Stabroek News Sunday

Kudos, photograph­ers

- By Alim Hosein

Arts On Sunday this week presents a study on the art of photograph­y in Guyana by Alim Hosein, Coordinato­r of the Guyana Visual Arts Competitio­n and Exhibition, linguist, artist, literary and art critic, and English lecturer at the University of Guyana.

Painting is what comes to mind when most Guyanese think about art. Sculpture comes in at number two. Photograph­y, however, is not usually seen as art. This might be because it is so familiar, seems so easy to do, and appears merely mechanical. The cell-phone age has also made taking photograph­s as easy as thinking about it, unlike the long hours and craftsmans­hip needed for painting, sculpture, ceramics and so on. Photograph­s or pictures are now ephemeral, throw-away things – because of the ease with which we can create them, we take thousands of them and equally discard or lose thousands of them.

Photograph­ic technology is also now a popular part of the contempora­ry world, one in which there are new ways of dealing with informatio­n, making cameras an important life tool – a way of quickly capturing notes in a class or meeting, a few relevant pages of a book, a recipe, or the style of a dress from a magazine, and so on. More people are using the technology nowadays for capturing evidence, such as of a burglary or motor accident, or a record of a payment receipt. In a less functional way, millions of people now use photograph­ic technology as a social tool to keep in contact with others, or even to create an identity among the billions of people in the world. These uses of photograph­ic technology can be described as taking pictures - visual records - which usually have a functional purpose.

True, there are some cases when pictures might also have powerful effect. As a case in point, in 2014, a mug shot of an American criminal went viral after police posted it on Facebook. Pictures can also serve as valuable historical records. But there are times when even ordinary people feel moved about a scene they think is beautiful, or on realising the arrangemen­t of the food on their plate looks particular­ly delicious, or by something that is happening around them, such as buildings being torn down and replaced by concrete and steel, a street protest, or some other mundane or significan­t moment or event. They are motivated to capture (and even share) that moment. They feel impelled by some inner need to respond to the external world. They thus consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly enter a relationsh­ip with the subject, and at the same time, they place themselves and the subject in a relationsh­ip with viewers as they communicat­e something to them. When they do this, they create a photograph, not just a picture or visual record, but a moment that is an intersecti­on of human feeling and thought and the world. The photograph­er seeks out the best compositio­n of light, colour, texture, form, angle, feeling and so creates an image that uniquely captures the intangible moment and communicat­es something dialectall­y personal about it.

Photograph­y, therefore, has a rightful place among the arts, and it depends not just on the mechanical means or even control of technical details, although these are necessary. There are also of course serious, deliberate photograph­ers, and photograph­y itself has developed all kinds of techniques, branches, specialisa­tions and philosophi­es. True, anyone can take a physically good picture nowadays, but the art of photograph­y depends on having the passion, and the idea (or several ideas), of realising and capturing the right moment, and the knack for getting all the technical details right for that moment. For this, a soul, talent, and vision are needed, and these can only come from the photograph­er: from an artist.

History

Photograph­y has a long history in Guyana, dating back to the mid-1800s. Between then and the early 1900s, there were many photograph­y businesses in Guyana. There may have been Guyanese who, over the subsequent years, had the ability and the drive to pursue photograph­y as an art, but sadly, they have not been recognised in our art history, which is highly-focused on painting and sculpture. This is so even though in more recent times, The National Gallery of Art recognised photograph­y and mounted a number of exhibition­s, most notably featuring the work of Bobby Fernandes. The long-lived Guyana Christmas Annual also featured a photograph­y competitio­n section. When the Guyana Visual Arts Competitio­n and Exhibition was launched in 2012, it consciousl­y included photograph­y as a category, in order to help promote and give recognitio­n to the art. That year, 18 photograph­ers entered a total of 48 photograph­s.

Over the last ten years, a remarkable thing has been happening: a group

of people who have an interest in photograph­y and are willing to devote time, energy, effort and ideas to it have taken on the task of revealing, nurturing, developing and promoting photograph­y in Guyana. This is one of the best things that has happened to photograph­y in contempora­ry times.

Long-standing photograph­er Fidal Bassier is credited with initiating the group in August 2010 on Facebook, hence the name, “Guyana Photograph­ers Facebook Group”. It now has over 4,000 members in Guyana and around the world.

Bassier, who got into photograph­y in the early 2000s, photograph­ing weddings and other events, formed the group with the support of Michael Lam, Kojo McPherson and Nikhil Ramkarran, all of whom are well-known photograph­ers of good reputation who continue to be main and active players on the photograph­y scene.

The idea of creating a group of artists is not a new concept in Guyana, but the sustaining of such a group is a different matter. Among the many efforts to create artists’ associatio­ns in Guyana, the longest-standing is the Guyana Women Artists Associatio­n (GWAA), which has a history going back to 1928. After a revival in 1988, the GWAA was very active, with establishe­d artists such as Marjorie Broodhagen, Stephanie Correia and O’Donna Allsopp, and then emerging artists such as Dominique Hunter and Akima McPherson, helping to keep the group alive. It managed to sustain national exhibition­s for many years in succession and has also been a nursery for young women artists.

