Slippage: Reclaiming personal family history through contemporary photomedia


Autoria(s): Gibson, Celise
Contribuinte(s)

Garnons-Williams, Victoria

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

This paper addresses the role of photography as a documentary medium and how this forms a basis for my practice-led studio investigations. In it, I will explore how photography is used to create histories and sustain specific notions of ‘legacy’ within the context of the family photo album. Family history is often based on stories to which the photo album provides a visual point of reference. Despite the ostensible ‘objectivity’ of the family photograph though it is nonetheless as subjective as the stories that surround it. In this way, the photo album perpetuates a hegemony of truth that obscures the fragmentary and highly selective nature of these documents and stories. The result is that every photo album implicitly documents the gaps or voids present in understandings of our own histories. Homi Bhabha refers to these kinds of voids as ‘disjunctive historical spaces’ – spaces of slippage that create the opportunity for new narratives and understandings to occur. Using Bhabha’s ideas as a chief point of reference, I will explore how these voids or gaps in information – and the opportunities for re-examination that they open up - can be explored through contemporary photomedia. Digital technologies such as camera phones and scanners generate a space in which photography’s own documentary conventions can be turned in on themselves to create a subterfuge. My current studio-based research involves using the scanner to navigate through my family’s sometimes-‘occulted’ history, in order to explore, document and recover my connection to this narrative. I am primarily interested in the scanner as a tool for capturing not simply surfaces, but objects, moments or movements in time. Objects or moments captured by the scanner can often be simultaneously distorted and consolidated, blurred and sharpened. This paper will propose that this ‘slippage’, literally expressed in the disruption of the pixelated field, can be used to create a space in which alternative readings or understandings of past events can be explored and new narratives produced.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/83030/

Publicador

Queensland Centre for Photography

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/83030/1/GIBSON%20QFP5%20Paper%20Final.pdf

http://queenslandcentreforphotography.shop033.com/p/9030562/photography-fictions.html

Gibson, Celise (2014) Slippage: Reclaiming personal family history through contemporary photomedia. In Garnons-Williams, Victoria (Ed.) Photography and Fiction: Locating Dynamics of Practice, Queensland Centre for Photography, Brisbane, QLD, pp. 75-78.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 Celise Gibson

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; School of Media, Entertainment & Creative Arts

Palavras-Chave #190503 Lens-based Practice #Practice-led research #Contemporary photography #Indigenous history #Identity #Place
Tipo

Conference Paper