Beauty Photography Software Market Disclosing Latest Trends and Advancement 2023 to 2030

Beauty Photography Software Market Disclosing Latest Trends and Advancement 2023 to 2030

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Key Players in the Beauty Photography Software market:

  • Meitu
  • Shanghai Benqumark Network Technology Co.
  • Ltd.
  • Manhole
  • Inc.
  • Line
  • Bytedance
  • Lightricks
  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Tencent
  • Twitter
  • Inc.

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  • With Social Function
  • With Editing Function
  • Other

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  • Recreational
  • Commercial
  • Other

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Throughout the forecast period, the Beauty Photography Software market research report includes data on market share in terms of industry growth potential, value and volume, and vital company features. A variety of preparations and preparation processes are also included in the Beauty Photography Software report. The Beauty Photography Software evaluation includes crucial variables such as leading manufacturers, growth rate, production value, and key geographies. We built a detailed and extensive business environment, as well as a commodity supply for the leading suppliers in various geographical regions, to provide clients of this study a precise image of the global Beauty Photography Software market.

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Pilvi Takala and the Art of Awkwardness

Pilvi Takala and the Art of Awkwardness

Pilvi Takala and the Art of Awkwardness

The Finnish artist is quietly taking notes as the people around her lose their shit.

Pilvi Takala photographed in profile by Billy  Hells.
There’s a “Jackass” element to Takala’s approach, but instead of shooting herself out of a cannon she’s inserting herself into social lacunae, filling up the negative space of subtexts and taboos.Photograph by Billy & Hells for The New Yorker

At the height of summer, a young woman arrives at the gates of Disneyland Paris. It’s hot. Water-bottle season. Most of the visitors are in groups. The woman has come alone. She’s in a basque-waisted gown with a corn-silk-colored skirt, a midnight-blue bodice, puffed sleeves with Vatican Swiss Guard-style stripes, and an apple-red cloak. She has black curls, tied up in a satin bow. She’s even wearing some kind of ruff, as stiff as a dog’s cone. People take her to be Snow White and start asking her to sign autographs and pose for pictures.

This lasts for less than two and a half minutes. A security guard charges over and pulls the Snow White look-alike to the side.

“It’s not possible to enter in this kind of clothes,” he says.

“Really?” she replies.

“You will have to change and put something else on.”

The Snow White look-alike is polite, demure even, but she doesn’t capitulate easily.

“It’s Disneyland, right?”

The guard has trouble articulating exactly what provision of amusement-park law the woman has violated. He is obviously acting on orders from superiors, but his confusion is ontological more than administrative. We are worried that you might do bad things, he says. People might think you’re the real character, you know?

He speaks into a walkie-talkie. It’s unclear what code he might be using to signal the problem, where the invisible line lies between an innocent bit of flair and a public threat. If Mickey Mouse ears are allowed, why not a Snow White dress? A little girl in a nearly identical outfit is standing nearby, but the guard pays her no mind.

Another guard has joined the negotiations. The problem, apparently, is that the Snow White look-alike resembles too closely the “real” Snow White.

Cartoon by Tom Cheney

“I thought the real Snow White is a drawing,” the Snow White look-alike replies.

A crowd gathers. Unfazed by the fuss she’s causing, the Snow White look-alike continues posing for photos and autographing books. Soon, a higher-up arrives. She states firmly that no disguises are allowed on the premises, and that the Snow White look-alike must change her clothes in the bathroom if she wishes to remain at the park.

“She’s no Snow White,” someone in the crowd mutters. “Let’s go.”

Scarlet cape rippling in the summer breeze, the too-real fake Snow White trudges off toward the toilets.

The woman in the costume is Pilvi Takala, who used the encounter as the basis for a 2009 video piece called “Real Snow White.” She is Finnish. She is an artist. But precisely what kind of Finnish artist she is remains as debatable as a theme park’s rule book. When I asked Vanessa Carlos, Takala’s London gallerist, how she would categorize her client’s art, she replied, “To be honest, I think she’s kind of off on her own-ish.”

Last year, Takala, who lives in Helsinki and Berlin, represented her home country at the Venice Biennale, where a curatorial statement noted that her work explores “how the neoliberal conflation of civic spaces and commerce has created a nebulous boundary that privileges consumer over citizen.” According to Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Art, in London, which staged a show of Takala’s pieces earlier this year, her art seeks “to stress test the conventions and codes that govern our daily interactions.” Takala sometimes describes her practice as “intervention.” One might simply say that she does things she’s not supposed to do in places where she’s not supposed to be.

The Snow White piece relies on a brilliantly simple conceit. The look-alike’s real transgression is that she’s taken a system’s assumptions to their logical conclusion. “The Disney slogan ‘Dreams Come True’ of course means dreams produced exclusively by Disney,” Takala writes, in an accompanying text. “Anything even slightly out of control immediately evokes fear of these real, possibly dark and perverse dreams coming true.” Like a churchgoer, the Disney visitor is meant to believe, but only within rigid yet unarticulated parameters. Takala told me, “What interests me is, What are norms: how are they upheld or undone, changed, and negotiated?”

Takala’s work involves an unusual combination of earnestness and humor. “It’s like the Yes Men, but softer and weirder,” the artist Stine Marie Jacobsen, who has collaborated with Takala, told me, referring to the American prankster-activist duo. In a 2015 video piece called “Give a Little Bit,” Takala explores the rules of exchange. The Supertramp song of the same name plays in the background as a young woman makes the rounds at a career fair, breezily collecting corporate freebies. At one booth, she silently pockets some pens. At another, she palpates the free apples before slipping a few into her bag. Soon, she’s laden with swag, attracting whispers and side-eyes. “The fear of someone possibly exploiting the system and a requirement that we follow the rules is often greater than that of common sense,” Takala writes. “We easily fail to assess the real losses or benefits of someone just taking a free apple because they want to eat it, and prefer to offer it to a person who presents their commitment to our arbitrary system of rules.” There’s a “Jackass” element to Takala’s approach, but instead of shooting herself out of a cannon she’s inserting herself into social lacunae, filling up the negative space of subtexts and taboos.

Her most powerful tool is awkwardness. Excruciating silences and cringeworthy conversations act as magnifying glasses on the social contract, inviting us to pore over its fine print. This almost legalistic talent for identifying vulnerabilities in institutional protocol is evident in “The Announcer” (2007), for which Takala hired an actor, an older woman, to insist that an employee at a posh Helsinki department store use the intercom to summon “interesting-looking” men to the information desk. In “Wallflower” (2006), Takala showed up at a dance for vacationing pensioners in a poufy pink prom dress and just sat there, tragically. For “Broad Sense” (2011), she e-mailed questions about the dress code at the European Parliament to representatives of all the member states. Then she visited the building in a T-shirt printed with their wildly varying responses, wandering the halls and maintaining an epic poker face when security stepped in.

In January, I went to see Takala in Helsinki. We met for lunch at a cozy Korean place in an artsy neighborhood called Punavuori. “I get super excited when things get awkward,” Takala, who is forty-two, admitted. I braced myself for a persnickety order or a feigned sneezing fit, but nothing untoward happened. We ate vegetarian dolsot bibimbap and cupped our hands around little bowls of ginger tea. In person, Takala is low-key and easy to talk to. I asked how she developed her tolerance for embarrassment and humiliation, whether she’d had to build it up, the way an athlete trains a muscle. “I think I have an unhealthy sense of safety,” she said. She noted, however, that she is able to summon this fearlessness only in professional situations. In regular life, she can’t even muster the nerve to interject during a drunken argument between friends. She added, “It’s embarrassing to me that I live in Berlin and speak no German, and perhaps if I were less embarrassed to speak it wrong I would already be speaking.”

