Against Barthes
Against Barthes
The gesture of pointing is the perfect embodiment of photography’s function as a
visual document: an injunction to look at this. In this textual and visual
essay, artist Joan Fontcuberta takes the index finger as his point of departure
for an insightful and irreverent consideration of photography’s relation to
indexicality. He refutes, as well as draws on, Roland Barthes’s suggestion that
every photograph tells us ‘this has been’ (‘ça a été’), reckoning with the
inconvenient multiplicity of thises in any given image. If a photograph
constitutes such a statement – as made explicit in images that include a
pointing finger – does the camera witness reality or performance? These
existential issues are further complicated by the emergence of post-photography
and generative AI. In this typically engaging and iconoclastic essay,
Fontcuberta destabilises our ideas about the authority and authoriality of
images, drawing on psychoanalysis, semiotics, and his own autobiography. His
text is interleaved between two compelling visual essays formed of images from
the archive of Mexican tabloid Alerta from the 1960s to 1980s, in which the
pointing index finger forms a haunting and often humorous through-line.
DISCOURSE is a series of small books in which a theorist, artist, or writer
engages in a dialogue with a theme, an artwork, an idea, or another individual
across an extended text. Explore the full series here.
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