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Given how Michael Light’s
most famous photographic works deal with atomic bombs and rockets to the moon,
it seems appropriate to ask why he is drawn to themes so epic in scale and
dramatic in their implications: “Certainly I love high drama, but I think it’s
more accurate to say that I’m drawn to the aesthetic of largeness, of all that
is beyond ourselves, precisely because we’d be better off if we didn’t go around
feeling like we were the biggest and most important things. Artistically, I’m
concerned with power and landscape, and how we as humans relate to vastness -to
that point at which our ego and sense of efficaciousness crumbles…”
This counterpoint of
hubris and humility is a defining feature of Light’s major photographic essays, Full Moon and 100 Suns, as is an implied but poignant commentary
on human vanity and its consequences. His subject matter may be vast –both
literally and morally, but Light sidesteps polemical exposition, preferring to
let his images invite the inevitable questions and discussion: “Social
commentary is an intrinsic, though essentially non-textual, aspect of my work”,
he says. “I don’t consider myself an activist, per se, but I am a committed
environmentalist and it informs my work as an artist. In my opinion, serious
contemporary artistic production dealing with landscape must deal with politics
and violence in some way, whether explicit or implied. Otherwise it’s just
fluff, decoration for those wanting false comfort and a delusionally ahistorical
and apolitical world.”
Full Moon
was published worldwide to mark the 30th anniversary of the first
manned moon landing. Drawing on NASA’s archive of over 32,000 negatives and
transparencies, Light distilled an extraordinary composite record, one that not
only featured many previously unpublished images, but also restored an
existential resonance to this most improbable journey. In a lecture given to an
MIT conference in Greece, Light described the purpose behind the five-year
project: “I wanted to reconfigure this event which had been painted in terms of
technological triumph, which it certainly was; a nationalistic triumph, which I
suppose it was, but really it had been painted in typically egotistical human
terms. I was interested in the moon as a place where we come to the edge of our
control, where we lose our egotism and enter into the sublime…”
In the book’s closing
essay, Light contrasts the Apollo project’s unprecedented ambition and
marshalling of resources with the unexpected consequences of equipping
astronauts with cameras. NASA had initially dismissed the idea of their crews
taking Hasselblads to the moon and early spacecraft designs did not even feature
windows. Yet beyond its technical, scientific and political importance, Apollo’s
legacy proved to be as much about the visual, spiritual and symbolic.
Light says: “The driving
forces were military, and yes, the propaganda value was huge, but getting humans
to the moon was a moment of undeniable triumph and true creativity. It was done
peacefully, without national territorial claim, and provided essential hope to
the species. It also resulted in a major maturation of our view of ourselves, by
offering a view of our home from afar. While manned lunar exploration was framed
in narcissistic terms, it hammered home the concept of ineradicable limits and
responsibilities even as we seemed to be breaking the last of them. My goal, in
a nutshell, was to show the moon as a place, as a landscape, as a world that is not about us.”
One image in Full Moon
perfectly captures the scale and precariousness of the Apollo venture, evoking
something more important than footprints, flags and Buzz and Neil. Dwarfed by a
landscape of disorientating proportions and relentless luminous grey, one small
human figure stands in the distance, his suit a featureless white; the only item
of colour in this monotone vista is provided by one thin orange cable stretching
back towards the camera.
If the airless clarity of
the lunar surface inspired Light’s landscape sensibilities, eerie light of
another kind informs his most recent book, 100 Suns. This latest volume
is in part a “portrait book of the bomb,” a record of human ingenuity made
monstrous and absurd. It’s also
a study in extreme ambivalence, with images that are both compelling in their
beauty and grotesque in their ramifications. The book’s title echoes the words
of Shiva, quoted by Robert Oppenheimer after the first atomic test: “If the
radiance of a thousand suns were to burst forth at once in the sky, that would
be like the splendour of the Mighty One… I am become Death, the destroyer of
worlds…”
Whether abstracted or
iconic, these bursts of man-made sunshine evoke a powerful response, and, in
common with Full Moon, their frozen moments combine the spectacular and
the inspectable: “Although my books are highly cinematic narratives, and my
prints can be large to the point of immersion, my enduring passion is the still
image precisely because it is inspectable in a way that is wholly different from
the ebb and flow of experience itself. This is the true intrinsic power of the
photograph for me — the ability to stop time and meditate on a moment such that
it can expand to proportions and meanings not otherwise perceptible.”
As both books are sourced
from publicly accessible archives, a question of authorship is raised. I puzzle
over whether to describe Light as a photographer, a historian or an artist who
combines curatorial taste with a photographer's eye.
“I’m a bookmaker first
and foremost, whether with found historical imagery or with my own
negative-making: the book form allows a kind of distillation and comprehension
that I require. The images themselves were never made in the context of art, nor
do I see them as art after passing through my digital process of manipulation.
But the experience of the book or show in the mind of the viewer happens
as if the images were indeed art. The experience is art… It’s important to
remember that for 30 years in the case of Full Moon, and for almost 60 in
the case of 100 Suns, no-one had done anything with these piles of
photographs owned by everyone and no-one, until I came along and ran them
through a certain sensibility and made rather odd text-less artist’s books out
of them...”
This text-less approach
avoids pre-emptive colouring of the readers’ reactions. The images in 100
Suns are accompanied only by the date, location and size of each explosion,
along with their eclectic military codenames: Priscilla, Zucchini, Wahoo,
Climax and Checkmate. Extensive
factual captions and a chronology of the weapons’ development are to be found at
the book’s end.
Full Moon
and 100 Suns are also linked by a causal irony. Without the propaganda
imperatives of an escalating arms race, it seems unlikely that human beings
would have entertained other, more expansive, reasons to set foot on the moon.
That the mania of the cold war and the prospect of mutually assured destruction
should result in iconic images of, literally, one world is a historical quirk
that Light appreciates.
“The twentieth century’s
two most notable moments are indeed intimately linked, and both are inextricably
bound up with violence and warfare. Apollo would not have happened if it were
not for the bomb and the distance between the United States and the Soviet
Union. The delivery of nuclear weapons by intercontinental ballistic missiles,
wherein the warhead was rocketed into Earth orbit and re-entered the target
nation from outer space, was what drove the so-called space race. Somewhere
along the way, both nations realised that they could stick animals on top of
rockets and get them back alive almost as easily as they could destroy whole
cities continents away...”
One incidental detail
from the endnotes to 100 Suns seems to summarise Light’s view of human
nature. This historical footnote warrants broader attention, if only for
illuminating the unique comic potential of practical nuclear physics. Ted Taylor
was a miniaturisation expert involved in many of the early atmospheric
experiments. On June 5th, 1952, during the test explosion of a 14 Kiloton device
in the Nevada Desert, Taylor used a parabolic mirror to focus the bomb's glare
and light his cigarette. While lunatic in its disproportion, Taylor’s cigarette
stunt seems entirely in keeping with Michael Light’s larger themes.
© David Thompson 2004
Michael Light’s Full
Moon and 100 Suns are published in the UK by Jonathan Cape, priced
£35 and £30 respectively.
www.michaellight.net/
An index of bomb-related
imagery and documentation can be found at
www.firstpulseprojects.net/bombproject/Index.html
The 1979 Moon Treaty can
be found at
www.greaterearth.org/laws/moon_try.htm
Published in
Eye: the
International Review of Graphic Design, #51, March 2004
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