“The Trainee” (2008) is probably Takala’s best-known work. To create it, she spent a month in the Helsinki office of Deloitte, the multinational consulting firm. Only a few higher-ups knew her real identity. (Deloitte was a partner of the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, in Helsinki, and Takala thinks that the executives agreed to take her on “because they wanted to seem cool/fresh in comparison to other companies.”) To her co-workers, she was Johanna Takala, a twentysomething intern in the marketing department. At first, she seemed unremarkable enough. Soon, however, they realized that she wasn’t contributing much to the team. It wasn’t that she was taking too many smoke breaks or browsing Facebook on company time. Far worse: she just sat there all day, staring into the distance. Anyone who dared inquire what she was up to was met with unnerving diffidence: “Brain work.”

One day, she rode the elevator up and down for hours. A few of her co-workers were amused (“Well, at least you’re cheering up our day!” one man said), but others simply could not take the strangeness. In an e-mail to a manager, one wrote:

Hi

Now the trainee has placed herself in the elevator closest to the cantine. She’s standing in the back corner drifting from floor to floor with the other users. People spend sensless amount of time speculating this issue. Couldn’t we now get her out of here? Obviously she has some kind of mental problem.

I also informed Y about this.

Doing nothing, when it provokes social censure, can actually be draining. Takala told me that after enacting the piece she spent a month in bed, “getting out only to do nice things with people who like me and give me the opposite of rejection.”

The most nonconformist thing about Takala may be her talent for refusal. Sarah McCrory, the director of Goldsmiths, recalls appearing on television with her for an art festival: “They put this terrible makeup on me, and then Pilvi turned up, and I was, like, ‘How come you don’t have to?’ And she was, like, ‘Well, because I said no.’ ”

“I’m not somebody who’s not aware of what the norm is, or what the pressure is,” Takala told me. “It’s not that I don’t get it. It’s that I get it, and I just keep repeating my instruction to myself.” She knows that she “could make flower paintings, and it would all be super-great, and everyone would love them.” She would rather provoke a conversation. Another way to think of her is as a late-capitalist Bartleby, preferring not to uphold certain expectations, and quietly taking notes as the people around her lose their shit.

Antti Kurvinen, then the Finnish Minister of Science and Culture, was standing on a riser in the garden of the Finnish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale’s prestigious Giardini venue. The fair, known as “the Olympics of art,” seems to bring out the competitive instincts of guests as much as of entrants. On opening day, art people hustled around the site’s twenty-nine pavilions, swathed in new-season coats and instant opinions. A Frieze critic had named Takala’s project, entitled “Close Watch,” one of the pieces he was most looking forward to seeing, praising her talent for “playfully probing sometimes unspoken social and economic conventions” and her “uneasy engagement with questions about consent and privilege.”

Kurvinen cleared his throat and welcomed the fifty or so people who had gathered for the kickoff.

“Pilvi’s art raises questions about what we consider normal and why we consider it normal,” he said. “We can see our everyday life through a different lens.”

He spoke for a few minutes and then scanned the crowd for an aide.

“We need some bubbles,” he said. “This is my favorite part of toasts!”

“I mainly come for the snacks.”
Cartoon by Zachary Kanin

Duly furnished with a flute of prosecco, he raised it and proclaimed, “And now I have officially declared ‘Close Watch’ open!”

Takala receives a stipend of two thousand dollars a month from the Finnish government. Mingling with well-wishers, she resembled a Republican senator’s worst nightmare of a state-subsidized Scandinavian performance artist: complicated haircut (mostly shaved, with a saucer of hair on top of her skull), wacky clothes (black boots with silver squiggles, black jumpsuit with purple squiggles, plush jacket the color of a tennis ball). Her works can take years to make, and she often flings herself into activity before even beginning to contemplate the final form a piece might take. “As an artist, I’m quite little worried about how things look,” she confessed. The Venice piece, a multichannel video installation, was available for fifty thousand dollars, but she doubted that anyone would buy it at the fair.

“Close Watch” came about after Takala’s long-standing curiosity about malls and about security coalesced into a curiosity about mall security. “I’m interested in how public space is controlled by private security companies, and in how it really is to do this work as a guard,” she told the Venice crowd. “Because the pay is very low and the education is very short, yet you have a lot of agency and a lot of responsibility.” To make the piece, she had completed a hundred-and-sixty-hour training course that Finland mandates for private-security employees. (She declined to undergo the five additional hours of training that would have earned her the right to carry pepper spray and an expandable baton.) She had called one of the country’s major firms, Securitas, asking to “make a work of art about the security sector.” Securitas agreed to allow her to go undercover as a guard at one of the Helsinki area’s biggest malls.

Otto Tiuri, a cousin of Takala’s, works for Securitas as a field manager. For a long time, he was skeptical that being an artist was a job. “I remember teasing her: ‘I’ll shoot some eggs at a wall and shoot a video and call it modern art. You can take five thousand and I’ll take five thousand,’ ” he told me. Takala, however, suspected that his work might be more complex than the stereotype of filmdom’s bumbling Paul Blart. She was curious about the vast gray area between the rule book and the food court, particularly as the state, in Finland as elsewhere, outsources more and more authority to private enterprise. “I’ve been the target of security interventions myself while doing my work,” Takala told me. “The guards define what’s disturbing and what’s not, so I wanted to see the other side of things.”

Calling herself Johanna again (her middle name), she told her mall co-workers that she had gone to art school and worked as a guard in an art museum, a common part-time job for students and artists. “I made it as minimal as possible,” she recalled. “And I didn’t talk to them much about my personal life—I can’t talk to them about living in Berlin. I was, like, ‘I wish I had a dog!’ ” On a break with colleagues one day, Takala feared that her beverage order might be a tell. “I’m feeling self-conscious, wondering if I should put oat milk in my coffee or if that’s not ‘guard-like,’ but then both of my colleagues put oat milk in theirs,” she wrote in her field notes, excerpts from which she included in a publication that accompanied the exhibition.

Methodologically, “Close Watch” was a departure from much of Takala’s previous work. She was trying to follow the rules, to fit in rather than stand out. Instead of inserting herself into situations to immediately change their dynamics, she allowed the situations to work on her. Patrolling the mall for around fourteen hours a week, Takala often found herself ill at ease. Sometimes her discomfort was structural. She was aware that she was working with people, not paintbrushes, and had tried to design the intervention in an ethical way. But the inescapable fact was that, as in most of her projects, she was using the lives of others—and, typically, not their finest moments—as material for her art. One day at the mall, guards put a teen-ager in a holding cell for selling snus, an illegal tobacco product. Takala asked a colleague so many questions about the kid, who was often in trouble, that the colleague told her she ought to talk to him herself. “I feel conflicted; it is intrusive and patronising to go and ‘study’ this person while he is being detained,” Takala wrote. “I have a strong urge to give him privacy. But as an undercover artist it’s also ‘good guard work’ and useful for my research to know the regulars. In the end I guess I wasn’t comfortable enough in my guard role to do it.”

Other times, her discomfort was more situational. One day, she and a colleague watched a “suspicious customer” on CCTV as he circled a car in the mall’s parking lot. “I start to feel excited about following him and speculating about what he is planning, and being in such a position of power,” Takala wrote. (It turned out that he was waiting for his friends, who had themselves been stopped by mall security, to let him into the car.) Five months into her tenure, she witnessed someone steal a phone. “I tell H and he radios the patrol guards, who have to run after the thief far past the mall doors,” she wrote. “I really feel the rush of the chase!” Takala told me that she was alarmed by the ease with which she assumed a harsh mentality: “I sometimes found myself being very authoritarian, and I was, like, ‘Why did I do that?’ ”

The tension in “Close Watch” comes in part from the conflicting incentives of workplace solidarity, personal politics, and the continued viability of Takala’s project. She recounts in her field notes that, on the security cameras one day, a white colleague spotted some Black teen-agers play-fighting. He announced that he was going to shut them down, using a Finnish racist slur. (Takala’s text translates it as “N-word.”) Then he suggested that Takala practice reporting the incident on the radio, instructing her to use the numerical code for “Black person,” rather than the one for “young person.” Takala writes:

I want to ask why race is important here, but not age, as play-fighting is quite standard behaviour for youngsters. I hesitate because I’m not sure I can deal with what his answer might be. I’m not sure I would know how to respond.

