Examples of relay in contemporary photographic practice include Sophie Calle’s Take Care of Yourself and Sophy Rickett’s Objects in the Field (see interview in the Appendix to this course guide) where clashes of understanding or interpretation work together to create a perhaps incomplete but nonetheless enriching dialogue between artist and viewer. Look these pieces up online. Investigate the rationale behind the pieces and see if you can find any critical responses to them. Write down your own responses in your learning log. How do these two pieces of work reflect postmodern approaches to narrative? Some definitions: Anchorage: words that help limit the meaning of an image or ‘anchor’ its meaning. Relay: alters or advances the. meaning. – Text that advances the image by supplying meanings not found in the image itself. example: film dialogue, ‘zine captions, visual pun. Image and text brings their own new bit of information to the overall message. Postmodernism: Postmodernism is a broad term used to describe movements in a wide range of disciplines, including art, philosophy, critical theory, and music. Many view it as a response to the preceding modernist movement, but where modernism simply reacts against classical concepts, particularly in the arts and […]
Examples of relay in contemporary photographic practice include Sophie Calle’s Take Care of Yourself and Sophy Rickett’s Objects in the Field (see interview in the Appendix to this course guide) where clashes of understanding or interpretation work together to create a perhaps incomplete but nonetheless enriching dialogue between artist and viewer. Look these pieces up online. Investigate the rationale behind the pieces and see if you can find any critical responses to them. Write down your own responses in your learning log. ● How do these two pieces of work reflect postmodern approaches to narrative? According to Barthes the two most easily identified linguistic messages with regard to images are ‘anchoring’ and ‘relaying. Images can have multiple related meanings and are thus said to be ‘polysemous, and in terms of linguistic messaging “ “its main signifier (sound image), or the name we have given it, a ‘floating chain’ of signifieds or ideas about what it really is, exists in our minds. When readers see an image they can select some ‘signifieds’ (words/phrases used to describe it) and ignore the rest depending on cultural norms or context. Being polysemic, however, is not necessarily advantageous because it allows us to question the […]
Some photographs in Country doctor can be encountered on their own with each providing its own narrative- see examples below: