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What
does a person deserve?
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In the midst of the Depression, 14 million people were unemployed. Near Lange's studio in San Francisco was a breadline set up by a wealthy woman known as the "White Angel." Looking at this photograph we cannot help but compare 1932 with what is happening now throughout America. Dorothea Lange brings us closer to the feelings of millions of people. As an artist she gave beautiful form to her anger about what people were forced to endure.
In my study of Aesthetic Realism I have learned that every person deserves to be seen aesthetically, as a oneness of opposites; and we can learn how from this photograph. Eli Siegel's question about Universe and Object from "Is Beauty the Making One of Opposites?" is at the heart of what makes "White Angel Breadline" so important. He asks:
The solitary figure in the foreground is clasping his hands, almost as if he were praying, and by those hands is an empty cup. His back is to the other men, yet we feel intensely the particular existence of this man alone with his thoughts, as we are aware that he stands for all those behind him, and so many more. Dorothea Lange carefully isolated the man against a dark background with a warm light on his hands, the simple cup, and his hat. She said:
In a lesson in 1963, Mr. Siegel said to me:
David Bernstein: I've felt that.
Eli Siegel: Is it true?
David Bernstein: It's not true.
Eli Siegel: Are you glad it isn't true?
David Bernstein: I'm glad.
Miss Lange courageously saved an earlier view
taken at a low angle minutes before, where the man seems lost and obscured.
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In her desire to really see what another person feels, she looked for a more precise way; and in a sense, a more humble way. Positioning herself higher, and pointing the camera down -- something wonderful happens that shows this man more truly and with dignity. He becomes the center of a great triangle. Everything radiates from his clasped hands. While we are looking down, the motion of the photograph is up and out. How different Lange's purpose is from the purpose people ordinarily have in positioning themselves higher than other people. Lange looked down in order to look up.
The man's hands are not folded in resignation. There is a feeling of "concentrated exactness" in his gesture which makes for energy and intensity, and there is hope in the composition itself. His hands, cup, and hat are in a progression which joins him to the people behind him in an expanding wave that carries us up and out at the upper right. The stillness in the crowd is given energy by the angles of the wooden rails, pushing out on both sides, while also supporting the man. The rails barricading the men radiate outward -- firm beams of light in the dark relate them to the wide universe.
Within the large triangle formed by rails and men, there is an interplay of the triangles of the fedoras with the round shapes of the caps. Fedoras and caps represent opposites too: they are elegant and everyday; both are arrangements of straight lines and curves, and the effect is very pleasing. Still, we constantly return to the central figure. His hat, worn and battered, is also one of the brightest and most lively shapes.
I had the privilege of learning from Eli Siegel in an Aesthetic Realism lesson that the respect I hoped to give as a photographer was also what people, including my wife, deserved from me. He asked:
David Bernstein: No, I couldn't.
The question "What does a person deserve by being a person?" is a national emergency in 1997. Millions of people are homeless now, as in 1932. 1 have learned from Aesthetic Realism that the only way for there to be justice for all is when the economics of America is fair to the aesthetic structure of the world. Dorothea Lange's photograph is a terrific criticism of the profit system, which is based on selfishness and contempt: the exploitation of people for profit without caring about their feelings or what they deserve. Every good photograph is against the injustice, the ugliness of the profit system, because its purpose is to see objects and people justly, as they are, and in relation to the whole world.
In his book Self and World, Eli Siegel describes so greatly what every nation must go after, and it is the very thing that makes for the beauty in Dorothea Lange's photograph. He writes: "The purpose of economics or politics is to maintain the collective while intensifying the individual, to support gloriously the universal while heightening properly a specific person."
Aesthetic Realism Foundation / Terrain Gallery 141 Greene Street (in SoHo) New York, NY 10012 212.777.4490 |