One of the problems with continually researching is that you can forget to actually stop and look at the images that occupy such a large proportion of your mind. You read book after book but rarely just stop for 15 minutes and look at a photograph.
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the yielding stone |
This feeling hit me as i was going through an ever increasing collection of notes. Amidst these scrawled on sheets was a copy of
the yielding stone by Gabriel Orozco. I thought for a moment i will just look at the image and try and figure out why it works. What follows is a bit of a deconstruction of the image and analysis of the resulting parts (may go on a bit):
- it is low angled shot in the centre of which is, based on the drain and road markings, a fairly large dark, spherical object
- its' size suggests something unusual and probably man made
- it appears to not be solid as the drain has left indentations on the surface suggesting that it has been rolled
- this sensation is emphasised by the road markings and diagonal composition that also imply forward motion
- as such it implies a human presence. The object seems to large to be moved by the wind and the fact that it has not seeped through the drain suggest it is relatively and therefore heavy
- that a photo was taken just about confirms that there was a human presence
- with all this established we are left to wonder why this ball has been made and rolled
- that this has happened feels odd but not sinister or threatening. the even lighting close up angle help this
- rather it seems playful or even child like
- but the scale of it suggest more that just a whimsical childish act. to a certain extent this has been planned and the object constructed
- as such the human presence is again suggested/emphasised
- feels like we are at the crossroads of an encounter and see the ball before it continues on its journey
The first thing to notice here is the language i found myself using. It is anything if secure and every conclusion drawn has an element of guesswork, educated guesswork, but guesswork none the less. So the first conclusion i came to is the photograph is a very unstable thing and left alone does not give us much security.
The other main point of interest was the consequences this has for Orozco's work. The photograph here is able to form an open, loose dialogue with the viewer. We have plenty of space to interact with the image and use our imagination. This is the key function of the image i feel. It is not describing something but rather evoking an action. The photograph starts our contemplation of this action and it is this we focus on rather the actual photograph. Crucially this dialogue is never resolved for us and remains open. So the viewer can keep pondering the work and its significance. The photograph does not interfere too much but rather provides a supportive platform for our imagination.