First Draft
Last September, Benchallal came to NYUAD for a scholarly discussion about her project, led by the university’s Professor of Literature and Visual Studies, Shamoon Zamir. During the hour-long, the audience learnt about Benchallal’s personal journey as a photographer as well as the motives and aims fueling her current project.
What is interesting about Benchallal’s photographs is that they focus not just on woman but on woman in the Muslim world. Although there are passages of the Qur’an that support equality between men and woman, there have been frequent interpretations that “limit the rights of woman and deny equality” (p. 165). This is why there is an even greater struggle for the woman’s movement in such countries and why it has been slow in the making, although process is being made. Also, it’s interesting how the majority of the woman in Benchallal’s pictures are covered and veiled; they observe the world from a hidden vantage point and usually go by unobserved.
Photographs are unlike other pieces of artwork in that they rely on a subject, someone whose image is being captured rather than designed. Benchallal has very direct aims with her photographic work but how much authorship does she have in creating the images or is she merely capturing what is already there?
Vilen Flusser gives a significant amount of responsibility directly the apparatus – the camera - that is used to capture and transform these particles rather than to the photographer. He argues that photographs are “envisioned surfaces computed from particles” (33), that they depict events in the particle universe (35) and transform the “abstract particles” into the “concrete” (34) and that “a photograph shows a chemist how specific molecules of silver compound have reacted to specific photons” (35).
Even when simply “capturing what is there”, the photographer has to make choices and decisions about how to portray what they see. These choices are called “necessary decisions” in the photography world and they include everything from the technical aspects such as aperture, shutter speed and focal length to editing, framing and the baseline decision of what to take a picture of. The photographer has “a range of possible settings at her disposal” and actively making decisions of how to take the photograph. Making these choices means that the “photographer’s intentions, beliefs, and decisions do play a central role in the process of production of a photograph”, it is simply not true that a camera in itself is solely responsible for the final product. The photographer as an individual making both personal and artistic choices “has a great influence on the way the resulting photograph looks.”
In “Three Kinds of Realism”, it is argued that these choices are taken not just on face value of what the image will visually look like, but with the direct aim. The photographer will alter the settings of the camera “depending on what the photographer wants to convey, that is, depending on the story she wants to tell us with her photograph.”
Nadia Benchallal is very clear in what she wants her photographs to accomplish: she wishes to “explores how the women are becoming emancipated and modernized while keeping their culture and traditions in conservative societies”. Her photographs are not accidental results of releasing the shutter, she has authored these images in order to tell a story.
In this image, two women wearing veils are walking down a street at nightfall. They face away from the camera, seemingly in conversation, and one of the woman clutches the arm of the other. A striking characteristic of this photograph is the blurry, slightly out of focus look it has. This effect comes from a combination of the aperture and the shutter speed variations and it creates an appearance of movement and of speed. These women are walking with a purpose. What I find intriguing, however, is the story behind this image. Benchallal explained during her interview that these woman are hurrying home from an afternoon at the beach. The call for curfew had gone off and they are hurrying home to escape the night. This story is not transmitted in the photograph though.
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