The Objectivity Laboratory: Propositions on Documentary Photography
Abstract
At a moment in history when “post-truth” and “alternative facts” epitomize a political and media landscape that feeds on the
circulation of doubt and distrust, The Objectivity Laboratory: Propositions on Documentary Photography addresses ethical
dilemmas that emerge when artists’ approach the realities and experiences of others.
Prominent photography criticism in the 1970s and 1980s brought a heightened awareness to the politics of representation, resulting in the emergence of a “documentary distrust.” My main objective in this research is to articulate “propositions” that address the documentary blockages that define photography’s framework and possibilities. The propositions—assembled under the headings MONTAGE, INVESTIGATION, RESISTANCE, and NEARBY—seek to contribute to the dynamic dialogue that has evolved in documentary photography in recent years, which has approached photography as an expandable and unfixed practice.
Truth and a “situated objectivity” are investigated as radical tools in the artist’s approach of urgent matters in the world.
A commitment to credible, rich, situated knowledges with a basis in reality materializes. Through a research project that has
aimed to explore and appreciate the possibilities of photography anew, I ultimately suggest that documentary photography has
the potential to lead to important knowledges about the world. This potential, I go on to argue, builds on a responsiveness in
relation to the violations that photography can inflict. Values of critical reflexivity, ethics, and responsibility unfold as essential
documentary attributes. The Objectivity Laboratory has been formulated as a search for considered and considerate procedures
in the documentary engagement with the world. In the pursuit of reliable knowledges and counter-narratives, transformation,
reflection, and contestation emerge as integral aspects of reliability and credibility.
The research is anchored in practice; developed in dialogue with artists and artworks, it is led by the primary research methods of artistic and curatorial practice. The natural sciences—the setting for my artistic practice—has inspired the theoretical outlooks and overall focus of the research and particularly Karen Barad and Donna Haraway’s perspectives, developed within feminist science studies, have acted as a catalyst in the quest for productive takes on contemporary documentary photography.
Parts of work
2016 — Zero Point Energy (artwork) 2018 — The Science Question in Feminism (artwork) 2018 — A World Made by Science (artwork) 2021 — Dear Truth: Documentary Strategies in Contemporary Photography (curated exhibition project) 2022 — The Objectivity Laboratory: Propositions on Documentary Photography (a book, or kappa)
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
HDKValand - Academy of Art and Design ; HDK-Valand - Högskolan för konst och design
Disputation
Fredagen den 8 april 2022, kl. 13:00, Baulan, HDK-Valand, Kristinelundsgatan 6-8, Göteborg
Date of defence
2022-04-08
kerstinhamilton@gmail.com
Other description
Material from and information about the research outputs can also be accessed digitally online via Research Catalogue Exposition available at URL: https://www.researchcatalogue.net/profile/?person=1559727
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22501/rc.1561886
Date
2022-03-21Author
Hamilton, Kerstin
Keywords
Documentary photography
situated objectivity
montage
truths
ethics
nearby
investigation
resistance
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-725-3 (printed version)
978-91-8009-726-0 (digital version)
Series/Report no.
ArtMonitor 91
Language
eng