He [Freud] thought… everyone is mad, that is, delusional.
- Jacques Lacan
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The relationship between art and psychoanalysis is long. Psychoanalysis, like conceptual art, approaches the nervous breakdown of modern society, a "...liberating, demystifying treatment of a human relation, and the fundamental illusion of man's experience." It was, in fact, Andre Breton who first identified hysteria as a mute, subversive protest against authority; and it was Freud who authorized the hysterics distance from one's culture, norms, and roles in order that identities and identifications can be undone. This collaboration of Denise Prince and Charles Merward (an artist making photographs and a psychoanalyst supervising) reveals how both practices intervene in the supposedly uninterrupted flow of experience. Captivating, Not Captive specifically and photography generally--given one is looking--captures what is unseen more than what is seen. In this way, it may be understood as analogous to the psychoanalyst's intervention. The analysand (the one who is requesting analysis) speaks without editing oneself and the analyst listens to the speaker. Much of the detail and alternate possibilities of meaning in the analysand's utterance is unthought and unheard unless returned to the analysand in the analyst's intervention (most often, the repetition of a word or phrase.) Similarly, in the same way Duchamp's ready-made re-turned viewers towards the nature of art and the art world, the photograph returns what is unthought and unseen in the viewer's experience. When the photograph cites or punctuates the negated content, the viewer is afforded the opportunity to catch a glimpse of something beyond the reality of the image: a glimpse of the real, the "mute presence beyond meaning" as Zizek has described it. Furthermore, the photograph is like an experience of anxiety, where the real fullness that exceeds human expression is made into a limited and exploitable disposable resource, quantified and identified by its re-semblance of potency qua paralysis. The lens intervenes to re-turn one towards courage amidst perpetual obstacles to thought and action. Captivating, Not Captive emerged from a post-analytic supervision of Prince by Merward in the way an analyst will supervise the work of another analyst. Lacan tells us, of course, that there is no analysis of art but that from art we must take the seeds for something else; and Jacques-Alain Miller tells us that psychoanalysis is not what you think, it is something else. Unorthodox but not unprecedented, the collaboration carefully began and the results are presented here for consideration. - Charles Merward from CAPTIVATING, NOT CAPTIVE: (2009 - 2022) ENABLING DESIRE
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"Your work has a transcendental value because it is beyond good and evil, right and wrong, outside of the law. It is literally insane."
-Charles Merward, philosopher and practicing psychoanalyst
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"Whether he poses or is real, no cat/Bothers to say" Thom Gunn Much has been concerned, in communities that concern themselves with such things, with 'the gaze': the presumed patriarchal, gendered authority of the viewer of film and photo, and the pose as its symbiotic response; the pose mirroring the desire of the spectator, passive by necessity. Since, the pose has become ubiquitous, influenced by the dominance of celebrity culture (insert Warhol quote) and the maw of social media, the selfie and social narcissism. In photographic portraiture, the pose has evolved from, historically, a sober assertion of social respectability to an understanding of the portrait as performance and theater and---by the inherent presence of an audience, as artifice. If, indeed, identity is now considered as construct, then the pose is a handy component of its architecture. The ideology of identity has been of fundamental prominence ---and contention--- in political discourse in the past thirty years, and it may be argued that photography, as the lingua franca of representation, is the most expedient tool of visibility, both individual and community. An endorsement by photography is an acknowledgment of worth of those that have been marginalized. Throughout photography's history, much of the work that has been most influential has disclosed individuals and identities heretofore unknown to mainstream hetronormative culture, and social media has profoundly accelerated this. The writer Lynne Tillman has said: "Risking ambiguities, (Diane) Arbus vigorously subverted the subject/object position, shoving the viewer into her soft ground. She interrogated looking, aggressively, and made looking itself controversial." A shrewd and gratifying summation of Arbus's legacy; succinct in its understanding of her singular contribution as not just the pathologies of subject (or 'victim' re: Sontag) but upending the comfort of passivity for culpability, a profound rupture in the history of looking. Arbus, says Tillman, removed the guardrails, undermining our smug alibis and immunities. This 'soft