Thursday, August 12, 2010

Too Precious


Photographs are too precious to exist. They are so expendable that we toss them aside in mosques shaped like photo albums. They become that which is most missed, yet we cannot remember their names. Photographs are those insignificant moments that connect us backwards and map our existence on this stage of hyper contextualization. We move forward on this ever-expanding stage where, with increasing rapidity, we sever the chord of memory and analog connection. Our loss becomes great while our hearts and minds become callous and distant.

(We should all take a moment and remember Roland Barthes and his “Camera Lucinda”, his beautiful and poetically semiotic contemplation about the meaning of a photograph. A man steeped in the deconstruction of language and meaning, a ban saw that cut through the façade of social narrative. But here faced with a photograph of his mother who had recently passed away he had to stop and try to render a clear “image” out of the perplexing vocabulary of “the photographic.”)

The backs of photographs are beautiful. Each one of them inscribed like a well-traveled FED EX package. Every one marked, dated and sent from different locations and arriving in one. There is something about the transition of the mass produced blank mirrors (unexposed photographic paper) to this personally transcribed and imbued object. Each one marked, not only with the image burned with light, but also the crudely cut sides that enable the picture to fit into a store bought frame. The date and stamp from the processor of the image, or the hand written script on the back that ranges from simple ontological references like the names of who is in the frame, the date, and perhaps the location, to a lovely sentiment wishing someone was there. Go, and dig through the historical detritus that is your life and you will find a proverbial longitude and latitude of coordinates that locate you or your loved ones in any particular moment in time.

Even the most transient and systemic images such as those school photos of yourself or others that were handed out like carte-de-viste’s of old showing our presence in a temporal map of a certain world. How each one of them is inscribed with a personal note of some sort restricted to a physical space of 2 ½ x 3 ½ inches. These vessels are the carriers of older photographic gestures and the precursor to the hyper- limited sentiment or ubiquitous statements found in modern practices like Facebook updates or Tweets. We should not move forward without knowing where we have been. So before you toss aside those pieces of paper, bad haircut or clothing style alike remember the power of their preciousness.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Booth only sees what you give it....



We have all(well I say this naively)been inside a beautiful machine with pulled curtain. Whether we have been inebriated on libation or innocently dragged in as a young child, we have been there. We have posed in those few seconds just prior to that flash popping and conducting us to take pose. We have either momentarily stood pause for the digital rendition or the chemical inscription of ourselves onto a strip of 4 individual moments, each an improvised performance with or without the other person who is there. We have all stood outside that curtain waiting for that thin strip of images portraying a the play that took place. We have all lived to regret or cherish those thin strips of performances displaying our improvisations in between calculated pops of light that etch us onto that surface, that surface, more permanent than now. We should take a moment and remember that we have been both the wizard behind the curtain as well as the in awe spectator. What are your memories of this situation. Good? Bad? Somewhere in between? Do you know where it comes from? Does the name Anatol M. Josepho ring any bell? Photobooths are the most destructive technological device ever devised in relation to the "photographer". Eradicating the person behind the camera, while ironically releasing the subject from the gaze of the photographer. This action, or inaction results in a beautiful and unique cultural product that holds a significant amount of fodder for the person that has it. Photo Automatons we are.

Photography takes an instant out of time, altering life by holding it still.

-Dorthea Lange

In The Begining......there was Light and Mercury and Silver Iodide and Me.


My Name is Kevin Charles Kline: I am a "Photographer" and Instructor of the practice living in Buffalo, NY. I have been photographing since the age of 15 when the boredom of growing up in a small town, a driver's license and a point and shoot camera came together in a symphony of escapism that sent me on a insatiable path that has yet to end. I put the word/title "Photographer" in these convenient "" 's for the simple reason that as I have walked this path of the photographic I find myself taking fewer and fewer actual photographs and find myself more interested and concerned with the conceptual/cultural/social/historical/aesthetic presence of this vast and ubiquitous medium in our history as well as our present. Though we have taken great technological and aesthetic strides over the last 185 or so years of this technology's existence I find our ability to completely understand and digest the impact of all the various heads of this technological hydra has not improved beyond the ghost captured in the box. This Blog will (I hope) provide an outlet not only for my tangential research/interests in photography but will also act as a sounding board to echo my daily inquiries and experiences of the photographic. I hope you enjoy!

"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed."

Albert Einstein