查尔斯·马维尔与城市崇高政治

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Nineteenth-Century Contexts-An Interdisciplinary Journal Pub Date : 2023-05-27 DOI:10.1080/08905495.2023.2217816
R. Rexer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从19世纪50年代开始,巴黎经历了前所未有的变革。在拿破仑三世的城市规划师奥斯曼男爵的授意下,这座城市迷宫般的狭窄街道被系统地拆除,为宏伟的现代林荫大道让路。记录转型中的城市的艰巨任务落在了查尔斯·马维尔身上,他于1862年被授予“城市摄影师”的官方头衔,并将在接下来的20年里,由市政委员会拍摄新旧巴黎(Kennel 2013,28-29)。马维尔非常多产,在巴黎公社前后的两段时间里为市政府拍摄了数百张照片,并因其一生的摄影技巧而受到赞誉。然而,也许是因为马维尔在19世纪60年代和19世纪70年代所做的大部分工作都是政府档案馆的,他在1879年去世时甚至没有收到讣告(Kennel 2013,40)。他在很大程度上一直被遗忘,直到1980年,他的作品的第一场大型展览巩固了马维尔作为首要城市档案管理员的地位,这得益于后现代对档案这一类型的迷恋。因此,他经常出现在学术辩论中,试图将其他“档案”摄影师,特别是尤金·阿特杰,奉为这种艺术史上的自负所束缚和沉没的岩石。最近,2014年,他在国家美术馆和大都会艺术博物馆的一场大型作品展采取了完全相反的方法,试图将他重新定位为一位被低估的艺术家,并展示马维尔从插画家职业生涯的早期到巴黎摄影师的才华。然而,任何为马维尔平反的努力都无法动摇他声誉上一个持久的污点:他所谓的糟糕政治。虽然马维尔和他的同时代人几乎没有留下任何关于其作品所感知的政治含义的痕迹,但二十一世纪马维尔的学术界在这个问题上的立场几乎是一致的。Shelley Rice称Marville为“奥斯曼的先遣队员”,并指责他用“与‘老板’相同的术语”重新定义街道(1999,86;88)。在这种观点下,用一位评论家的话来说,马维尔的巴黎照片是“官方话语的一部分,旨在产生[新巴黎]的建筑形式并控制其接受度”(Lee 2013110)。最近关于马维尔的作品在美学和纪录片方面都对他的作品进行了评价,比如肯尼尔、洛克和克莱森的文章和书籍章节,这使赖斯的说法复杂化,但并没有完全重新考虑他作为
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Charles Marville and the politics of the urban sublime
Beginning in the 1850s, the city of Paris underwent an unprecedented transformation. At the instigation of Baron Haussmann, urban planner to Emperor Napoleon III, the city’s maze of narrow streets was systematically torn down to make way for grand, modern boulevards. The daunting task of documenting the city in transition fell to one Charles Marville, who was granted the official title of “photographer of the city” in 1862 and would spend the next two decades photographing old and new Paris on municipal commission (Kennel 2013, 28–29). Marville was remarkably prolific, producing hundreds of photographs during two periods of work for the city government before and after the Paris Commune, and received accolades for his photographic skill during his life. Yet perhaps because most of the work Marville did in the 1860s and 1870s was destined for government archives, he was not even given an obituary upon his death in 1879 (Kennel 2013, 40). He remained largely forgotten until 1980, when the first major show of his work cemented Marville’s status as a premier urban archivist, fostered by the burgeoning post-modern fascination with the archive as genre. As such he often appeared in scholarly debates about attempts to canonize other “archival” photographers, particularly Eugene Atget, as the rock to which such arthistorical pretensions were bound and sunk. More recently, a major show of his work at the National Gallery of Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2014 took precisely the opposite approach, attempting to reposition him as an underappreciated artist and to show the breadth of Marville’s talents, from the early days of his career as an illustrator through his turn as the photographer of Paris. No attempts to rehabilitate Marville, however, can shake one enduring blot on his reputation: his purportedly bad politics. While Marville and his contemporaries left few traces concerning the perceived political implications of his work, twentiethand twenty-first-century scholarship of Marville has been nearly unanimous in its stance on the issue. Shelley Rice has called Marville “Haussmann’s advance man,” and accused him of using the camera to redefine the streets in “the same terms used by his ‘boss’” (1999, 86; 88). In this view, Marville’s photographs of Paris are, in the words of one critic, “part of an official discourse meant to produce the built forms [of the new Paris] and to control their reception” (Lee 2013, 110). Recent work on Marville that valorizes his work both in aesthetic and documentary terms, such as articles and book chapters by Kennel, Locke, and Clayson, complicate Rice’s claim but do not go so far as to argue for a total reconsideration of his reputation as a shill for
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Nineteenth-Century Contexts is committed to interdisciplinary recuperations of “new” nineteenth centuries and their relation to contemporary geopolitical developments. The journal challenges traditional modes of categorizing the nineteenth century by forging innovative contextualizations across a wide spectrum of nineteenth century experience and the critical disciplines that examine it. Articles not only integrate theories and methods of various fields of inquiry — art, history, musicology, anthropology, literary criticism, religious studies, social history, economics, popular culture studies, and the history of science, among others.
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