the triangulation of the gaze: the way in which Bugs Bunny is looking at Daffy, while Daffy's eyes are focused on us, even while his mouth is speaking the other way. And who are we looking at at? Some people obviously feel like they are looking at Daffy along with Bugs, vicariously sharing Bugs' rather normative point of view and perhaps even his sarcastic grin. But others may find themselves wondering, as I do, what we can do to make the relation between Bugs, Daffy and the viewer become something else! Daffy holds the clue: Forked tongues (i.e., the ability to speak in more than one language, and preferably in more than just former imperial languages) and eyes in the back of one's head (i.e., the ability to invent a new kind of vision)---isn't that what we need nowadays!
varjag said:
fuzzy postmodernist rhetoric
If the discussion of a shift in modes of production and the transition from industrial capitalism to k-economy (or cognitive capitalism) seems "fuzzy" to you, I suppose that's another 'reason' to justify the cost of Leica glass. You belong in the delirium of the image described by Lucretius, who, at the beginning of
De Natura rerum, talks about the sweet feeling one experiences when looking at a sinking ship from the safety of a nearby shore. This neutralizing effect of the image is well known.
It might be apposite to mention, by the way, that even HCB took time off from his sketching to go and join street protests against the illegal and disastrous intervention in Iraq.
But lest anybody come along and point the finger, or crop the hand, let me repeat again I do not advocate the position that art must be judged by politics, nor even that art somehow reflects society and/or politics. The ease with which people keep pulling out these tired old categories is amazing! Most of these ideas were already demolished by modernist avant-garde artists and writers--well before the postmodernists! What I am saying is the altogether bland and widely accepted idea (for people who have continued reading authors after 1965) that certain aesthetic concepts and practices share and/or challenge fundamental assumptions with the socio-political ideas and practices of their age. In the concept of the decisive moment, I see shared assumptions with the political and metaphysical discourse of sovereignty. Sovereibnty, it is well known, is undergoing deep and profound transformations in our era.
But perhaps I am just foolish to ask a bunch of people who still cherish film, as I do, to address the startling changes and innovations now apace in our society. Considering how much I love film and how much respect I have for the people here (who have contributed enormously to my film appetite), I will let biogons be biogons and hold me silence.
-jon