New article and new research direction: "Photography Without Images"

Just published in December 2022! New article and new direction in my research:

Alise Tifentale, “Photography Without Images: A Proposal to Think About the Medium as Practice, Apparatus, and Form of Social Interaction,” in Latvian Photography 2022, edited by Arnis Balčus and Alexey Murashko (Riga: Kultkom, 2022): 152-171.

Download my article as a PDF here!

Abstract:

In this article I propose to think about photography without images, i.e., focusing on the medium as practice, apparatus, and form of social interaction. Based on concepts created by Pierre Bourdieu, Vilém Flusser, and Lev Manovich, among others, this article attempts to depart from the image-centered, art-historical approach to photography that has dominated this field so far. Instead of repeating the romanticized narrative of “great” or “important” images and their “talented” makers, this article proposes to look beyond the images’ surface and examine unpublished or deleted photographs in archives and on social media, the significance of darkroom work and collective or shared authorship, photography on the NFT art marketplace, and the role of AI and automation in photographic production. The article discusses the work of photographers, artists, digital creators, and social media content producers such as Sultan Gustaf Al Ghozali, Caroline Calloway, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Zenta Dzividzinska, Alan Govenar, Ivars Grāvlejs, Lucia Moholy, Emma Agnes Sheffer, Alnis Stakle, Sophie Thun, and others.

Joining the faculty of the City University of New York in fall 2022

With great excitement I’m joining the faculty of the Art Department at the Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York, as an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Art History in fall 2022.

So happy to work on the loveliest, greenest, and most relaxing urban campus in New York City with a fantastic waterfront promenade right outside my classroom and the Kingsborough Art Museum right next door.

Courses that I teach here include

  • Modern Art: From 1945 to the Present (in person, fall 2022),

  • Art History Survey II: From Renaissance to Nineteenth Century Art (asynchronous online, fall 2022),

  • Survey of Art History: Prehistory to the Present (hybrid, fall 2022), and

  • Survey of Art History I: From Ancient to Renaissance Art (asynchronous online, spring 2023).

Talk at the seminar "Likeness in Difference. Perspectives on Baltic Regional Art History" in Tallinn

Thrilled to think and write about my recent archival research discoveries: my talk “Invisible Photography: Discovery and Interpretation of Zenta Dzividzinska’s (1944-2011) Archive” in the panel discussion "Invisible Photography" was part of the seminar "Likeness in Difference. Perspectives on Baltic Regional Art History in Tallinn, Estonia, May 14, 2022.

The panel was chaired by Annika Toots, and the participants were Alise Tifentale, Agnė Narušytė and Annika Toots.

Download the seminar program as pdf here, and find out more about the seminar on the Kumu Art Museum website.

Photo courtesy of Jana Kukaine.

Seminar “Likeness in Difference. Perspectives on Baltic Regional Art History” took place in the Estonian Academy of Arts and Kumu Art Museum, Tallinn, Estonia, May 13-14, 2022. It brought together art researchers and curators from the three Baltic countries—Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Art history of the Soviet period served as the point of departure for the seminar.

Photo courtesy of Inga Lāce.

The abstract of my talk, “Invisible Photography: Discovery and Interpretation of Zenta Dzividzinska’s Archive”:

I'd like to propose the topic of invisible photography—such as photography that has survived only in negatives—in the broader context of preservation and interpretation of Soviet-era women-photographers' archives. Focusing on a case study of the private archive and estate of Zenta Dzividzinska (1944-2011), a Latvian artist and photographer active locally and internationally in the 1960s, I'd like to speak about the cultural, social, and political circumstances that had rendered her work invisible until very recently.  At the center of Dzividzinska's legacy is a vast collection of hundreds of negatives and prints depicting the daily life of three generations of women as it unfolded in and around their small house in the Latvian countryside as well as self-portraits and collaborative work produced together with other young female artists and art students while she studied at the art school in Riga. She was misunderstood for most of her lifetime, and only since the 2000s her legacy has begun to attract interest from art historians, curators, and contemporary artists. But one of the main challenges for anyone who would be interested in her work is that it is invisible. Museum curators or collectors typically are interested in “great” artworks—they look for large-size, excellent quality, well-preserved vintage prints ready for framing and exhibiting. But Dzividzinska did not make many exhibition-size prints during the 1960s. Her most radical work at the time was not thought of as exhibitable, so it exists in small test prints or only in the form of negative because Dzividzinska not always had the time and resources to produce any prints at all.

Learn more about life and works of Zenta Dzividzinska: www.artdays.net

Photo courtesy of Šelda Puķīte.

Watch my presentation and the following discussion on YouTube:

Watch the lively discussion that followed our panel:

Browse the slides from my presentation:

New research article published in Social Sciences

This article is one of the deliverables in the research project, Life with COVID-19: Evaluation of overcoming the coronavirus crisis in Latvia and recommendations for societal resilience in the future (VPP-COVID-2020/1-0013) that was implemented from June 2020 to March 2021. The project was led by Alise Tifentale who from December 2019 to March 2021 served a visiting researcher at the Communication Studies department, Riga Stradins University, Riga, Latvia.

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Soviet press photography: A review of two books

I reviewed two new photo books that offer an insight into the press photography of Soviet Latvia from the 1950s—1970s: Dominiks Gedzjuns. 1956-1961, edited by Toms Zariņš and Aleksejs Muraško (Riga: Kultkom, 2021) and Bonifācijs Tiknuss Takes Photographs Half a Century Ago, edited by Andrejs Tiknuss in collaboration with Ēriks Hānbergs and Voldemārs Hermanis (Riga: Madris, n.d.)

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