One can’t help but think that this would have been an appropriate moment for Takala to summon her talent for saying no. “I did the thing he asked,” Takala said. “In retrospect, I shouldn’t have.”

One of Takala’s colleagues became suspicious, and found out that she was an artist by Googling her. (“I did wonder what’s up with that haircut when you first started,” another guard told her.) After being unmasked, Takala left the mall job. Back in the studio, she had no idea what to do with the raw material she’d gathered. Christina Li, the curator of “Close Watch,” recalled, “She had a Google Drive, and she’d just dump everything in there every day after work, just, like, vomit everything out.”

In its engagement with such issues as police violence, racism, and surveillance, the project was far more ambitious than anything Takala had attempted before. “I don’t think that Pilvi imagines that her work will change the whole industry,” Li said. “But it’s kind of throwing a pebble in the water, and thinking that maybe she can influence things in some way.”

Takala had been struck by how theoretical best practices yielded to peer pressure on the ground. “I was interested in the internal policing that happens in the workplace,” she said. “I wanted to know, could that second colleague somehow change the course of events?” She decided to ask ex-colleagues if she could interview them about their decision-making processes during incidents she had witnessed, particularly those which related to “excessive use of force, racist humor, and toxic masculinity.” (Excerpts from seven of the interviews appear in the publication that accompanies the exhibition.) Many of the guards who accepted her invitation shared her discomfort with their peers’ attitudes, yet felt that they had little influence over behavior that was unsavory but not illegal. “If a colleague does something really wrong I would intervene, but it would really take a lot,” one guard told her.

Takala decided to revisit some of the thorniest scenarios using the forum-theatre technique. Developed in the nineteen-seventies by the Brazilian director Augusto Boal, forum theatre uses “simultaneous dramaturgy”—actors and audience members collectively create a play in real time—to examine social problems. Takala found a performance space in Helsinki and invited five guards (three white Finnish men, a white Finnish woman, and a Finnish man of Moroccan descent), a forum-theatre facilitator, and a trio of hired actors to join her for a three-day filmed workshop. (She also hired an anti-racism consultant.) Portions of the workshop form the basis of “Close Watch,” which Takala presented at the Biennale in a stark space divided by a one-way police mirror. (This summer, the piece is on view at the Migros Museum of Contemporary Art, in Zurich.) The forum-theatre sessions combined elements of group therapy and role-play, with participants trying to construct different outcomes to the troubling incidents. In one scenario, a guard roughly removes an inebriated woman from the shopping center.

“My friends went someplace and I don’t know where,” the woman, played by an actor, tells the guard.

“Pretty shitty,” he replies. “Want to step outside and talk for a while?”

“Whatever,” she says.

“Let’s go smoke a cigarette.”

“Are you offering?”

“Why the hell not!”

The reconciled pair step into the wings, as the rest of the workshop participants break into applause.

Takala’s work involves an unusual combination of earnestness and humor. In a piece from 2009, she is barred from Disneyland Paris for too closely resembling the “real” Snow White.Art work courtesy the artist

As comforting as these resolutions were, they were somewhat unsatisfying. The stakes were low, given that the guards were only playacting, just as Takala’s concerns about her job performance had seemed somewhat contrived, given that she knew she could leave at any time. But the tameness was, in part, by design. “In not choosing the ‘Man Bites Dog’ moments, we were looking for something more complex and less obvious, so it’s not clear where the problem stems from,” Stine Marie Jacobsen said. “Pilvi and I had a lot of discussions around ‘Are we pointing fingers here, or are we trying to learn from each other,’ and it’s definitely the second one.”

That night in Venice, Takala and a large group of friends and family members gathered for dinner. She had invited the guards who appeared in the video to the Biennale, and three of them—Teppo Koskinen, Taha Sabbane, and Jonna Haapalainen—had made the trip. They were thrilled to be there, and amused at the random turn of events: who would have guessed that their colleague with the odd haircut would be a world-renowned artist who, in turn, would invite them to appear in a work of art, the world première of which they’d be celebrating in a Venice restaurant over platters of bacalao and squid? I asked Koskinen whether he’d ever suspected that something was up with Takala.

“We have young people, we have old people, so nothing was too weird,” he said. “The only weird thing was maybe her enthusiasm about certain subjects.”

“Like what?”

“She told me she was interested in human psychology—that sounded maybe a bit too deep for a security guard, or something?”

Sabbane cut in: “She wanted to see the good things about everyone. She didn’t expect that someone might want to hurt her on the job.”

After Takala’s identity was revealed, “some people were worried what her agenda was,” Koskinen said. Explaining why he’d accepted her invitation to sit for an interview, he added, “I trust my instincts on people.”

At first, the guards hadn’t realized that they would appear in the final work. “Pilvi told me the film would be just for her to remember things, and then the actors would redo what we’d done,” Sabbane recalled.

“After that, the plan changed!” Takala called from the other end of the table. “You guys were so good!”

As grilled sardines circulated, I asked Haapalainen whether the experience had changed the way she does her job.

“No,” she said.

Her next shift was Monday.

Pilvi Kalhama, the executive director of the EMMA-Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Finland’s largest museum, detects a quintessential Finnishness in Takala’s “calmness, conciseness, and directness,” and in her ability to let a silence endure. The artist Minna Henriksson, a friend of Takala’s, sees her fascination with rule-making and rule-breaking as a critique of Finnish conformity. Speaking about “The Announcer,” she explained, “It’s sort of a petit-bourgeois atmosphere, and everybody reads the same newspaper, and goes to the same department stores and exhibitions. It can be such a monoculture.”

Takala grew up in Helsinki in what she calls “a very safe and non-problematic family.” Her mother was an architect; her father was a criminology researcher. She has a brother, who deploys the Takala game face to capitalist ends as a professional poker player. (Takala explored the microcommunity that he and his roommates, fellow expat online gamers, established in a Bangkok hotel in a piece called “Players.”) When Pilvi was a teen-ager, she stopped traffic as part of an effort by ecological activists to “reclaim the streets” and had “an animal-rights heavy moment.” She may have started developing her signature mix of sincerity and irony then. She recalled, “Some of the harder-core activists would release the animals . . . and then they’d die.”

In the Finnish education system, art is treated as a career as much as a calling. Figuring that it could be fun, Takala went to a high school that specialized in the arts, then earned a bachelor’s degree and a master’s from the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki. Her early work was wide-ranging—she once sculpted a huge black Doberman with glowing halogen-lamp eyes—but, inspired by artists such as Bruce Nauman and Eija-Liisa Ahtila, she soon started experimenting with video.

In her twenties, Takala married Ahmet Öğüt, a Kurdish conceptual artist. (They are now divorced.) I can’t say much more about Takala’s personal life. “I have a long-term stalker,” she explained, the first time we talked, asking that I leave her family out of my story. She was concerned for their safety, so I agreed.

The stalker appeared in December of 2015, after Takala staged an intervention called Invisible Friend—a free text-messaging service. “Send an SMS to 04573963166,” posters that Takala stuck on lampposts around Helsinki read. “Invisible Friend will text you right back.” In the course of two months, more than a thousand users initiated anonymous, sometimes deeply personal exchanges with a team of writers Takala had assembled. The writers were instructed to remain nonjudgmental and to let users dictate the terms of the discussion: where it went, when it ended. Takala wrote, “Invisible Friend fosters an intuitive form of thinking that doesn’t require an ultimate goal, a problem that must be solved, or a specific structure.”

The stalker had been a user of Invisible Friend. Once the project ended, Takala began receiving a barrage of messages from him via e-mail and social media. (They were sent from more than twenty different accounts, and finally comprised more than a hundred and seventy-five thousand characters.) The messages varied in tone—hectoring, aggressive, snide, pathetic, lovesick. For months, Takala tried to ignore them, but they increased in intensity as she prepared for a 2018 solo show at Helsinki’s Kiasma Museum. The stalker wrote:

OK, I’ve had enough, I will tell the museum about you, about your sociopathy. . . . This will mean that your show will be cancelled. Until now I have not met anyone I cannot convince, what ever the issue.

Men are victims of women, that is all Edvard Munch’s art is about.

LAST OFFER. You can accuse me of harassment or groping or what was the term again, and I won’t defend myself. We will meet in real life and will first just be together and we won’t talk about us at all, just about everything else and it is really nice. Then in the end you will hit me and make a report that I harassed you. Then I admit to it. If this offer is not good enough for you then nothing is, and you can spend the rest of your life lonely.

Faced with this kind of abuse, many people would cower. Takala, however, felt that the e-mails presented an opportunity to delve into, as she later wrote, “a certain kind of gendered, online behaviour, one in which the risk of reprisal is minimal.” She decided to make art about it.

“Admirer” (2018) chronicles Takala’s attempts to negotiate a legally binding contract with the stalker (known as Anonymous). The document, she explains to him over e-mail, will both form the basis of an art work and serve as an agreement for cutting off all contact. They go back and forth for weeks. The stalker says that the museum has chosen the opening date to coincide with his birthday; Takala says that’s not true. He wants museum staff to undergo friendliness training; fake smiles never work, Takala counters. She is intransigent on one point: control over the resulting piece will belong to her and to her only. “Why do you insist that my identity must not be found out?” the stalker writes, even though he has previously insisted that he remain anonymous, and that visitors sign a contract promising that they won’t attempt to identify him. “And why would you not offer me real help for instance by asking your viewers to be friends with me?”

For “Close Watch,” Takala went undercover as a security guard at one of the Helsinki area’s biggest malls. Methodologically, this was a departure for Takala. She was trying to follow the rules rather than break them, to fit in rather than stand out.Art work courtesy the artist

Takala replies that he is welcome to include some personal information if he wants to. “I don’t think however that an artwork is the best way to get friends or that there would be many people that would like an anonymous friend,” she writes. “Like I said before, that structure where the other person is anonymous does not build trust and is not a good starting point.” In the end, they agreed to post instructions at the entrance to the exhibit, asking visitors not to attempt to identify Anonymous. The contract specified, however, that “the Work shall include instructions as to where and how Anonymous’ contact details may be acquired, and the viewers requesting them shall be given an email address chosen by Anonymous.”

After two months of negotiations, Takala and Anonymous signed the five-page contract. It stated that after September 16, 2018, “the Parties shall agree to end all communications.” The proviso wasn’t upheld, exactly. In recent years, the stalker has been less persistent, but he surfaces occasionally. Still, Takala is glad that she brought the situation into the open. “Everyone says that, if someone’s after you like this, the best response is not to do anything and hope it goes away,” she told me. “But I was trying to see, like, how I can use my position. He has this power of being anonymous and not having to be responsible for what he’s saying. But then I’m, like, ‘I can speak publicly, and I can control the narrative.’ ”

After Venice, “Close Watch” travelled to the Espoo Museum, which is situated in a former printing house in an industrial neighborhood outside Helsinki. On opening night, in mid-January, a considerable crowd turned out for a discussion with Takala, followed by a reception. Executives from Securitas had been invited, but, up until the last minute, Takala wasn’t sure whether they’d come. In the end, they showed. Jarmo Mikkonen, the company’s national head, stood next to a drinks table in a dark suit, earphones dangling around his neck. I asked why he’d given the go-ahead for Takala to work undercover at the mall.

“In Finland, there was quite a discussion concerning multiculturalism,” he said. “After I heard that Pilvi was interested in this kind of performance, I’m saying, ‘O.K., go ahead,’ because we should be as transparent as possible.” He continued, “And, also, we should support—I’m sorry, I forgot the word.” He paused a minute. “Diversity!” he said, over the din, recovering the word. “DIVERSITY!”

Takala’s piece, he said, had shown the company some areas where it needed to improve, and since its début Securitas Finland has changed the radio security codes so that they no longer indicate race or ethnicity.

During my time in Finland, multiculturalism and diversity were, indeed, major topics of conversation, but they were being debated in a specific context. A few weeks earlier, police had arrested several security guards—employees of a company called Avarn Security—for allegedly beating people, some of them from racial and ethnic minorities, near train stations around Helsinki. “Police say they have evidence the guards went well beyond their powers as security guards, and humiliated their victims,” Yle, Finland’s national broadcaster, reported. “They suspect the guards moved the victims to secluded areas and then kicked them and attacked them with expandable batons, while filming some of the incidents.” (Avarn has since fired the guards, saying, “We condemn all unprofessional behaviour, and we have a clear zero-tolerance policy for illegalities.” The guards have denied that they committed any crime.)

Then, in early January, at the mall where Takala worked, a woman died after Securitas guards removed her from a store. Witnesses said that the woman was not behaving aggressively, and that she was “pressed to the ground and handcuffed” by four guards, one of whom reportedly “lay on top” of her. (Mikkonen expressed his condolences and called it a “very unfortunate incident.”) Finnish police are investigating the incident as suspected negligent manslaughter.

According to one study, security guards in Finland commonly engage in ethnic profiling. This practice occurs with special frequency in public spaces such as shopping centers, where, in Finland, retail often intermingles with public services. (The mall where Takala worked, for instance, hosts a Zara, a Marimekko, a social-services office, a children’s-health clinic, and an enormous library where you can play the piano, use a 3-D printer, and check out everything from books to ice skates.) Still, as the Media Monitoring Group of Finland has noted, hardly any stories about the security-guards scandal mentioned ethnic profiling.

Ali Akbar Mehta, an Indian-born artist and curator in Helsinki, has denounced the “skewed constellation of power” that he sees operating in “Close Watch,” particularly in Takala’s choice to center it on the experiences of security guards, effectively excluding those of the people who are subject to their policing. “Why are these voices missing from the dialogue in ‘Close Watch’?” he wrote, in No Niin magazine.

Takala is politely dismissive of Mehta’s criticisms. I asked if she ever considered bringing a wider variety of voices into the piece. She replied, “I think that’s so cheesy. To me, it’s like when you have those TV things that bring together a racist and a person of color to have a beer.” She continued, “When I’m not that demographic, I’m, like, ‘What is my position?’ And the thing about being sympathetic to the guards, or humanizing them? I think if we don’t humanize everybody, we’re not going to get anywhere good.”

As if Takala’s body of work didn’t offer ample enough proof of the social construction of awkwardness, there are always saunas. In Helsinki, Takala suggested that we spend an afternoon at the Yrjönkatu swimming hall, the oldest public pool in Finland. Helsinki’s Web site calls it “a true gem of the city,” noting that it “is unique in that bathing suits are not required.”

We each paid around fifteen euros for entry and the use of a personal changing cabin. Our first stop was a blazing wood-burning sauna, where we shovelled kindling into a hissing furnace. We swam laps in an Art Deco pool, all arches and ferns, and, in an overlooking gallery, ate blini with chopped gherkins, sour cream, and honey. There were butts and boobs everywhere.

Takala was disconcerted by an aspect of our visit. In the pool regulations, posted near the entrance to the baths, she saw a flaw, a silence begging to be spoken. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, it said, were reserved for men. Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays were for women. Children over the age of seven “must use the hall during the times reserved for their own sex.”

A few weeks later, Takala sent me an article from the Finnish press, reporting that Yrjönkatu had instituted a new set of “safe space” rules just after our visit. These included a prohibition on racist or discriminatory talk and a ban on taking photographs, but the issue of gender was left unaddressed. “We’ll see what more they will do for nonbinary & trans inclusivity,” Takala wrote. I wondered if she wouldn’t find a way to press the issue. ♦

Opinion | Ballad of a Beautiful, Blood-Soaked Landscape

Opinion | Ballad of a Beautiful, Blood-Soaked Landscape

NASHVILLE — The American South didn’t invent the murder ballad, but it certainly keeps the genre alive, both literally and musically. The oldest of these songs came from the folk traditions of the British Isles before crossing the Atlantic and being enshrined in the folkways of Appalachia. There they lived on in front-porch picking parties and mournful firesides until the phonograph slingshotted them to a national audience.

The earliest murder ballads were often cautionary tales, warnings to young women of the dangers of unsanctioned sexuality. We love these stories still. Murder ballads combine our morbid fascination with violence and our apparent inability, even now, to keep vulnerable people safe. Such songs “are part of a larger tradition of celebrating and commodifying violence against women,” writes the Nashville-based photographer Kristine Potter in her new monograph, “Dark Waters.” The book considers the legacy and ubiquity of human ferocity in the Southern landscape, historically and in our own time.

Balladeer 2, 2022Kristine Potter/Aperture
Impasse at Sodom’s Creek, 2017Kristine Potter/Aperture

The crime writer Harold Schechter has called murder ballads “the oldest form of true-crime literature,” and it’s hard to argue with that assessment. Such songs are often the story of a man who solves the problem of a problematic woman the old-fashioned way. Think of Bob Dylan’s “Ballad of Hollis Brown.” Johnny Cash’s “Delia’s Gone.” Dolly Parton’s “Banks of the Ohio.” Think of Lyle Lovett’s “L.A. County.” When a woman has become inconvenient in some way, such songs tell us, a midnight trip to the river — or to the grave — is in order.

Many a recording-era hit has updated or extended this ancient terrain, but Ms. Potter’s work upends the tradition altogether by considering the literal terrain in which murder ballads have traditionally taken place. Again and again, her photographs capture both the isolation and the beauty of the rural South: the dirt roads without a soul in sight, the creeks and rivers that curve away into even greater isolation, the trees choked by moss and vines, the gravestones and makeshift memorials barely visible through the trees.

The landscapes in these photographs are not so much threatening as bereft of protection. Entering such beautiful spaces is always a risk for a woman alone — not because of anything inherently dangerous about a mist-drenched stream or a bamboo-clotted riverbank or even a rocky waterfall, but because bucolic settings aren’t always as empty as they seem. And nobody would hear you scream if danger has followed you into the woods — or if danger is already there, just waiting for you to arrive.

A black-and-white photograph of two men, one Black and one white, kneeling together near a body of water, preparing a fishing line.
Two Fisherman, 2015Kristine Potter/Aperture

In many of these images, it is hard to tell up from down, hard to tell the water from reflections in the water. This dislocation, too, has its analog in the murder-ballad tradition. In some of the oldest that survive in recorded form, the vulnerable woman willingly joins her lover on a journey into the woods, believing they are running away together. Once she understands the truth, she pleads for her life. She promises to stop pressing for marriage, to raise the baby on her own. Man and deep current alike are indifferent to her plight.

The images in “Dark Waters” don’t focus strictly on the backdrops to violence; there are human portraits here, too. A pair of furious men fight on the shore. A mother clutches a naked infant just slightly too tightly, her fingers almost claws. Starkly lighted women glare at the camera, each with damp hair and accusing eyes. In case you haven’t yet made the connection, they’re also wearing clothing that echoes the attire worn by women in the 18th and 19th centuries. Peak-ballad-era attire.

The narrative transpiring within some photographs is even more transparent. A picnic table and benches are engulfed in crime-scene tape. A vine-entwined post holds up a road sign marked “Bloody Fork.” A Black woman, her brow furrowed, glances behind her even as her arm reaches forward. She appears to be fleeing.

Nell, 2017Kristine Potter/Aperture
Rosie, 2021Kristine Potter/Aperture

The most haunting of Potter’s images are the ones that at first might not seem haunting at all. In one, two teenage girls dressed in that nearly identical way of young teens — tight cutoffs, striped tees — stand on the roadside, looking together into a dark gap in the dense vegetation. Are they debating whether to enter? There’s no way to know, but I gasped when I turned the page and saw them there, standing in that margin between the road and the dark unpathed space just beyond it.

In the South, our most isolated places are at once the most beautiful and the most blood-soaked, and Ms. Potter understands that women are in no way the sole victims of this violent legacy. In one photo, an older white man teaches a young Black man how to tie on a fishing hook. The younger man’s position — kneeling, head bowed, eyes cast downward, arms raised, wrists together — suggests both resignation and supplication. He could be learning to tie a hook on a fishing line. He could as easily be crouching to avoid blows. He could as easily be presenting his wrists for handcuffs.

Our deep woods are lovely, our still waters restful, but the Southern landscape has never been a safe place for a woman alone. It has never been a safe place for a Black man alone. It has never been a safe place for L.G.B.T.Q. people of any race or gender. To enter an isolated place alone has always been to take a risk, and we have known that all our lives.

Popular music, often recorded by female artists, has for some time now offered songs that flip the murder-ballad tradition on its head. Sometimes, as in The Chicks’ “Goodbye, Earl,” female protagonists exact revenge against their abusers. Sometimes, as in HARDY’s 2022 hit, “Wait in the Truck,” the man in the song is a hero protecting a battered woman, not the one who wants to murder her.

Troublesome Creek, 2016Kristine Potter/Aperture

In keeping with the ballad tradition, these new songs are morality tales in their own right. Instead of cautioning women to avoid sexual transgression, or even the appearance of transgression, they are meant to be empowering. We don’t have to take this anymore, they say. We aren’t alone and defenseless after all.

But in too many ways, we are still absolutely alone and defenseless, and the threats keep growing more transparent and more pernicious as dangerous people on social media egg each other on. Confronting that reality has, so far, not been a priority. “I see a through line of violent exhibitionism from those early murder ballads, to the Wild West shows, to the contemporary landscape of cinema and television,” writes Ms. Potter. “Culturally, we seem to require it.”

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Margaret Renkl, a contributing Opinion writer, is the author of the books “Graceland, at Last” and “Late Migrations.” Her next book, “The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year,” will be published in October.

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Puzzle Monday: Generation Gaps

Puzzle Monday: Generation Gaps

The Aboriginal Australians of Mornington Island in the Gulf of Carpenteria are known internationally for their dancing, their art—and their languages.

The island off the north coast of the country has a population of about 1,200, made up mostly of the Lardil people, the original inhabitants, and the Kaidildt people, who were relocated there in the 1940s. Even though the island is poor, geographically isolated, and remote—more than 500 miles of Outback from Darwin and 1,400 miles from Sydney—the islanders’ culture is famous worldwide.

Lardil dancers performed at the opening of the Sydney Opera House in 1973, and a troupe regularly tours Europe and America. Mornington Island painters are represented in galleries in every Australian state capital, including the work of the late Sally Gabori, who exhibited in Europe. And the Lardil language remains one of the most studied Aboriginal languages, even though its last fluent speaker died almost two decades ago.

“There are many incredible things in Lardil,” says Erich Round, a linguist at the University of Surrey in England, who studies Lardil and Kayardilt, the language of the Kaidildt.

One reason Lardil remains an active area of linguistic research is because celebrated American linguist Ken Hale visited Mornington Island in the 1960s, during which time he learned Lardil and made almost 1,000 pages of notes. Later, as a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he related Lardil to influential theories of language that were emerging there.

The language has a number of fascinating features. Lardil people, like many Aboriginal peoples, have strict rules about family relationships, and these rules are woven into the grammar of the language (as seen in the challenging puzzle below). Another unusual feature is that Lardil is the only language outside Africa that uses the “click” sound as part of its phonology. (To be more accurate, the click sound only appears in words in Damin, a ceremonial language of about 200 words that is spoken only by Lardil men.)

