Tuesday, 23 August 2016

The Machine and the Garden, Andy Grundberg.

When this was recommended to me recently I actually Ordered ‘The Machine In the Garden’ by Leo Marx.  This book traces the conflict of industrial and agrarian world views in 19th century American literature.  Interesting, but not what I was expecting.  Fortunately at the same time I had ordered Grundberg’s ‘Crisis of the Real’ for his essay on Ansel Adams and was delighted to find the ‘correct’ essay that refers to photography, in this.  I found the essay quite an eye-opener and I begin to see where my ‘hangout group’ are coming from when they critique my work.

Unlike Marx’s book, this essay refers to the conflict of the rise of technology, especially photography, with the world.  His subtitle is ‘Photography, Technology and the End of Innocent Space’.  He begins the essay in 1859, looking at Charles Baudelaire’s views on photography.  He felt that rather than being allied with art, photography was ‘part of the great industrial madness of our times’.  Grundberg agrees with Baudelaire and argues that the 19th century growth in photography was allied to positivism which is a belief in the redeemability of man and in the elimination of all social ills and injustices through scientific systems, mass production, free enterprise and hard work.  Grundberg disagrees with this point of view and suggests that we cannot expect nirvana to arrive at the end of a production line.  He goes on to remind us that photography was not born into the world alone; it was not the only human activity to become mechanised in the 1830s.
Andy Grundberg compares two different photographers form the Victorian era: Roger Fenton and his romantic, bucolic images against Robert Howlett’s famous image of Brunel standing proudly by the anchor chains of his steam ship The great Eastern.  One references the landed class’s desire for rural nostalgia, while the other portrays the delight in technology.  The gulf between them, he says, is the creation of a new Eden, one in which the perfect garden is replaced by the ideal of the machine.
Grundberg argues that cameras were and still are used to promote the interests of industry and are themselves the product of an industrial process and produce images mechanically.  He adds that early practitioners, such as Samuel Morse were both upper-class and male hobbyists, but by the 1870s it became increasingly mechanised.  In 1893 Kodak attempted to make photography attractive to females by their use of the ‘Kodak Girls’ at the Chicago World’s Fair, but this was at odds with the lot of the female workers in the Kodak factory.
He postulates that far from removing misery and poverty in the world, mechanisation increased it, but photography, he says, was the first means by which the world was alerted to such situations.  Photographers such as John Thompson in England and Jacob Riis took up the camera to help expose the unsanitary, debilitating conditions of slum life.  Despite their faults, argues Grundberg, we have to admire these two because they were pretty much alone in the 19th century in taking a critical view of the new industrial urbanized society.
Grundberg now moves on to the subject of landscape photography. And how in the 19th century it mirrored what he describes as the ‘innocent space’.  He says that around the time of the American civil war a major change took place in the way the land was depicted and this happened in the American frontier which attracted those seeking adventure as well as those seeking an aesthetic sublime.  Two artists/photographers represent the shift well:  Hudson River School landscape painter, Albert Bierstadt, depicted the Rocky Mountains in a totally sentimental and romanticised manner; more dreamscape, he says than landscape.  In contrast was Carleton Watkin’s photography, which suggests what Bierstadt’s doesn’t, that the natural world is as likely to be unfriendly as friendly – that, in fact, it has no feeling for man one way or the other.  Timothy O’Sullivan was another such as Watkins.  Grundberg says of his survey photographs that there was generally no foreground plane to supply a bridge for the eyes, no sense of inhabitability, nothing inviting about the site.  Grundberg tells us that O’Sullivan imbued his pictures of the American West with a profound scepticism about Man’s relationship to Nature.  He tells us that this tradition was continued by the late 20th century group of New Topographics.
In England things took a different direction we are told.  Rather than romanticise the machine, the garden was romanticised in the name of art.  He says that to take the curse off the mechanical nature of photography, photographic-artists manipulated their pictures using platinum, carbon or gum bichromate to separate the images of art photography from the spectre of mechanical reproduction.  In America Alfred Stieglitz initially worked in this tradition, but being the photographer that he was he could not pretend to be innocent of the machine.  Eventually, Grundberg argues, there was 180 degree turn from the rejectionist position of the pictorialists and it embraced the machine and the camera with it.  This came not from Stieglitz, but from a photographer that he promoted: Paul Strand.  In Germany Bauhaus artists and photographers were also sympathetic to this ideal.  We are told the ‘modern’ early 20th century photographs of cars and trains are not merely documents of machines; they are pictures with a mission to sell the faith that technological progress entails progress towards a new social order.
Grundberg goes on to say that both modernist photography and positivism that preceded it are faiths based on a belief in progress through the machine.  What separates them as faiths is that the Modernists believed technology and aesthetics to be compatible rather than rivals, but to make this appear in photographs, they had to eliminate anything from the frame  that would allow the machine to be seen in context.
Gradually things changed yet again and people and their plight began to be shown in photographs.  In America Lewis Hine began to concentrate on the worker instead of the machine.  The Farm Security Administration photographers remind us how bad things could get for the labour force.
Perhaps the most important sentence in the essay from my point of view is when Andy Grundberg asserts that today (albeit 1985) photographers can no longer pretend that the natural world exists in a splendid, edenic isolation, remote from human culture and human interference, as Ansel Adams was able to do in 1927.  Instead, they are trying to picture the world in a way that conforms not only to our experience of it, but also to the postmodern belief that what we know of it is known through the biases of culture – that there is no stepping outside the bounds of our times and our society.  There is, says Grundberg, in recent (1985) landscape photography a palpable sense of tragedy, of loss, of diminution and regret.
Towards the end of his essay Grundberg concludes that today there is no innocent space, no room to see the garden without also seeing the machine.


So what does this mean for my photography?  I feel that I have a tendency to try to live in the ‘innocent space’.  I enjoy, perhaps wrongly and naively, taking photographs that make the natural world look perfect to suggest that all is well with the world.  Of course I know that isn’t the case and like many I am fully aware of the effect of the hand of man whether it be the building of factories and industrial complexes, pollution, clear felling of tropical forests for beef cattle, the burning of fossil fuels and climate change and the damage caused by nuclear power plants let alone by unrest in the Middle East and other troubled parts of the world.  Taking images of a ‘perfect’ world, however, is seductive, but it is important that someone shows the other side of the coin.  I think that my latest images, though, go some way to redress that balance.  In my woodland walks I have looked for that which makes me feel less comfortable, more uneasy, the darker side of woodlands and for evidence of the hand of man; evidence of the machine in the garden.

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