ground': pliant, uncertain, yielding, bruised; without sensible footwear, vulnerable. The female figures here, recumbent and supine admist draping swirls of fabric, haloed in turbaned headdress are, of course, a modern odalisque; the familiar clutter of cramped domestic life a substitute for orientalist bric-a-brac; a baroque of busted housewares. Here, a seemingly distant signifier of servitude and colonialism is redeemed and recuperated, an anachronism converting to an agent of empowerment and identity and agency. Those historically excluded arrive at the portal of beauty and desire; that recently denounced as objectifying becomes privilege, again. Fashion photography reliably traffics in aspiration and desire, and identity as formed by style, fluid and mercurial, thus a cunning influencer of cultural taste. Regardless of recent attempts at inclusivity, however, fashion maintains strict taxonomies of beauty and class, renewing a narrow margin of what is considered attractive. In Denise Prince's photographs, their resemblance to recognizable vocabularies of fashion photography propose the possibility of sharing the tropes of fashion and style to now include those who have been excluded from its privilege, to say nothing of public life itself. The transaction, this screen test, is rather more complicated, as the meticulous illusion of a fashion spectacle fails deliberately. Along the margins, the unruly debris of place, hard and unforgiving, encrusts the frame; later, the clumsy collaging into the lavish interiors of the ruling class remain on the image surface like a decal, upholding their separation, their otherness. The apparatus of the shoot-the chords, lighting stands, and clamps are revealed, left strewn about, and we see the staging and the back-stage, the makeshift. Sand (and the always handy sand-dune-fence prop) with its reference to holiday, travel, frolic, privilege, is here as sandbox-- indifferent to the demands of visual illusion. The gestures of fiction are undermined by the brutality of fact. Prince does not comfort, rejecting pictorial devices of romanticism and leitmotifs of fashion imagery; no warm caressing light nor soothing soft focus, and the veneers that surround the figures are without mercy. We are stranded without the reassurance of fashion's stagecraft of transcendence and youth, the luminous body. Like much relevant work of our time, the work deeply challenges conventions of beauty, and pointedly, our anxieties that chaperone beauty as a human characteristic. Here beauty is a triumph of ecstatic revelation, clenching and contracting: "Beauty must be convulsive or not at all". It is post-Edenic, in which the expulsion from the Garden does not elicit shame and awkward self-consciousness, but pleasure and play; acceptance. The emotional tripwire of the work is availability and this moment of flirtation, and discomfort is ours, not theirs. Not Reggie, Saidi, Gail, nor Susie. Not Zelda nor Jackie. Our gaze is not avoided, and we witness an assertion of themselves as image, vital in their swagger, mirth, glamour or grace, and this gaze, not as violation, judgment and superiority but of ardor. - Stephen Frailey Screen Test: The Photographs of Denise Prince
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I am crying.
I do not know what this is.
That is good.
That’s all.
Thank you,
js
-Jerry Saltz, art critic for New York magazine, October 2013
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To see beauty is to know love but, while the apprehension of beauty is through the eye, it is through the lens’ marriage of light and beauty that the psyche is truly captivated. Light mediates the relationship between physical and intellectual reason, an elegant analogy between enlightenment and illumination, between physical and intellectual vision. We’ve always delivered fire. We’ve always deified light. Plotinus saw a world awash in divine light, infusing matter with spiritual forms. Heraclitus exalted fire as the first principle. Denise Prince sees beauty beyond the veil of ego. Beauty radiates fully formed from Prince’s subjects, infused with divine light as aesthetic objects. It is eyesight on fire, threatening to seer [sic] into one’s soul if one looks directly, scarred by the light of reason and the light of the sun. The dilemma, ought we see, is anamnesis or amnesia. If we perceive beauty it induces anamnesis, a memory of a terrific encounter with the Real, a meaningless traumatic hole. Then one must choose: either captive to trauma or captivated by beauty. If one is captive then one remembers only the anxiety of that esoteric encounter with the Real; but, if one is captivated then one is driven by the desire to know and love, to recollect, to recover Prince’s revelation. - Charles Merward, ψa ANAMNESIA: Captivating, Not Captive
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"Thank you for this. Provocative, unsettling, and perhaps not in the ways you, the artist, intends, which is the case always as Duchamp taught, the "art coefficient", the unexpressed but intended and the unintentionally expressed. I too think art should step further than any knowledge we have about it, to even create anxiety."
