Transfiguration: Southworth and Hawes, Reproduced Images and Body

E. Handy
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Abstract

The Harrison Horblit Collection at the Harvard University’s Houghton Library contains a remarkable daguerreotype plate by the Boston firm Southworth & Hawes. It reproduces an engraving after Raphael’s Transfiguration. Whereas reproductive printmaking normally seeks to produce multiples of a unique original, daguerreotype reproductions open a space of ambiguity between the categories of original and reproduction since daguerreotypes are unique objects. Much is lost in this translation, but what is gained? If reproduction of paintings normally renders the singular multiple, what happens when a painting is reproduced as a unique image? Why was this daguerreotype created? Southworth & Hawes specialized in portraits of celebrities and considered themselves artists. Why then did they make a daguerreotype of an engraving of a painting? And why this painting?Their image of an image of an image is at once simply duplicative and a meditation on photography itself – an expanded conception of photography that figures it as spiritual and conceptual practice, as is suggested in other conflations of image reproduction and transfiguration within Southworth & Hawes’ oeuvre as well. The logic of the Southworth & Hawes’ Transfiguration becomes less a conundrum when considered in relation to two of their other images, one of the branded hand of abolitionist Jonathan Walker, the other a self-portrait representing Southworth’s torso as a classical sculpture. Translation, transfiguration, body, soul and image are closely imbricated in all three of these daguerreotypes, each produced during the height of New England Transcendentalism. While Raphael’s Transfiguration epitomizes the intersection of the human and a divine being as Scriptural drama, The Branded Hand and Southworth as a Classical Bust allude to the spiritual realm through representation of the soul’s transcendence of the suffering body rather than direct reference to scripture. The Branded Hand detaches subject from the context of the body as a whole; Walker’s wound appears in the image as the silvery trace of the price paid for his abolitionist conviction. The portrait of Southworth separates an individual man’s identity from the more allegorical presence, while presenting suggestions of sorrow as emblems of spiritual elevation. But beyond this, the transmedial daguerreotype of the print of the Raphael announces itself as visual metonymy; the transfiguration of Christ in the painting also conveys the transfigurative power of the photographic medium itself.
变形:索斯沃斯和霍斯,再现的形象和身体
哈佛大学霍顿图书馆的哈里森·霍布利特收藏中有一张由波士顿Southworth & Hawes公司制作的引人注目的银版照相底片。它仿照了拉斐尔的《变形记》。由于达盖尔银版版画是独特的对象,因此复制版画通常寻求产生独特原作的倍数,而达盖尔银版版画复制品在原创和复制类别之间打开了一个模糊的空间。这个翻译失去了很多,但得到了什么?如果绘画的复制通常呈现单一的倍数,那么当一幅画作为一个独特的图像被复制时会发生什么?为什么要创造这种银版照相法?Southworth & Hawes专注于名人肖像,并认为自己是艺术家。那他们为什么要用银版照相法来雕刻一幅画呢?为什么是这幅画?他们的图像的图像是简单的复制和对摄影本身的沉思——一种扩展的摄影概念,将其视为精神和概念实践,正如在索斯沃思和霍斯的作品中对图像复制和变形的其他合并所建议的那样。当考虑到他们的其他两个图像时,Southworth & Hawes的变形的逻辑就变得不那么难了,一个是废奴主义者Jonathan Walker的烙印手,另一个是代表Southworth躯干的自画像,作为一个古典雕塑。翻译,变形,身体,灵魂和形象在这三种达盖尔银版照相法中都紧密地交织在一起,每一种都是在新英格兰先验主义的鼎盛时期产生的。拉斐尔的《变形记》作为圣经戏剧集中体现了人与神的交集,而《烙印之手》和《古典半身像》则通过表现灵魂对痛苦身体的超越,而不是直接参考圣经,暗示了精神领域。烙印之手将主体从整体的身体语境中分离出来;沃克的伤口在画面中呈现为他的废奴主义信念所付出代价的银色痕迹。索斯沃斯的肖像将个人身份与更具讽喻性的存在分离开来,同时将悲伤的暗示作为精神升华的象征。但除此之外,拉斐尔版画的横向达盖尔照相法宣称自己是一种视觉转喻;画中基督的变形也传达了摄影媒介本身的变形能力。
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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