Surface Tension: Navigating Socially Engaged Documentary Photographic Practices
Responsible organisation
2015 (English)In: Nordicom Review, ISSN 1403-1108, E-ISSN 2001-5119, Vol. 36, no Special Issue, p. 79-95Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
As Documentary Photographers increasingly introduce the collaborative and participatory methodologies common to socially engaged art practices into their projects (particularly those that are activist in nature, seeking to catalyse socialchange agendas and policies through image making and sharing), there is an increased tension between the process of production and the photographicrepresentation that is created. Over the course of the last five years I have utilised these methodologies of co-authorship. This article contextualizes this kind of transdisciplinary work, and examines the ways in which the integration of collaborative strategies and co-authored practice in projects that are explicitly designed to be of benefit to a primary audience (the participants, collaborators and producers) might be usefully disseminated to a secondary audience (the general public, the ‘art world’, critics etc.) through analysis of my projects Red Light Dark Room; Sex, lives and stereotypes made in Melbourne, Australia, and The King School Portrait Project made in Portland, Oregon, America.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Gothenburg: Nordicom, University of Gothenburg , 2015. Vol. 36, no Special Issue, p. 79-95
Keywords [en]
socially engaged art, documentary photography, participatory photography, col - laborative photography, Wendy Ewald
National Category
Social Sciences Media and Communications
Research subject
Media
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:norden:org:diva-3926DOI: 10.1515/nor-2015-0031Libris ID: 10382037OAI: oai:DiVA.org:norden-3926DiVA, id: diva2:813481
Conference
This issue of the Nordicom Review, edited by Pradip Ninan Thomas, is a result of the boutique conference 'Beyond the Impasse' which was organized by the Centre for Communication and Social Change, University of Queensland in January 2013. The aim was to bring together academics who were involved in pushing the boundaries as it were of communication for social change in terms of theory and methods as they applied to practice.
2015-05-222015-05-222021-03-15Bibliographically approved