-Robert Buck, September 2013
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"When Jackie want something and I say no and she upset. And when she upset and you know she poke her hand, you know, in the diaper or she lay in the floor. Right and one day… She love to lay in the floor and she know that I don't like her to lay in the floor because dirty. And one day she lay in the floor and she didn't want to get up. And people walk back and forth say, “She okay?” I say, “She fine.” She didn't want to get up. So I have to lay on the floor with her. And people walk by you know say, “Are you okay, ma'am?” And I say, “Do I look okay?” When Jackie saw me to lay there with her and she curious. So she stand up and she want me to stand up with her and I didn’t stand up, you know? And somehow she listen from there. You know, she didn’t like lay in the floor anymore. Because I want to do that so she can see look right or not, you know? Because she lay there and I want her stand up she didn’t want to stand up and I lay there with her and she stand up and she can look, she said, "Oh, I thought I’m crazy, this woman crazy than me." You know, so she not do any more. I play a lot of silly thing with her. I put my… You know, even in the public. I go out of there, I play the dancing with her. Oh, my god, I think I’m look like the crazy monkey, but who care? You know? I live for me and I live for Jackie. You know? And sometime they look at me and Jackie, they laugh. I say, okay. I keep thinking about they audience, you know? And some of the parent go with the kid and they feel shy. And I say too bad for those kid.” Because they come through life they come through it’s for a reason. A family, “Oh why you kid like that?” Kids like Jackie, you know. The main thing love them. Take care them. That the main thing. Love is more important. Because they come from through the world. Why they like that? And some parent they too shy. They give those kid to the group home or to the program. And they keep talking you know about charity. And I say you have to charity yourself. First you know who you are before you love other. - Lang Le, auntie of Jacquelyn
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"No one is making work like this."
-Anne Wilkes Tucker curator of photography, Museum of Fine Arts Houston
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An art object, like any other meaningful part of the world, is a construction: an act or consequent of construing, interpreting, or explaining. The sub-stance of an art object is the form reflected in its structure like a painting representing its model, or the name of the father, or a dream encrypting its fantasy. Form is nevertheless a black box, a cipher either disguised by or made to disguise some rupture, gap, or split in meaning. In aesthetic anxiety, in existential anxiety, the visceral terror of nihilism manifests in the aftermath of meaning’s destruction. Yet, even in seemingly dissimilar structures we can nonetheless sense the contours of its hidden form, running like a tattered thread from the New Severity of ancient Greek art and tragedy, knotting us to our fate like Electra and Orestes come to reckon for the murder of their mother: ORESTES. Electra! My sister, dear Electra! My only love, the one joy of my life, do not leave me. Stay with me. ELECTRA Thief! I had so little, so very little to call mine; only a few weak dreams, a morsel of peace. And now you've taken my all; you've robbed a pauper of her mite! You were my brother, the head of our house, and it was your duty to protect me. But no, your needs must drag me into carnage; I am red as a flayed ox, these loathsome flies are swarming after me, and my heart is buzzing like an angry hive. ORESTES Yes, my beloved, it's true, I have taken all from you, and I have nothing to offer in return; nothing but my crime. But think how vast a gift that is! Believe me, it weighs on my heart like lead. We were too light, Electra; now our feet sink into the soil, like chariot-wheels in turf. So come with me; we will tread heavily on our way, bowed beneath our precious load. You shall give me your hand, and we will go— ELECTRA. Where? In such a moment of aesthetic anxiety, of existential anxiety, the visceral terror of nihilism must be managed through make believe, through the construction of truth. Truth requires commitment: ORESTES. I don't know. Towards ourselves. Beyond the rivers and mountains are an Orestes and an Electra waiting for us, and we must make our patient way towards them. ELECTRA. I won't hear any more from you. All you have to offer me is misery and squalor. [She rushes out into the center of the stage. The FURIES slowly close in on