“Boys would learn the ceremonial language when going through the ceremony from boyhood to manhood. It is very, very interesting because it has all the hallmarks of an invented language,” says Round. “It has an interesting system of data compression where a whole lot of words get crushed down.”

Mornington Island artist John Williams explains the world creation story known as Dreamtime to his granddaughter.
Mornington Island artist John Williams explains the world creation story known as Dreamtime to his granddaughter. Courtesy Mornington Island Art (MIART)

According to the 2021 Australian Census, there are about 300 speakers of Lardil on Mornington Island, though Round says all of them are native English speakers, and speak Lardil to various degrees as a second language. “I met the last fluent speaker of classical Lardil in 2005, and he passed away later that year,” he says.

About 160 Aboriginal languages are still spoken in Australia, and most are endangered. In Mornington Island, the success of Lardil artists and dancers is increasing pride in the Lardil language, too. “Lardil is spoken in everyday conversations by a lot of people, but it’s mainly the older folk who speak Lardil regularly,” says John Armstrong, arts centre manager at the Mirndiyan Gununa Aboriginal Corporation on Mornington Island. “We work with the local school on [Lardil] language lessons that include Kaidildt as well.”

He adds that the island has about 35 active artists, and that the sale of Aboriginal art is the largest contributor to the local economy. “The Kaidildt works are very colourful and abstract, whereas the Lardil works are more muted colours of ochres, browns, and blacks.” As well as exhibiting through galleries in Australian cities, islanders sell their work through their own online gallery.

Stumped? Download the solution, with all the logical steps to get there!

Agency 100 2023: Deloitte Digital

Agency 100 2023: Deloitte Digital

Financially, the pandemic years have been kind to Deloitte Digital’s bottom line, with U.S. chief marketing officer Mark Singer characterizing them as a “hypergrowth period.” The numbers bear that out, with agency revenue spiking from $374 million in 2021 to $441.3 million in 2022, a gain of 18%.

The company’s expansive offering and transformation-first mindset likely have something to do with the recent results. “We view ourselves as a transformation business that lives at the intersection of consulting and creativity, and the entire market has grown tremendously around driving transformation — with digital, with experience, with content, with creative,” Singer says. “There isn’t a company in the healthcare and life sciences sectors that we don’t do work for.”

Singer notes that the post-pandemic period has prompted an even greater emphasis on connecting with customers, patients, physicians and influencers. That, coupled with the industry’s ongoing data revolution, “really helped us accelerate,” Singer continues. “Clients aren’t just saying, ‘Give me my communications solution.’ They’re saying, ‘Give me the thing that will help us transform our business more effectively.’”

To help manage the company’s growth, agency-world veteran Joanna Ruiz joined last year in the newly created role of managing director, Deloitte Health agency head. She notes that the firm’s clients have embraced change and the evolving demands on their day-to-day operations.

“The old way involved working in a linear model. Campaign development would take eight to 12 months, starting with strategy and then going to planning and creative,” she explains. Today, it’s more like a virtuous cycle: “We can bring incredible data that feeds insights — and then those insights feed brand strategy, which feeds campaign and content development, which feeds precision engagement, which feeds measurement. Technology has changed the world and our clients; the marketing people as well as the agencies have to change how they operate to keep up.”

Deloitte Digital increased its staff from 1,753 at the end of 2021 to 1,900 a year later. The company’s major acquisition was Dextra Technologies, a software engineering firm based in Monterrey, Mexico.

“It’s helping us build capabilities around marketing tech, commerce and sales force, and even around content,” Singer says. “And as the Hispanic and Latinx population grows within the U.S., it gives us a more native capability.”

While 30% of Deloitte Digital’s growth last year came from new clients, Singer notes that not all of the logos are new ones to the company: “We may have been working with them on anything from talent strategies to execution or some kind of connectivity.” Clients include pharma giants such as Merck and Sanofi as well as large healthcare systems such as NYU Langone, for which the firm has created digital apps and platforms that allow patients to book doctor appointments and follow up on prescriptions.

“We have teams working in pod-based delivery models at scale on continuous improvement and building on these products,” Singer adds. 

New in-house offerings during the past year included ConvergeHealth CognitiveSpark, a cloud-based platform that uses AI to help companies drive better decision-making in the digital marketing realm. Another new offering, the Deloitte Global Content Studio, facilitates nimbler production of high-volume, high-quality content assets.

Deloitte Digital also grew the size and ambition of its Health Equity Institute, founded in 2020 to help brands put health equity at the root of what they do. Ruiz reports that the program has impacted underserved communities: “We used our data analytics tools to identify sectors in Brooklyn’s gentrifying Crown Heights neighborhood, where folks don’t have the right nutrition or healthcare and are in danger of developing diabetes. Then we helped those individuals get the services they needed.”

Knowing that socioeconomic and mental health pressures have intensified in COVID-19’s wake, Deloitte Digital has also set about building awareness in predominantly Black and Hispanic communities of other health conditions.

A final new tool, the Ethos Offering, is designed to assist business leaders in developing programs around equity, climate change and sustainability.

“It’s about helping clients build sustainable manufacturing, distribution or supply chain practices,” Singer notes. “That allows companies to walk the walk, but do so in a way that benefits the longer-term future of their business.”

Amid it all, Deloitte Digital has stopped to smell the flowers, so to speak. “It’s not just about the work,” Ruiz stresses. “There’s a lot of camaraderie.” The company has grown to occupy eight offices, with Ruiz and Singer operating out of the Hudson Street headquarters in Manhattan. “It’s a great place to work and congregate, with a bar that serves coffee during the day and wine and beer at night.” There is, of course, ping-pong and karaoke.

Ruiz believes that Deloitte was minimally impacted by the pandemic from a business perspective, owing to its traditional consultancy model, which demanded a considerable amount of travel. “Our people have always been either at a client site, in an office or collaborating somewhere. It’s part of our culture to operate in a remote fashion,” she explains.

As for what comes next, neither Singer nor Ruiz expect the company’s current pace to slacken. “Just when you think marketing is going to slow down, something new and interesting gets thrown into the mix,” Singer says, pointing to Deloitte Digital’s “measured approach” toward AI and machine learning.

“We know the dirty little secret, though I can’t quantify it just yet. But right now, if you use AI, it’s probably more expensive than using humans,” he adds. “Still, there’s a lot of promise. Can we use AI to create medically approved content? To streamline an MLR process? To create more personalization so that targeting rare diseases becomes more efficient?”

Despite that cautious approach, Singer is bullish about opportunities to use AI in the realms of content and design. He teases that the firm will unveil “two or three pretty interesting, and maybe even industry-changing, things” in this area in the months ahead.

When asked for her own predictions, Ruiz aims slightly longer-range. “By 2040, healthcare as we know it will no longer exist,” she proclaims. “We’ll use science and data and tech to identify diseases earlier, to intervene proactively and to better understand disease progression to help people feel better and live longer.” 

Deloitte Digital, she adds, wants to keep working with “companies that get that,” and similarly hope to transform health and communication ecosystems. “There’s so much transformation happening in health and digital and AI — the impact is going to be profound.”  

. . .

Our marketing role model…

Chidiebere Ibe, an artist and med student, noted the absence of diverse medical illustrations and aimed to fix that gap himself by creating positive, accurate images for the healthcare system. Often the best work stems from the creative collision of unexpected ideas, and Ibe’s beautiful, yet illuminating, art illustrations offer the perfect example of that collision in action — while marking a tangible step toward increasing representation in medicine. He’s not invested in effecting positive change for the sake of marketing and sales, but instead utilizes these as tools in his efforts for change. — Singer

New exhibit at Woodstock Museum focuses on portrait photography of the past

New exhibit at Woodstock Museum focuses on portrait photography of the past

Long before taking a selfie was as easy as pulling your phone out of your pocket, capturing a portrait was a serious undertaking. 

