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引用次数: 1
摘要
在这篇文章中,我提议利用桑给巴尔石城的一个摄影“暗室”的概念和物理空间,来探索由Ranchhod Oza(1907-93)制作并由他的儿子Rohit Oza(1950-)继承的Capital Art Studio(1930年至今)系列的一组图像。我运用黑暗的概念以不同的方式阅读这些视觉档案,并为一组图像提出多个“其他生命”。首先,通过将这些非洲摄影集展现在世人面前,我从某种意义上把它们从历史的“暗室”中拿了出来,并将其暴露出来,以供解读。其次,我把镜头聚焦在Oza实体暗室,它位于石头镇肯雅塔路的工作室后面,在这里,一系列桑给巴尔人的照片被冲洗和打印出来,这使暗室成为一个摄影复杂性和感官的地方,而不仅仅是机械复制。第三,我将黑暗发展为一种美,在某些天空、水和皮肤的图像中,这些档案展示了桑给巴尔在阿曼苏丹国(1668 -1964)和英国保护国(1890-1963)统治下作为印度洋岛屿和港口城市的地位。第四,我将1964年的桑给巴尔革命概念化为一个视觉黑暗的时代,它暂时限制了在新的非洲-谢拉兹政党领导下的石头镇的摄影实践。在我的整个分析过程中,我用“黑暗”的框架来质疑摄影作为一种美学实践,它深深沉浸在物质和暗与光、黑与白的隐喻中,是桑给巴尔海洋岛屿不可或缺的一部分。
Of Sky, Water and Skin: Photographs from a Zanzibari Darkroom
ABSTRACT In this article, I propose to take up the concept and physical space of a photographic 'darkroom' located in Stone Town, Zanzibar, to explore a set of images from the Capital Art Studio (1930-present) collection produced by Ranchhod Oza (1907-93), and inherited by his son Rohit Oza (1950-). I employ a concept of darkness to read this visual archive differently and propose multiple 'other lives' for a set of images. First, by bringing this African photography collection to light, I am taking it out of the 'dark rooms' of history in one sense and exposing it for interpretation. Second, I focus my lens on the Oza physical darkroom located in the back of the studio on Kenyatta Road in Stone Town, where photographs of a range of Zanzibari persons were both developed and printed and that open up the darkroom as a place of photographic complexity and sensorium, and not just mechanical reproduction. Third, I develop darkness as a form of beauty in certain images of sky, water and skin from this archive that showcase Zanzibar's position as an Indian Ocean island and port city whilst under rule by the Omani Sultanate (1698-1964) and British Protectorate (1890-1963). Fourth, I conceptualise the Zanzibar Revolution of 1964 as a time of visual darkness, which temporarily restricted photographic practices operating in Stone Town under the new Afro-Shirazi political party. Throughout my analysis, I use a framing of 'darkness' to interrogate photography as an aesthetic practice deeply immersed in materialities and metaphors of dark and light, black and white, and as integral to Zanzibar's oceanic islandness.