her.] Help! Zeus, king of gods and men, my king, take me in your arms, carry me from this place, and shelter me. I will obey your law, I will be your creature and your slave, I will embrace your knees. Save me from the flies, from my brother, from myself! Do not leave me lonely and I will give up my whole life to atonement. I repent, Zeus. I bitterly repent. Like Electra, one can sacrifice one’s commitment to the truth of one’s own vision for the stability of lawfulness; or, like Orestes we can dare to imagine our own substitute for the law: ORESTES: You see me, men of Argos, you understand that my crime is wholly mine; I claim it as my own, for all to know; it is my glory, my life's work, and you can neither punish me nor pity me. That is why I fill you with fear. And yet, my people, I love you, and it was for your sake that I killed. For your sake. I had come to claim my kingdom, and you would have none of me because I - was not of your kind…. But have no fear, people of Argos. I shall not sit on my victim's throne or take the scepter in my blood-stained hands. A god offered it to me, and I said no. I wish to be a king without a kingdom, without subjects. Farewell, my people. Try to reshape your lives. All here is new, all must begin anew. And for me, too, a I new life is beginning. A strange life. . . . This exhibit is a record for those who have dared to and who would dare to imagine, and who would leave Electra to her tragedy. - Charles Merward from CAPTIVATING, NOT CAPTIVE: (2009 - 2022) ENABLING DESIRE
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...construct an imaginary vocabulary and “teach people how to imagine a human body. Not old or burnt but useful, beautiful.”
-Charles Merward
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“What's exhilarating about your Missoni people and their color-burst worlds is how they reject 'disability' and the exploitive legacy of Other-terror… Your work frees them to deny a beggar's position on the dull parade of standard attractiveness. The 'pretty' person becomes wan when faced with their ecstatically chaotic beauty. Instead of being trapped, their free forms flow amongst the couture. Their power is based on an essential mystery and is therefore limitless.”
-Ian Grey, March 2014
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"What do you think of the pictures we took?" "They were... revealing. They allowed me to show what nobody else has seen as far as me and that specific attire. So it was kind of like, “She’s photographing this?” And what are people going to say when they look at it? I won’t be around to hear it but I was real... elated that you chose me to do that because again, I’ve told you previously that those kind of things gives your mindset strength and then it gives you a little freedom from society. Because you’re just... You’re being photographed like you were a model. And it just there are no words to explain the emotions you have going through you when you are allowed an opportunity to be photographed in that manner. It’s a.. it’s revealing for me because of all the scars that are underneath but it’s a happy place. When I get to know that I am, you know, being photographed in that manner. Your normal photographer, that’s not something they would do. It gives you some liberation. It really does it gives you liberation to know that you know you can be photographed like that. You just get to show people who you are. It is deeper than on top. You know how you. It just goes deeper and it kind of shows that you have that strength to do that. 'Cuz everyone doesn’t have it. And would be reluctant to.. be photographed in their underwear. I enjoyed it I really did. In that dress. Being photographed on the bed in that dress was just. The dress put me in the place that, a happy place as well. But because I like clothes it was just and it felt so soft. I liked being photographed like that and being a little giddy and having a good time. It’s just um. It’s one of those things that are being released out of a box. That nobody knows about. Internally. It’s, it’s .. I can’t explain it to you. The inner emotions that you go through when you can be you without trying to please anyone. Excerpt from conversation with model Princella Lee Bridges:
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"THIS IS POWERFUL! I think you managed reflecting the human beauty and grace by dissolving the uneasy layers of perception and comforting biased interpretation. Most importantly, your approach in this work demonstrates that "emphasis" on portraying of human subject can be diminished, or perhaps even erased, making the perceptual experience free from constraints. REALLY NICE WORK, CONGRATULATIONS!"
