Photography and Cinema

(sharon) #1
thememoryandimplicationsofeachnewphoto-

grapharementallysuperimposedonthepreceding

one,whileallowingforthekindsofforwardand

backwardmovementdeniedtocinema’sflow.^26

Forexample,ashotofthefrontofaNewOrleans

barber’sshopisfollowedbyashotofthedilapidated

interiorofabarber’sshopinAtlanta,thenbyashot

ofdisusedcarsinabreaker’syardinPennsylvania.

Anumberofconnectionsandassociationsarepossi-

ble,buttheunforcedlayoutofthebookleavesthem

asseparateastheyarelinked.

Montageasorchestrationassumesadifferent

characterwhenittakesupthesnapshot,which

announcesitselfasmuchmoreofafragment.Aswe

sawearlier,thesnapshotbecameartisticallysignifi-

cantwheneverydaylifeitselfbegantobeexperienced

asaformofmontage,thatis,asasetofdisarticulated

momentsincreasinglyunlikelytocohere.Formany,

RobertFrank’sbookThe Americans( 1958 – 9 )marked

theemergenceofahighlysubjectivereportagemod-

elledonthesnapshot.Uptothatpointreportagehad

developedeithertowardsthecrystallinefreezingof

movementtypifiedbyHenriCartier-Bressonorthe

meticulousformalityofEvans.^27 Cartier-Bresson’s

‘decisivemoments’flirtedwiththeshapelessnessof

modernlifeonlytorescueitthroughtheperfected

compositionofthesingle,beautifulphotograph.

Bycontrast,Frankexploitedexcessiveblur,off-kilter

framingandotherhalf-controlledaccidents,recoding

themassignsofafundamentallyfracturedpost-war

experience.Hisphotographyemergedfromacareful

balanceofBeatcultureoutsiderismandthoroughimmersioninthechaos

ofaworldofcontradictorysigns.Frank’smomentswererarelyprivileged

asecstaticortraumaticguaranteesofthe‘nowness’oftheeveryday.At

74 timeshisaleatoryslicesof 1950 sAmericaseemedalmostrandomand

61–63PagesfromWalkerEvans’sAmerican
Photographs(NewYork,1938).
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