Elena Glasberg,
"Blankness in the Antarctic Landscape of An-My Lê"
(page 5 of 6)
Lê records a built environment that is brutally industrial,
menacing, and strangely familiar. While her large format images
monumentalize the effort to support scientists in Antarctica, it also
points to the growing tension between human-powered modes of field work
and remote, simulated, or robotic modes of information gathering and
data production. The human body may not be as necessary to science as
an attachment to heroic history might have it. The glorification of
labor and the working class aspect of the South Pole site gestures
complicatedly to the impossibility of nostalgia for the human body as
the primary site for meaning on the ice—even as that body is now a
worker in an organization within an infrastructure far removed from the
dangers faced by the original heroes. Lê's South Pole is a
combination (post)industrial office park and (de)militarized base. The
support of science requires an infrastructure whose implications secure
Antarctica within a map of globalization and capital flows at odds with
depictions of the ice as pure, empty, or even as heroic and sublime.
Figure 6 An-My Lê
Offload, Two Marines California, 2006
Archival pigment print
40 x 56 1/2 inches
Courtesy of the artist and Murray Guy Gallery
Military operations are captured by Lê in Offload, a
similarly structured scene of sky meeting water taken from an elevated
position. Though the location is a shore, not a frozen polar plateau,
and the characters are a military amphibious vehicle, a tank, and an
aircraft carrier headed towards the horizon, these elements are in
analogous position to those in Storage Berms at the Pole. The Marines
on the beach are anonymous, and dwarfed by the scene and machinery from
which they emerged and which they drive. Relative movement comes
through in the spume clouding the landing vehicle, which is caught
between being in the water and sitting on shore. A vaguely malevolent,
thick sky hangs over the affair. The shared composition of Offload
and Storage Berms at Pole demonstrates Lê's anti-exceptionalist
positioning of Antarctica as removed from its own narrow history of
extremophile representation. Rather, Lê places Antarctica in a
visually and politically homologous position to globalization of the
U.S. military. As Chalmers Johnson has observed, the "U.S. has bases in
every continent but Antarctica"—though Lê would suggest a minor
correction: the Antarctic is not fully or cleanly demilitarized, even
though the ATS remains in effect.[14]
As Simon Jenkins recently argued in
The Guardian, the U.S. and other nations adhere nominally to the
ATS restrictions against drilling, assaying, and other development
plans, to the extent that science programs can do whatever they want.[15]
That includes, within science programs—which no one suggests are
anything but serious and valuable—activities and implications that
are also nationally strategic. These activities help to aggrandize
development and may be refunctioned at a time when the empty frozen
laboratory becomes a different kind of blank, when ice core drilling and
blasting might be put to other less scientifically benign purposes.
The tiny human figures against a grand background echo Ponting's
classic perspective. But in this take the human figures are diminished
toy soldiers rather than anchors of the human. Lê amplifies the
potential of Heroic Age sublime to an extreme distortion comments back
on the limits of the very notion of the sublime to give any real
proportion to nature or to humanity. This imbalance was immanent in
Ponting. Lê, the contemporary Ponting, has forced us to look at
the absurdity, the menace, the doom both in the material facts of
humanity's trace in Antarctica, and also in the mode of looking at
Antarctica.
Porter's anxious warning about drilling in the ice has returned in
the form of concern over global warming and renewed resource pressure
worldwide. And yet artists are less interested in the propaganda
techniques of the earlier generations of eco-art.[16]
A new style of the
eco-visual is emerging in which artists directly survey the damage in
the landscape, risking its aestheticization and their own complicity in
ruin—yet avoiding the equally problematic evacuation of the human from
the concept of wilderness.[17]
Lê's complex "deadpan" exposure, or
muted outrage, characterizes the post-Heroic in Antarctic photography as
both desiring the Heroic and critiquing its trace, lamenting its
tabula rasa clarities while refusing everything imperial that its
blankness stands for.
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