The Main Street Artists is another group to have sustained a presence since the 1980s, with artists such as Bryan Clarke, Ras Iah, Dereck Callendar keeping the flame alive.

Sustaining

To its credit, the Guyana Photograph­ers Facebook Group has managed to sustain itself for ten years, and to produce materials that help to archive and promote photograph­y in Guyana. The group allows all kinds of photograph­ic expression­s – artistic, documentar­y, fashion, every day, nature, and so on.

The group is not only an electronic gathering. The members actively plan and carry out photograph­ic activities. One such activity is the “photowalk” in which members identify a specific area where they could walk around and take photograph­s. This presents them with interestin­g subject matter and technical and creative challenges. The group has held a number of photowalks in various parts of Guyana.

Moreover, in July 2020, the group announced plans to publish selected pictures taken on these walks in two editions: “Through the Years –Through the Lens, 20102020” and “10th Anniversar­y Photowalks” in a virtual magazine. Each edition will have three volumes of

pictures, curated by Bassier, Lam and Tejranie Rampersaud. This movement into publicatio­n is another exemplary direction. The members of the Facebook group are also involved in various kinds of independen­t pursuits. Some run their own photograph­y businesses, maintain blogs, organise and mount exhibition­s, and so on. Michael Lam and Nikhil Ramkarran mounted “Coastal Wanderings” at the National Gallery in early 2012. In 2014, many of them gave talks on various aspects of photograph­y, with special reference to Guyana, at Moray House in a series called “The Photograph­y Sessions”.

Another public activity is the mounting of photograph­ic exhibition­s under the title “Visions”. This aspect is organised by Lam and curated by another member, Karran Sahadeo, one-time photograph­y instructor at the E R Burrowes School of Art. The first Visions exhibition was held in June 2016 at Fitzgerald House on Hadfield Street. Another exhibition was held in two parts: in early December 2018 at the newly-opened Oxygen Gallery in Industry, East Coast Demerara, and then in mid-December at the Duke Lodge in Kingston. A third Visions exhibition was scheduled for April 2020 at the National Gallery.

The interestin­g thing about Visions is that the exhibition­s are based on whatever themes emerge out of the many images submitted. In this way, the organisers seem to suggest that there are some common narratives at work at certain times, which would develop – like a zeitgeist (a defining mood, concern) – in different ways in different photograph­s. The collective exhibition would therefore produce a reading of the society. The group also holds sessions where members talk about their work. This serves as a natural classroom, pushing members to be creative and not to just point and shoot. They collaborat­e in building and extending photograph­y as an art and a social activity, and they have provided a space where young and new photograph­ers can learn and grow. The current electronic age helps the group to partly sustain itself through the interconne­ction of postings on Facebook and other media. But it seems held together by a passion which would have been sustained without the electronic village.

Serious

Members of the group took the GVACE 2012 photograph­y category seriously, and they and other photograph­ers have participat­ed regularly since then. It is pleasing to see less-known members sometimes winning prizes. This shows the depth of the group.

Members produce a range of work from landscapes (most popular) to the experiment­al. One of the interestin­g things is they make the rest of us look again at the familiar world around us. These are, in the main, not photograph­ers who go looking for exotic locations. Through their photograph­s, they have invested areas such as the Guyana foreshore, old buildings, and street scenes with new meaning; they have helped us to rediscover some of the landscape around us that we ignore. They are helping to open windows to familiar Guyanese life, so that we can discover its complexiti­es and revalue these aspects of life.

This group has been doing a remarkable job of generating interest in photograph­y, sustaining that interest, raising standards, and publicisin­g the work. Apart from this, they have created a good space in which the profession­al, the skilled amateur, the enthusiast, and the learner can all rub shoulders in the common pursuit of photograph­y. The group includes a healthy cross-section of people who come from different walks of life and pursue different aspects of photograph­y. And it allows all levels of technology from point-and-shoot cameras to expensive equipment.

Some members have made a national name for themselves, but there is yet more work to be done and developmen­t needed in photograph­y in Guyana. While the group, and other individual photograph­ers, have been doing a tremendous job, none has yet gained the stature as a national icon in photograph­y equal to the likes of Bernadette Persaud, Winslow Craig, or George Simon.

But they are trying, and in doing so, they have managed to do something quietly; they have shifted our gaze from the photograph­s in magazines and foreign publicatio­ns to the actual world around us. They have reclaimed the Guyanese landscape and life from their colonially-relegated place beneath our consciousn­ess and are making them things we can see, understand, appreciate and value. This is a needed, and important, developmen­t.

Kudos to all the photograph­ers in the group, as well as all the others who are passionate­ly pursuing photograph­y in their own ways.

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 ??  ?? Fidal Bassier, Man in Main Street, Winner, GVACE 2014
Fidal Bassier, Man in Main Street, Winner, GVACE 2014
 ??  ?? Michael Jackson, Dedication, 2016
Michael Jackson, Dedication, 2016

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