Elena Glasberg,
"Blankness in the Antarctic Landscape of An-My Lê"
(page 2 of 6)
Whiteout: An Inviting Blankness?
But before examining Lê's Events Ashore, I need to
expose further the history of Antarctic landscape photography in the
work of Porter and Herbert G. Ponting (1871-1935), the celebrated
British photographer of the Heroic Age whose influence and example
extends to both Porter and to Lê. Ponting came to Antarctica an
experienced and well-traveled photographer of places far from the U.S.,
where he lived, or Britain, where he worked. But the Antarctic
presented specific challenges due to its temperatures, harsh weather,
monotones, and lack of more traditional flora and fauna. Ponting's
well-earned reputation for photographing remote and little-seen places
was based on a traditional landscape aesthetic that in many ways
unraveled in Antarctica.[5]
Figure 2 Herbert Ponting, The Castle Berg, 1911
Ponting, the official "camera artist" of the 1910-12 Scott
Expedition, struggled to address the relative lack of classical
perspective of horizon and scale. Initially disappointed at not being
among those chosen for the final trek to plant the British flag at the
South Pole, he admitted that there would have been nothing of interest
on the polar plateau to photograph, in any case. Thus, Ponting chose
sites and objects close to the shore, the hut, and to human activity—framing
strategies that created variations on classical perspective,
with an icy particularity. Ponting helped establish what is now
recognized as the aesthetic of the Heroic Age, characterized by dramatic
juxtapositions either between human figures (or those of the built
environment) and icescapes, or within inherently dynamic mountains or
crevasses. The human-scale figures and the "sublime" icescapes only
become meaningful in relation to one another. Without human figures,
the unfamiliar environment would escape the particularity of place.
This paradox of encounter, which fueled the Heroic Age, between an
indifferent ice and humans intent on colonizing the uninhabitable,
recurs throughout Antarctic photographic representation. It has left
deep traces of style, object choice, and perspective on Antarctic
representational history, not the least of which is the powerful
imperial imaginary of Antarctica as a tabula rasa, or a pristine,
untouched, terrain that, as the translation "blank slate" would suggest,
invited marking. The kind of blankness produced by juxtaposing human
figures on the ice or staging perspective with the lens is a "filled in"
kind of blankness. It is not unlike the blankness of early European
maps that designated the southern continent as terra incognita,
in words written boldly across the map vellum. The declaration and
naming of the territory as "unknown" was paradoxically a form of filling
it in, and of knowing it.
But the type of blankness projected onto or produced through a visual
engagement with Antarctica's terrain changes depending on who produces
the image. For Ponting, the inviting blankness of Antarctica seemed
almost formalist, an aesthetic challenge to create a recognizable scape
from such impoverished materials. That his photos were part of an
imperial expedition to claim Antarctica and the South Pole underscores
the role of cultural concepts in the construction of empire. Ponting's
landscapes were more than attempts to fill in the blank of Antarctica
with familiar gestures to romantic sublimity: they were claims on the
territory created by the camera's eye as much as by the juridical
intentions of the British.
Porter, like Ponting, is a national photographer. But the U.S.
played no role in the Heroic Age in Antarctica, and has never lodged an
official claim to Antarctic territory, despite later substantial
military involvement beginning with R. E. Byrd's 1929 flight over the
South Pole and his establishment of "Little America" in 1932, a Navy
base on the ice of the Ross Sea, and the subsequent greater efforts of
"Operation Highjump" (1948) and "Operation Deepfreeze" (1956). So
Porter's extension to Antarctica of a monumentalized "desert" blankness
directly related to the Yosemite Sierra Club images as an object of
conservation, rather than empire, marked a very different kind of
"filling in" of the blank of Antarctica. "Deception Island" depicts a
desert to be conserved, to be kept empty and devoid, paradoxically
filled with its own desertedness. But in Antarctica Porter had to
choose his landscapes carefully. Sites such as the Dry Valleys that
comprised the 2% of unglaciated Antarctica, and the more conventionally
dramatic mountains ranges and shores, leant themselves more directly to
the kind of images associated with a sublime nature worth conserving.
Porter was flown to various locations as a guest of the National
Science Foundation's Artists and Writers Program (AAWP), keeping
extensive notes on the places he visited, including the South Pole. Yet
Porter chose not to include photographs at the South Pole in the book,
thereby revealing his investments: the South Pole is a place where
within the Porter aesthetic there would be nothing to see but
significant evidence of U.S. colonization in the elaborate, if isolated,
built environment. The South Pole Porter arrived at in 1978 could
hardly be considered "empty." It featured a geodesic dome full of
supplies and meat-locker-like dwellings for personnel. A bright red
'milk carton' observatory on stilts, other smaller buildings, a groomed
runway, a striped ceremonial pole marker and various and sundry sheds,
tents, and areas for vehicles and supplies constituted the scattered
settlement. Unable to aestheticize these bare marks of colonization,
Porter's conservation ethic in Antarctica leaves visually blank
the pages where the South Pole Station or the polar plateau might have
stood: it was the wrong kind of blank, an unserviceable lack of visual
drama and significance best left to words and traditional narrative. In
1978 Porter empties the Antarctic of all national competition and any
trace of the Heroic Age, using aerial and remote technologies of
viewing. Porter also blanks out Antarctica's imperial history, and so
performs a new form of imperialism more suited to the U.S. non-claimancy
stance.
Another type of serviceable blanking of Antarctic space occurs in the
discourse of international science, which, since the ATS has guided and
limited access to and activities on the continent, is the justification
for the human presence at the South Pole. Writers often celebrate
Antarctica as the "frozen laboratory" for science. A laboratory is a
place, an occasion really, that provides the means by which science is
done. While a lab may have some characteristics of its own—orderliness,
for one—it lacks traits outside those that can be filled
by experimentation. The trope of the frozen laboratory suggests an
Antarctica that is a neutral, clean, and untouched space for the work of
science, itself free of ideological investments or products. Other
common descriptors of Antarctica as "remote" or "desolate" also enforce
a serviceable blankness on a territory that increasingly finds itself on
the receiving end of unprecedented—and ever-increasing—concentrations of human
interest.[6]
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