A new exhibit at the Woodstock Museum gives a snapshot into the history of portrait photography as far back as 160 years ago — from the late 1800s to early 1900s — when smiles were a rare sight.

Don’t Smile opened Saturday and highlights about 100 vintage portraits collected in Oxford County, curated from the Museum’s collection of more than 13,000 images. 

“We don’t think anything of taking a photo now,” said Adam Pollard, curator of collection at the Woodstock Museum. “Back then…it would have been a big event.”

The exhibit goes back in time to when getting a portrait taken was an expensive endeavour, said Pollard.

three kids in a sepia photo portrait
This photo from 1865 of Daisy, George and John Rose is featured in the ‘Don’t Smile’ exhibit. In most early portrait photography no one is smiling, which comes out of portrait painting, said curator Adam Pollard. (Submitted by Woodstock Museum)

It takes us back to an earlier time where this was an outing, an event — and even owning a photograph in early times was something special, he said. 

“You had to get dressed up, you have to go to a studio, you would be posed in positions. They would take a couple of photos, and hopefully they would get a good one.” 

The first commercial photography came around by 1849, but it didn’t get to places like Woodstock or London until the 1850s or 1860s. Back then, copper plates and chemical solutions were used to develop photos.

Smiles were rare in early portrait photography

Don’t Smile comes out of the fact that in most early photography, you don’t see anyone smiling,” said Pollard.

While there are a lot of theories why, Pollard said it comes out of sitting for long periods of time for portrait paintings, as the next evolution of the portrait.

On top of that, the first portrait photography required long exposure times upwards of 20 seconds. “It was hard to hold a smile for that long,” he said, though as technology evolved, the time soon came down to a second or two. 

man in low lighting inside
Adam Pollard, curator of collection at the Woodstock Museum, says that in the later 1800s getting your portrait taken was an event and something we take for granted today. (Submitted by Woodstock Museum)

Back then, copper plates and chemical solutions were used to develop photos, but came at a high cost. When glass plates came around, the cost went down. Photos could printed into multiple copies on paper.

More smiles emerged when the Kodak Brownie camera was released in the early 1900s. People started taking their own candid snapshots with people smiling. That bled into the majority of photographic studios around that time.

The exhibit features some famous faces from history such as Alexander Graham Bell, John A. MacDonald and con artist Cassie Chadwick. 

museum panel with old portrait photos
Cabinet cards were the primary style of portrait photography from after the 1870s to the early 1900s, according to the exhibit. They were photos printed on paper and mounted on a card. (Submitted by Woodstock Museum)

For those looking to capture a bit of the past, a historic studio camera and portable studio camera from the late 1800s or early 1900s are on display. The cameras, on loan from Annandale National Historic Site and Museum, were once used in a Tillsonburg photography studio, Pollard said.

The photos used in the exhibit are all reproductions because light can be very damaging for old photographs, he said. It also allows them to do some enhancements to faded or damaged photos. 

 “It’s very important for us to keep the collection safe,” he said. 

Pollard will be giving a curator talk on how to care for photographic images on Saturday, June 10 at 2:30 p.m. at the City of Woodstock’s Cultural Canvas event.


WHERE TO FIND IT:

What: Don’t Smile: A selection of early photographic portraits exhibit.
Runs: June 10 to September 9.
Where: Woodstock Museum National Historical Site, 466 Dundas St. in Woodstock, Ont.

Capturing the Moment at Tate Modern: all killer, no filler

Capturing the Moment at Tate Modern: all killer, no filler
A

bsolute bangers abound in Tate Modern’s latest show. In the show’s biggest room, with Marlene Dumas, Peter Doig and Luc Tuymans close by, is arguably David Hockney’s best painting, Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures), made in 1972. You surely know it: a depiction of his lover Peter Schlesinger looking down into a pool in which a man breaststrokes beneath the surface, with verdant French hills behind.

It’s the great summation of his Sixties and Seventies obsessions: pools and bathers, enigmatic double portraits, queer desire and longing, sardonic riffs on abstraction.

The split composition is daring: chlorine up close, chlorophyll beyond. The painting is also a marvellous exposition of the mechanics of its medium, from the glistering highlights on the stylised ripples in the pool, the subtly modulated colouring on the poolside tiles, and the inspired painterly shorthand for trees and mountains in the landscape.

Its significance in this show is its deep relationship with photography. Hockney conceived of the scene through a serendiptious spotting of a pair of unrelated photographs on the studio floor, which gave him the idea of the standing figure looking down on the swimmer. In the complex process of making the painting, he took hundreds of photographs that he then used in the two-week burst of activity that brought the painting to its completion.

imageRichard Hamilton, Towards a definitive statement on the coming trends in menswear and accessories (a) Together let us explore the stars (1962) ” height=”1869″ width=”2500″ srcset=”https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Richard%20Hamilton%2C%20Towards%20a%20definitive%20statement%20%20The%20estate%20of%20Richard%20Hamilton.%20Image%20%20Tate%20%28Oliver%20Cowling%20%20Lucy.jpeg?width=320&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2500%3A1869%2Csmart 320w, https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Richard20Hamilton2C20Towards20a20definitive20statement2020The20estate20of20Richard20Hamilton.20Image2020Tate2028Oliver20Cowling2020Lucy.jpeg 640w, https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Richard%20Hamilton%2C%20Towards%20a%20definitive%20statement%20%20The%20estate%20of%20Richard%20Hamilton.%20Image%20%20Tate%20%28Oliver%20Cowling%20%20Lucy.jpeg?width=960&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2500%3A1869%2Csmart 960w” layout=”responsive” class=”i-amphtml-layout-responsive i-amphtml-layout-size-defined” i-amphtml-layout=”responsive”>

Richard Hamilton, Towards a definitive statement on the coming trends in menswear and accessories (a) Together let us explore the stars (1962)

/ © The estate of Richard Hamilton/Tate

I was expecting much more from Hockney in this show. He’s spent decades expounding on his theories of the relationship between the camera and the brush, the human eye and the photographic lens (including some controversial statements about the limits of photography), so a show exploring what it calls “the dynamic relationship” between the two disciplines would seem an ideal stage on which to explore this in depth.

But Capturing the Moment is emphatically not that kind of show. I imagined something exhaustive and exhausting; the kind of dense, comprehensive survey that has defined Tate Modern’s programme – dozens of rooms, a 500-page catalogue, a whole world of theory about mediated images and mechanical eyes. But while the show begins with a great Susan Sontag quote – “The painter constructs, the photographer discloses” – it’s largely pretty lightweight intellectually, with no catalogue, and a meandering thematic structure.

And while at the core of the show are a couple of rooms where photography is centre stage – including marvellous, vast pieces by Jeff Wall, key figures in the Düsseldorf School, Andreas Gursky, Thomas Struth and Candida Höfer, and the cool calm of Hiroshi Sugimoto’s seascapes – it’s mostly a show about painting that relates to photography. But even then, it doesn’t really analyse how. You could say it has a blurry focus.

imageLouise Lawler, Splash (2006) ” height=”3449″ width=”2756″ srcset=”https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Louise%20Lawler%2C%20Splash%2C%202006%2C%20printed%202012%20%20Louise%20Lawler.jpg?width=320&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2756%3A3449%2Csmart 320w, https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Louise20Lawler2C20Splash2C2020062C20printed2020122020Louise20Lawler.jpg 640w, https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Louise%20Lawler%2C%20Splash%2C%202006%2C%20printed%202012%20%20Louise%20Lawler.jpg?width=960&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2756%3A3449%2Csmart 960w” layout=”responsive” class=”i-amphtml-layout-responsive i-amphtml-layout-size-defined” i-amphtml-layout=”responsive”>

Louise Lawler, Splash (2006)

/ Louise Lawler

This is in part because it’s effectively an introduction to a private collection, that belonging to the YAGEO Foundation, founded by the collector Pierre Chen, who runs an electronic components company in Taiwan. Chen must have deep pockets – the Hockney was briefly the most expensive artwork by a living artist when it sold for more than $90m at Christie’s in 2018 – and he’s assembled a collection that’s clearly rich in both photography and painting. So it doesn’t take a huge leap of the imagination to picture how they arrived at the shape of this exhibition, which accompanies the YAGEO holdings with works from Tate’s collection.

