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Terrace Court 2004 Photo: Alec Soth |
Every once in a while, the Materialist has a fantasy of chucking this whole editing thing and running off to start a gallery. She likes art. She HAS art. And more and more frequently, she finds artists much more pleasant company than writers, who are, granted, more articulate on the whole than many artists, but who unfortunately are also given to employing their eloquence to complain, endlessly, about the many neuroses from which they suffer, and about the many forces they feel are conspiring against them. Writers also tend to be lonely, and spend long hours sitting in their boxer shorts at home, blogging. (Not that the Materialist is talking about anyone specific here! God no!)
In the end, none of this is probably very true, but the Materialist has lately become ever more convinced about artists' superiority as fellow citizens because of a blog by a photographer named Alec Soth. Soth is a Magnum photographer and the artist of a sad, witty, tough, and harshly beautiful series called "Sleeping by the Mississippi"(1999-2002), and the recent "Niagara." The Materialist first learned of his work a few years ago from her dear friend, Yossi Milo, who used to represent Soth (and who makes being a gallerist look so easy that he can be held at least partially responsible for the Materialist's unreasonable fantasies), and, she must admit, owns three prints from "Mississippi," which she bought during one of her many bouts of semi-employment on $200 installments. But as much as the Materialist admires Soth's work, she is equally impressed by Soth's blog, which is remarkable both for his generosity, his unstinting praise for and admiration of his fellow artists, but also for the serious, searching conversation he holds with its readers-and himself-about the nature of photography, and art, itself, its purposes, its meanings, its responsibilities. Reading through his blog, the Materialist is reminded of what a great photographer can do-how the camera becomes not just a way of seeing, but a way of puzzling. The photographer carries on an argument with himself, and the image he takes is, if successful, a distillation of every theory, and contradiction, and conflicting thought he may have had, all captured in a frame. But in Soth's blog, one actually sees this argument in words-it's a wonderful diary of engagement, and a sort of intimacy of thought that the Materialist feels lucky, every day, to read.