Lisa Bloom,
"Polar Fantasies and Aesthetics in the Work of Isaac Julien and Connie Samaras"
(page 5 of 6)
Figure 11 Connie Samaras
Dome Interior
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
Most of these images are achieved through straightforward
photography, though some of them appear as if completely invented. The
best example of this tendency is her only photograph of a strange empty
domestic interior inside the Buckmister Fuller dome at the South Pole,
showing two rows of red sleeping quarters facing each other that she
altered slightly by flipping the negative, making the sleeping quarters
mirror each other. Though the photograph is only slightly changed, the
interior looks, in the mind of the viewer, alternatively like meat
lockers, future cells for monks, or worse, those of a morgue (see Figure 11).
The bright red sealed bunk spaces and the dome ceiling together are
more easily imagined as occupied by a strange organized cult in a science
fiction film than a real place where actual scientists live and work.
Her slight digital manipulation of this space is done deliberately to
make us wonder about "normative" gender relations in such a strange
unearthly interior. Compare this work, for example, to Laura Kay's image
of the interior of the Fuller Dome in 1985 (see Figure 12). Here the dome
interior is a funky non-corporate space, nonetheless made habitable, and
inhabiting a specific identity and an appealing counter-culture
aesthetic that makes it inviting.
Figure 12 Photograph by Laura Kay
Given the way that Samaras' photographic work goes out of its way to
deliberately play with our ideas of what we imagine Antarctica to be, it
is significant that she titles her work after Phillip K. Dick's
semi-autobiographical VALIS trilogy based on his own claim to
have had paranormal experiences. Dick's VALIS trilogy is a study
of the invasion of futuristic technology from the future into the
present, established by supernatural intelligence, into the life of an
ordinary, present-day man who is having a nervous breakdown. As Samaras
indicates in her article in this special issue,
her photographic work, like Dick's novel, highlights some of the
ways that scientific and technological rationality combats but fails to
contain the forces of superstition and irrationality. This anxiety that
creeps into her work and Dick's rejects not the technological
determinism of science but the confident ideology of scientific and
technological universality and the neutrality of its representation.
This also entails challenging masculinist modes of rationality, which
was the subject of a fairly ironical photo and text project she made in
the mid-1990s where she "corrected" the representations of earth culture
sent out in 1977 by NASA and Carl Sagan to extraterrestrials on two U.S.
Voyager Spacecrafts.[15]
Figure 13 Connie Samaras
Underneath Amundsen-Scott Station
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
Samaras' Antarctica project pursues this ironical approach by
injecting something more unsettling and unearthly into what otherwise
appear to be fairly neutral and objective images of Antarctica's built
environment, with its mostly anonymous industrial structures.[16] This
comes through in her triptych of the "Amundsen-Scott Station Phase III"
and the way the building, under construction, looks like a flimsy
Hollywood set on ice rather than a place of habitation, and also in her
photograph "Underneath Amundsen-Scott Station," (see Figure 13) in which the
building resembles an installation in space with its ultra-modern and
sleek, seamless surfaces, while simultaneously the base of a fairly
banal corporate structure. Like all her work, the deliberate play with
the variable space between documentary and fiction sets her images apart
from the public narratives and images of the Heroic Age of exploration
and represents a shift from an image of the polar regions as
representative of the sublime, to the present where the Antarctic is
visualized as a place of fascinating terror, but this time as a result
of man-made climate change and neo-liberal economics. In Samaras'
images, the Antarctic is no longer seen as simply an unearthly place,
but also as a strangely fragile site, one where the ice itself becomes
an important entity. The built environment seems vulnerable and
unstable, as in her work, "Domes and Tunnel," where the shifting pack
ice will cover the Buckminster Fuller dome already slowly sinking in the
permafrost, or in "Antennae Field South Pole," (see Figure 14) an image of
an empty Antarctic landscape that dwarfs a tiny radio antenna standing
as the only sign of human habitation.
Figure 14 Connie Samaras
Antennae Field South Pole
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
Amelia Jones, the feminist art critic, in her 2006 book
Self/Image: Technology, Representation and the Contemporary
Subject, argues that the most important legacy of feminism is its
politics of positionality across the visual. By that she means the
importance of emphasizing the situatedness of positionality, of
visuality, and of spectatorship. Samaras, who is interested in the
social space of taking photographs and her performance behind the
camera, is committed to recording her embodied relationship to
Antarctica. For Samaras, that means highlighting the sense of
dislocation and anxiety involved in living in such an extreme
environment. In Gender on Ice, I pointed out how in the Scott
narrative, the gendered, physical body is replaced by moral character,
which provided the foundation on which masculinity becomes heroicized
and the exterior world loses its concreteness. Samaras' work is not
about heroic masculinity but something much more displaced, related to
both her positionality as well as the placelessness of the site that she
photographs. Her detailed focus on the everyday brings us back to our
senses, and in its focus on Antarctic architecture (both new and old)
counters the romanticism and fantasies of transcendence through moral
character that characterizes so much of the British discourse in
Antarctica. At the same time, fantasy is not entirely absent as her work
also evokes how alien the landscape is in Antarctica, when she, for
example, foregrounds how uncontrollable the ice is as it swallows up
buildings and signs of life in "Night Divide and Contrails" (see Figure 15)
and in "Buried Fifties Station."
Figure 15 Connie Samaras
Night Divide and Contrails
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
The two videos that Samaras made in Antarctica also move us away from
narratives that erase or ignore the real life suffering, anxiety and
sense of vulnerability and entrapment that is part of negotiating this
extreme environment. The first is a single unedited static video,
capturing a Weddell seal (average adult weight 400 pounds) noisily
coming up for air through a hole in the ice. The other shows a male
station hand asleep in the cargo bay area of a transport plane to
Antarctica (see Figure 16). The seal jumps out at us in intervals and
startles the viewer as she breaks through the icy surface just to
breathe, reminding us of the effort it takes for all mammals, including
humans, to breathe, and the kinship between human and non-human animals
in this extreme climate. The man on the transport plane is quiet; the
only noise is the sound of the airplane's engine. However, as he sleeps
and breathes quietly, he seems quite vulnerable. This image in
particular is meant to remind us of how dependent the people, who are
mostly absent from Samaras' other photographs, are on machines and the
built environment just to simply live in this extreme environment (see Figure 17).
While the videos evoke the dependence of human beings on
their machines and buildings, her clinical images of this anonymous
built environment make us wonder what kinds of human beings could
inhabit this secluded, somewhat alien, non-domestic world. You might say
that her video, with the mummy-like man sleeping in suspended animation,
captures the ghosts moving through these spaces, even though this
peaceful image seems to be the antithesis of the picture of hardship and
suffering that provided a heroic dimension to polar exploration from an
earlier age. Samaras reminds us that in the post-heroic age, while the
region is increasingly more accessible, the same anxieties of managing
the forbidden climate remain today.
Figure 16 Connie Samaras
Video still from Untitled (Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica)
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
Figure 17 Connie Samaras
Video still from installation Sleeping Man on Transport Plane
digital print
Courtesy of the artist
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