Photography and Museums of Mutuality: A Metaphor

Elisavet Kalpaxi
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Abstract

This article employs photography as a vehicle to explore museums and their increasing attempts to gain an open, discursive, democratic, and inclusive character. It suggests that drawing a parallel between photography and museums, at a time when globalizing technologies, aesthetics, and politics demand the radical redefinition of both, can provide a useful ground from which to examine the role of photography in the development of museums and vice versa, as well as notions of engagement, participation, and inclusion. In the last 150 years photography has performed a number of unique roles—evidentiary, artistic, commercial, and vernacular—that have all had a great impact on the history of representation, as well as the way in which photographs communicate inside museums (i.e., as artworks/artifacts, as evidence of objects and phenomena found outside the museum, as a record of objects contained in the museum, and as a marketing tool). All of these functions also have an impact on how photography is understood within and outside museums. However, within museums—this applies both to museums of art and other kinds of museums, including anthropological, archaeological, and history museums—photography was originally conceived and still operates predominately as a document; that is to say, as evidence of some kind, whether of an object, culture, or an artist’s work. The definition of a document is here taken from Suzanne Briet’s seminal 1951 work, What is Documentation.[1]
摄影与博物馆的相互关系:一个隐喻
本文以摄影为载体,探索博物馆及其日益努力获得开放、话语、民主和包容的特征。它表明,在全球化的技术、美学和政治要求对两者进行彻底重新定义的时候,将摄影和博物馆相提并论,可以为审视摄影在博物馆发展中的作用以及参与、参与和包容的概念提供一个有用的基础。在过去的150年里,摄影发挥了许多独特的作用——证据、艺术、商业和民间——这些都对再现的历史产生了重大影响,也对照片在博物馆内的交流方式产生了重大影响(即,作为艺术品/手工艺品,作为博物馆外发现的物品和现象的证据,作为博物馆内物品的记录,以及作为一种营销工具)。所有这些功能也对博物馆内外如何理解摄影产生了影响。然而,在博物馆内——这既适用于艺术博物馆,也适用于其他类型的博物馆,包括人类学、考古学和历史博物馆——摄影最初是作为一种文件来构思的,现在仍然主要是作为一种文件来运作的;也就是说,作为某种东西、文化或艺术家作品的证据。文件的定义摘自苏珊娜·布里特1951年的开创性著作《什么是文件》。[1]
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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