theyobviouslybelong
together.Strandlaterdescribedthemotheras
"that
pillarofserenestrength,"andthe
pictureitselfisfullofself-sufficientseren-
ity.Itisatableau,asartfullystagedasthegroups
ofmarble-whitelivingstat-
uarythat
used
tobeunveiledwithfanfareatthe
circus.Andlikethose
tableaux,
it
is
symbolic,representingaconceptthattranscendsthe
moment
atwhichthepicturewas
made.Itisrepletewithemblematicdetails—
facial
resemblances,barefeet,workclothes,
theutilitarianbicycle,thecrumbling
masonry—thatreinforcethebasicidea.
Whateverthismotherandhersons
weredoingbefore
Strandgatheredthemfortheportraitoutside
theirhome
inLuzzara,Italy,andwhatever
theydidwhenheletthemgo
theirways,this
familyiscapturedforeverto
representtheunityofmatriarchal
families.
Whiletimestandsstill,thesepeopleshare
in
a
kindofimmortality.
The
factthatStrandusedout-of-dateequipment
whenhetookthepictureis,
oddlyenough,relevantto
thesuspended-timepicture.
WhenStrandspokeof
theportrait,herecalledthat"the
photographwasmadewitha 5 x7-inch
Home
PortraitGraflex,purchasedin1931,
thatwasstillofunimpairedusefulnessto
me.The
lens,aDagor12-inch,wasstoppeddown
tof/32,probably."His ex-
posurewas
presumablyabout1/30second."The
Family"couldhavebeen
photographedinalmost
thesamemanneracenturyago,had
itexistedthen.In
theearlydaysofphotography,most
pictureswerecarefullyposed
inwaysthat
suspended
timesimplybecausetechnical
limitationsmadedifficultany
other
scheme.Itwas
possible—withskillandluck—to
freeze apeakinstantora
randommoment,but
suchpicturesdidnotbecomeeasyto
make,andthere-
foreattractivetoexperiment
with,untiltheadventoffast
filmsandsmallcam-
eras
inthiscentury.
Today
photographerscaneasilyseek,
oravoid,thearranged
momentof
suspendedtime,seek
oravoidthedecisive
moment,seekoravoidthe
ran-
dom,ordinarymoment.Few
restrictthemselvestoa
singleattitudetoward
time.
Thecomposed,static
intervalhasitsplace,ineverything
fromformal
portraitsto
stilllifes.Thedramaofthe
peakofactionwillalways
command
attention.And
offhand,fleetingglimpses
increasinglyfeedthemainstream
of
modernphotography.
Aphotographerneednot
makeanadvancechoice
among
theoptionsfordealing
withtime;hisconceptions
andfeelingsabouta
subjectcan
helphimdecidewhere
itistobeplacedin
time.