- Dr Mehmet Candas, The University of Texas at Dallas, Molecular and Cell Biology, September 2013
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Our society is structured by our shared neurosis that we can essentially hold back the trauma and the beauty of that which touches us but is incomprehensible – that which effects us. We have to create a suppleance. We have to create a new make believe that somehow allows us to see a re-semblance; a repeated make-believe in the disorganization around us. We experience anxiety in the face of the disorganization. So this anxiety drives us to, again, request the terms. To demand even. To demand that we are told what it is that we ought to want. And well, finally, when you are looking for a master you, of course, will find a master. Because the confrontation with the meaninglessness, the no-thing that pulls us towards it, that is without meaning, that leaves us unable to distribute the pain that we experience is deeply, deeply troubling. We lack the courage to stand in the midst of it. To stand in the midst of the disorganization without having everything precisely pinned down. For example, the very nature of this talk. The jargon I’m stringing together. The perhaps unfamiliarity to some of it or just familiar enough to make you think it’s interesting or disinteresting or on or off the mark. That in itself is a response to the fear of this disorganization. Denise was exactly in this place. Where she was unanchored. Her meanings weren’t ordered. Her imaginary sense and sensation was shifting all around her. Yet she didn’t want to pin it down. She didn’t want to do what most of us do when we experience this anxiety, which is, of course, to ask the analyst to patch the symptom up. So she began talking about new and different fantasies. These fantasies began to compel her. In her dreams. In the lapses in meaning. The ruptures, gaps, splits, impediments, fractures. Where sense and sensation no longer line up. She ultimately found herself making images of people who were, well, living examples of this terrifying, traumatic, beautiful real that effects us… There is a hopefulness in this confrontation because the artist is in some way responsible to see not into the past and the future but directly into the present. They are responsible to diagnose and perhaps even treat the anxieties, the plagues that work us every day. That wear us down… From “Not On Speaking ‘Terms”: Trauma and Beauty critical commentary by Charles Merward, May 16, 2013
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"That which we commit to memory in the form of community identities ought not be and cannot be subject to rules, as if beauty and freedom are a game. If beauty is exclusive then freedom is occulted by limits and obstacles to the spontaneity essential to beauty and play." -Charles Merward
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Series origin: I'd stepped inside a Missoni boutique and on my way out picked up a bound catalog. The colors were great and the models had been airbrushed until, for example, a blank space existed where an underarm would have been. It was a beach scene without a sea, clearly made on a set. The post work was so extensive that the models were uncanny; truly Imaginary Bodies. I took it home and tucked it away. Months later (and remember I was somewhat early in my psychoanalysis at this time) I encountered pieces of myself that felt like some kind of nexus of how I was put together and conceived of a body of work around the catalog. I’d imagined working with models like my friend’s niece (and fashion enthusiast) Ryan as well as people who had experiences that altered the way they looked. Analysis was, in part, a startling confrontation with who I believed I was. And as I negotiated this, I must have naturally sought others who had (even more profoundly) renegotiated who they believed they were. The series was soon named Captivating, Not Captive and included replicating each of the images in the catalog (it was the Estate Line catalog with photographs by Steven Meisel). I gathered as many of the clothing pieces from in the catalog as I could locate on the after-market and I duplicated setting, props and poses as closely as possible. After each model was captured in the catalog pose, I invited them to do what they liked on the set for additional images. To my surprise, they generally struck poses and waited. I began to take photographs when they were in between poses to loosen expectations. Models seemed unsure and were often playful as they explored what they wanted to do. Without formulating the concept explicitly, I began to work against other expectations of representation (including composition and even focus). I quickly preferred the exploratory images to my catalog reproductions. - Denise Prince
