人妻少妇专区

Close Enough: Belonging,
Intimacy & Representation

In 1947, two years after WWII ended, four war photographers founded Magnum Photos. Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, George Rodger and David 鈥淐him鈥 Seymour had each reported on the atrocities and conflicts of the 20th聽century and were recalibrating to a new world. The agency was a new type of collaboration, departing from conventional practice to allow copyright to be held by the artist, not by the magazine that published the work. Almost 100 photographers have been part of the collective, diversifying to include women and people of colour, and 49 are active members today.聽Much of society has changed since the agency was established, with digital photography, smartphones, social media and generative AI redefining what it means to take and share an image. New generations of lens-based practitioners question what it means to document, asking how ethics and fairness can influence the making of a project. Nevertheless, Magnum continues to endure as the most famous agency in the world, featuring artists whose work gets to the heart of our uncertain and precarious contemporary moment.聽

Now, C/O Berlin hosts聽Close Enough聽as part of the gallery鈥檚 25th聽anniversary. The exhibition, which was initially displayed at the International Center of Photography, New York, in 2022, features 12 women photographers from the acclaimed Magnum agency. The show is inspired by a famous quote from co-founder, Robert Capa: 鈥淚f your pictures aren鈥檛 good enough, you鈥檙e not close enough.鈥 Here, this assertion is expanded it beyond its original context of war photography to consider a different aspect of proximity: the trust, complicity and connection that exists between artist and subject. Featured works tell of belonging, intimacy and representation, whilst also addressing foreignness, vulnerability and power.聽聽

The debate surrounding “closeness” is central to the documentary image. Since the invention of the medium, questions have been asked about how to strike the delicate balance of bearing witness without shaping a narrative, considering how images can both reveal and distort lived realities. At the heart of the discussion is a concern for consent, agency and the photographer鈥檚 responsibility to portray people with clarity, dignity and cultural sensitivity. It鈥檚 a conversation that has defined the evolution of Magnum, with 鈥渙bjective鈥 war reportage giving way to a more nuanced approach, raising questions rather than providing authoritative responses as to what happened. Fred Ritchin, curator and art historian, writes: 鈥渇or today鈥檚 younger generation of photographers there is much less of a sense that simply reporting on an injustice is sufficient, and there is a much more complex awareness as to what is or is not possible to explain.鈥澛

At C/O Berlin, there is no attempt to provide answers, instead, the debate is held up to scrutiny and audiences are invited to look more carefully at creative practice. Each of the 12 featured artists share their approach, and works are accompanied by short texts describing the projects from a personal perspective. They鈥檙e complimented by an audio guide, expanding the exhibition to include commentary and reflections by the participating photographers. The variety of this show makes it particularly compelling, with approaches that range from long-term collaborative projects to observations of social processes.聽

Projects that stem from long-term relationships are a core part of Close Enough. Here, the key to a good shot is trust and collaboration. One of the most famous lens-based pratitioners of the 20th聽century, Susan Meiselas, embodies this approach. She is best-known for work in Latin America, covering the insurrection in Nicaragua, and life under the dictatorial Pinochet regime in Chile where she embedded herself in the community, working with local photographers to put together a powerful project that illuminated life under the government. Meanwhile, Bieke Depoorter often uses accidental encounters as her starting point and allows the evolution of these interactions to shape her trajectory.聽In聽the moving-image work聽Agata, she grappled the connection between artist, subject, audience and the medium itself. The piece was created over the course of five years, made in collaboration with a Polish woman, Agata Kay, whom she met in a strip club in Paris. Together, they formed a small alternate reality that served as a container for them to explore questions they each had regarding identity, performance and representation.

Several photographers focus on the female body, questioning societal expectations of women and the pervasiveness of the male gaze. Sabiha 脟imen explores the experiences of young Islamic women in Turkey and aims to give greater visibility to Muslim women in the art world. Her iconic image of veiled girls on a pink, garish rollercoaster is, as she described to the聽骋耻补谤诲颈补苍,听鈥渁 symbol of serious, religious observance next to a site of pleasure and youthful abandon.鈥 Olivia Arthur is similarly able to capture deep, reflective shots that explore personal and cultural identities. Her residency with Fabrica saw her begin working on a series about women and cultural divides, a topic that has defined the rest of her career. One of her most famous series聽Jeddah Diary聽(2012), follows the lives of young women in Saudi Arabia, offering 鈥渁 glimpse behind those often closed doors, piecing together an understanding of the bubble-world that they live in.鈥 Also featured is Hannah Price鈥檚 internationally celebrated project聽City of Brotherly Love聽(2009-2012), a series featuring men who catcalled her on the streets of Philadelphia. It鈥檚 an empowering project, turning the camera on those who sought to objectify her in an act of reclamation.聽

Together, the works featured in聽Close Enough聽paint a vivid and nuanced portrait of contemporary documentary photography. They raise vital questions about relationships to subjects, ethics and what it means to portray complex socio-political issues in a single shot. The artists remind us that an image is always a collaboration 鈥 and is immensely stronger for it.聽


Close Enough is at C/O Berlin until 28 January:

Words: Emma Jacob


Image Credits:

1&5. Somayeh, Teheran, Iran, 2010 漏 Newsha Tavakolian / Magnum Photos.
2. Dragonflies catching mosquitoes, Yakutia, Russia, July 2021 漏 Nanna Heitmann / Magnum Photos.聽
3. Everyday After Work, West Philly, 2010 漏 Hannah Price / Magnum Photos.
4. A plane flying low over students at an amusement park, Istanbul, Turkey, 2018 漏 Sabiha 脟imen/ Magnum Photos.聽
6. The Necklace, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1999聽漏 Alessandra Sanguinetti/Magnum Photos.