Reproducing the indigenous: John Møller’s studio portraits of Greenlanders in context

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Acta Borealia Pub Date : 2016-07-02 DOI:10.1080/08003831.2016.1238175
Ingeborg Høvik
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Between 1889 and 1922, John Møller (1867–1935), the first professional Greenlandic photographer, produced more than 3000 glass plate negatives documenting life in Western Greenland around the turn of the twentieth century. Rooted in an internal understanding of self, Møller’s photographs played an important part in the formation of a contemporary image of Greenlandic indigenous identity. At the same time, Møller’s photographic practice was arguably entangled in and delimited by a historical reality that was structured by colonial relations of power. This paper examines the social and art-historical contexts of Møller’s work, focusing in particular on a selection of his formal studio portraits. My reading of these portraits suggests a case in which conflicting impulses coincide. On the one hand, Møller produced images that played out the “ethnographic convention”, a European form of representation dating back to the sixteenth century used for the documentation of non-Western indigenous peoples as specimens. However, in acting out that convention, Møller’s photographs hint at a subtle, progressive building-up of identity that reclaimed images of Greenlanders for themselves, and turned an originally negative, external image of indigeneity into a positive sense of self.
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再现土著:约翰·m·勒在语境中拍摄的格陵兰人的工作室肖像
1889年至1922年间,格陵兰岛第一位专业摄影师约翰·m·厄勒(John Møller, 1867-1935)拍摄了3000多张玻璃板底片,记录了20世纪之交格陵兰岛西部的生活。基于对自我的内在理解,Møller的摄影作品在格陵兰土著身份的当代形象形成中发挥了重要作用。与此同时,Møller的摄影实践也被殖民权力关系所构成的历史现实所纠缠和界定。本文考察了Møller作品的社会和艺术历史背景,特别关注他的正式工作室肖像的选择。我对这些肖像的解读暗示了一种矛盾冲动重合的情况。一方面,Møller制作的图像体现了“民族志公约”,这是一种可追溯到16世纪的欧洲表现形式,用于记录非西方土著民族的标本。然而,在实践这一惯例的过程中,Møller的照片暗示了一种微妙的、渐进的身份认同的建立,这种身份认同为他们自己找回了格陵兰人的形象,并将原本消极的、外部的土著形象转变为积极的自我意识。
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来源期刊
Acta Borealia
Acta Borealia HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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