What it lacks in intellectual rigour, though, it makes up for in stonkingly great works. Early on, there’s a rare pairing of photograph and painting of the kind I wish we could see more often – two images of mid-century humanitarian turmoil, which aptly illustrate Sontag’s maxim. Picasso’s Weeping Woman (1937), that devastating picture evoking the tragedy of the Spanish Civil War, turns to face Dorothea Lange’s defining image of the Great Depression, made a year before Picasso’s painting, Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California.

In both images, the woman’s hand is raised to her face, but Picasso can use the fractured forms of his post-cubist language to capture a shattering grief, while Lange had to find a precise moment in which to convey a similar depth of emotion. This pairing perhaps conveys a second meaning in the exhibition’s title most effectively – that of the different ways in which painting and photography represent the times in which they were made.

imageFrancis Bacon, Study for a Pope VI (1961) ” height=”7098″ width=”5629″ srcset=”https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Francis%20Bacon%2C%20Study%20for%20a%20Pope%20VI%2C%201961%2C%20Yageo%20Foundation%20Collection%2C%20Taiwan.%20%20The%20Estate%20of%20Francis%20Bacon.%20All%20rights%20reserved.%20DACS.jpg?width=320&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=5629%3A7098%2Csmart 320w, https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Francis20Bacon2C20Study20for20a20Pope20VI2C2019612C20Yageo20Foundation20Collection2C20Taiwan.2020The20Estate20of20Francis20Bacon.20All20rights20reserved.20DACS.jpg 640w, https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Francis%20Bacon%2C%20Study%20for%20a%20Pope%20VI%2C%201961%2C%20Yageo%20Foundation%20Collection%2C%20Taiwan.%20%20The%20Estate%20of%20Francis%20Bacon.%20All%20rights%20reserved.%20DACS.jpg?width=960&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=5629%3A7098%2Csmart 960w” layout=”responsive” class=”i-amphtml-layout-responsive i-amphtml-layout-size-defined” i-amphtml-layout=”responsive”>

Francis Bacon, Study for a Pope VI (1961)

/ The Estate of Francis Bacon

Similarly mournful is Lucian Freud’s portrait of his mother nearby, one of 18 he made of her following his father’s death, and among his most moving works. Freud, ever a painter from life, is one of the more unfathomable inclusions in the show – one senses he’s here to support his old mate Francis Bacon, whose work is one of the most remarkable explorations of how paint can respond to the photographic image. Bacon’s portrait triptych of Freud from YAGEO’s collection here is a marker of what he called the “violence” he did to his sitters, using photographs – Freud’s face is all sinew and bruised flesh amid a blood-red ground.

There are marvellously productive conversations between painters all through the show: Bacon opposite Marwan, the Syrian painter, whose painting of the writer Bader Chaker al Sayyab pictures the poet’s head with a slab of meat above it, seemingly about to crush it. Opposite the Hockney there’s a fantastic wall of British and US pop art using photographs – Pauline Boty’s wry comment on pin-ups in which the writer and artist Derek Marlowe sits cheerily beneath four bluntly severed portraits of Marilyn-esque women; a magnificent Robert Rauschenberg silkscreen painting, Almanac (1962); and a thrillingly austere Andy Warhol Brando painting. Two artists that could have commanded entire exhibitions with their relentless interrogation of the photographic image, Gerhard Richter and Wilhelm Sasnal, share a transcendent space.

imageAndy Warhol, Self Portrait (1966-7) ” height=”2247″ width=”2229″ srcset=”https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Andy%20Warhol%2C%20Self%20Portrait%201966-7%2C%20Yageo%20Foundation%20Collection.%202023%20The%20Andy%20Warhol%20Foundation%20for%20the%20Visual%20Arts%2C%20Inc.%20%282%29.jpg?width=320&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2229%3A2247%2Csmart 320w, https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Andy20Warhol2C20Self20Portrait201966-72C20Yageo20Foundation20Collection.20202320The20Andy20Warhol20Foundation20for20the20Visual20Arts2C20Inc.2028229.jpg 640w, https://static.standard.co.uk/2023/06/12/08/Andy%20Warhol%2C%20Self%20Portrait%201966-7%2C%20Yageo%20Foundation%20Collection.%202023%20The%20Andy%20Warhol%20Foundation%20for%20the%20Visual%20Arts%2C%20Inc.%20%282%29.jpg?width=960&auto=webp&quality=100&crop=2229%3A2247%2Csmart 960w” layout=”responsive” class=”i-amphtml-layout-responsive i-amphtml-layout-size-defined” i-amphtml-layout=”responsive”>

Andy Warhol, Self Portrait (1966-7)

/ The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

A compelling subplot is Tate showing off its great collection of contemporary painters. Works by Michael Armitage, Lisa Brice, Christina Quarles, Laura Owens and Njideka Akunyili Crosby, among others – all acquired in the past decade – show how productively and distinctively artists are grappling with the photograph and the screen.

Tate should, at some point, do the great scholarly painting-meets-photography show I expected. If you want real insight into the tension between these two disciplines, you won’t get it here. But you will see dozens of out-and-out bangers, and that’s enough for now.

Tate Modern, to January 29, 2024; tate.org.uk

Journalist, Arts Professional

Journalist, Arts Professional

This is a truly exciting time to join Arts Professional, the UK’s leading B2B digital publication serving the arts and cultural sector at a time of significant change in the industry.

With a website, a series of weekly e-bulletins and solid social media presence, we serve professionals working in or with the arts sector, across the full spectrum of art forms. This summer we will go live with a new modern publishing platform and updated branding. 

Known for our high-quality investigative journalism and in-depth research-based coverage, we report on the stories that arts professionals need to develop their organisations and their work – everything from cultural policy and research, to fundraising and marketing, to advocacy and best practice. From time to time, we run our own surveys to gather the perceptions and opinions of the cultural sector on hot topics and key policy areas.

What does the role involve?

The role offers the chance to get involved in all aspects of editorial content, be part of the editorial decision-making process and be given responsibilities not available in a larger organisation. The successful candidate needs to be self-motivated, trustworthy, flexible and an adaptable self-starter. 

The purpose of the role is to source, research, write and publish relevant high-quality news content for this well-established and respected digital publication for people who work in the arts and culture sector. 

Is this the job for you?

The role will suit a journalist with professional experience, a keen interest in news journalism and, ideally, relevant expertise in the arts sector. This home-working role will suit a keen self-starter capable of working both independently and as a team player. Our team meet several times a year in London.

Sounds like the job for you? Then take a look at the Job Pack for more details of the company, the role, and the qualities we’re looking for. 

Job Pack

How to apply

To apply, please submit a cover letter outlining how your skills and experience meet or exceed the person specification and why you would like to work for Arts Professional (max 1 A4 sheet), along with your CV and two examples of your  published articles.

Applications will be anonymised before being considered by the panel, and  shortlisted candidates will be asked to complete an equality and diversity 
questionnaire.

Please send your application to our HR colleagues at careers@baker-richards.com

Closing date for applications: 8am on Monday 26 June 2023
Candidates will be invited for interview: 6 or 7 July 2023

Super sculpture Saturday

Super sculpture Saturday
Some of the most talented and imaginative artists from all around the region and the state entered their artworks into the Yelarbon Sculpture Day on June 10, with some truly amazing artistic feats on display. 12 artists and 24 sculptures were on display on Saturday. Michelle Irlam from Barntree Studio in South Maclean, Brisbane won […]