Touching Surfaces (cid:35)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:67)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:85)(cid:83)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:83) (cid:17)(cid:25) (cid:44)(cid:73)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)&(cid:0)(cid:84)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:0) (cid:0)(cid:84)(cid:72)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:82)(cid:84)(cid:83)(cid:0) General Editor: Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe Editorial Board: Anna Bonshek, Per Brask, John Danvers, William S. Haney II, Amy Ione, Michael Mangan, Arthur Versluis, Christopher Webster, Ralph Yarrow Cover photo: Jacqueline Hayden, Ancient Statuary (1998). Courtesy of the artist. Cover design: Aart Jan Bergshoeff The paper on which this book is printed meets the requirements of “ISO 9706:1994, Information and documentation - Paper for documents - Requirements for permanence”. ISBN: 978-90-420-2513-4 ISSN: 1573-2193 ©Editions Rodopi B.V., Amsterdam - New York, NY 2009 Printed in the Netherlands Touching Surfaces Photographic Aesthetics, Temporality, Aging ANCA CRISTOFOVICI Amsterdam - New York, NY 2009 In memoriam Aurora-Stela Anghel Aurora Anghel Daniel Cristofovici Carolina Acknowledgements This book had its earliest beginning at the Center for Twentieth Century Studies at the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, where I was a fellow in 1996-1997. My gratitude to Kathleen Woodward, its director at the time, for providing me with exceptional working conditions and a most inspiring intellectual dialogue. I wish to extend my heartfelt thanks to the staff of the Center, and especially to Carol Tennessen, associate director at the time, who assisted me in many ways. I also want to acknowledge the generous support of a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation that made my collaboration with the Center possible. In the absence of any other institutional support since then, I would like to express my gratitude to those who helped me, over the years and in diverse ways, to turn that project into a book. I am particularly pleased to thank my friends, Doris Kiely, Yolanda Lalu Levi, and Angela Jianu, who read fragments of the work in progress, Juliet Bates, who kindly read the entire manuscript in its final phase, Mark Carlson, Corrado Minervini and La Famiglia da Nizza, for helping me solve details in the layout of images, and Serge Della Monica, who, over time, showed me the light in the dark room. My special thanks to the photographers whose work has sustained this book, and in particular to those who generously accepted to grant me the reproduction rights and made useful comments on their work, to Christine Guibert for her permission to reproduce the photographs of Hervé Guibert, and to Agathe Gaillard, from the Gaillard Gallery, in Paris. I am also grateful to those who provided me with high definition images to be reproduced in the book: Kay Broker and Alexandra Batsford, from the Pace/MacGill Gallery, in New York; Dan Cheeck, from the Fraenkel Gallery, in San Francisco; Adam Harrison, from the Jeff Wall Studio, in Vancouver; Christina Horeau and Marie-Eve Beaupré, from the René Blouin Gallery, in Montréal; and Jonas Wettre, from the Steidl Verlag, in Göttingen. The library staff of La Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris, my part-time home during the years when this book was being written, has been of great help. My thankful thoughts to all for viii Touching Surfaces their competence, warm reception, humor, and to Henri Coudoux, in particular, for his genuine interest in my project. The first chapter of this book is an updated and revised version of my essay, “Touching Surfaces: Photography, Aging, and an Aesthetics of Change”, which first appeared in Figuring Age. Women, Bodies, Generations (Kathleen Woodward ed., Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1999), reproduced here by permission. I have presented fragments from the chapters on Jim Dine and Joyce Tenneson at the Annual International Conference on “Literature and Psychoanalysis”, in 2004 and 2005, that were published on-line in the proceedings of the respective conferences. I wish to thank Dr. Daniel-Meyer Dinkgräfe, the director of the Consciousness, Literature, and the Arts series at Rodopi, for his interest in my manuscript, which was to come out with another publisher in 2003 and then was mysteriously lost. Paris, March 2008 Duration is to consciousness as light is to the eye. Bill Viola, Statement 1989 It is a most recollected small painting. It thinks that only one thing is necessary & this is time. But this one thing is by no means apparent to one who will not take the trouble to look. Thomas Merton, on a painting Ad Reinhardt made for him
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