sharon
(sharon)
#1
over in favour of their staged reconstruction. This staging could be
avowedly faithful, or less so. Several things follow from this. While
Wall’s photographs still describe the real world, they are shifted into the
register of semi-fiction. The documentary function of the medium is
partially suspended and the camera as witness is replaced by pictorial
hypothesis: ‘This was’ gives way to ‘What if this was?’ In traditional
documentary practice the subjects are photographed in their continuous
relationship with the world they inhabit. To stage an image is to rupture
that continuum, producing a photograph as imaginary as it is lucid.
(This perhaps is the only distinction we can make between a documen-
tary photograph that is ‘taken’ and one that is ‘made’, although it can
never be absolute).Mimic( 1982 ) was Wall’s first image staged outdoors.
He had witnessed a casually racist gesture in the street and decided to
re-enact it for a photograph. A white man and girlfriend are walking
slightly behind an Asian man. On the edge of each other’s fields of vision
the white man makes a loaded gesture as his middle finger pushes back
his eyelid. Wall selected the street and the players, rehearsing the scene
before shooting it. Achieving convincing narrative gestures in photo-
graphs is notoriously difficult. Wall has tried everything from paying
people to perform things over and over for long periods before attempting
to shoot, to filming rehearsals on video then freeze-framing the ideal
gestures and replicating them on location.^21 The title ‘Mimic’ can be read
at any number of levels: photography as a ‘mirror of nature’ mimics the
world; photography mimics film; the white man mimics the Asian man;
models mimic actors who mimic real people; Wall mimics the event he
saw; the central gesture is a depiction of the unthinking mimicry of a
reactionary ideology; and for the gallery the image is printed very large,
mimicking the scale of the viewer’s own body. Wall has pursued levels of
clarity and precision beyond what we usually see in reportage or street
photography. He uses a large-format camera that can record scenes in
great detail but is slow to use.Mimiccould only have been staged, not just
because of the detail but also because of the point of view. The camera
sees everything that is important here, in focus and without blur.
Moreover, the three people act as if the photographer and his bulky
equipment were not there right in front of them. Such disavowal of the 137