Moving Beyond Description, Mark Johnstone
Scientist and artist alike have been mystified for centuries by the common physical sensation of sight. The human process called "seeing" has been partially explained through various scientific models and philosophical theories; yet alternative conceptions for the experiential phenomenon of sight have been endlessly created through the intuitive efforts of artists. Photography provided a practical and easy means for describing things. This invention complicated the conception of the eye as an experiential link between the human mind and the world. Photography was a new connective mediator  a way of indicating what was visually significant or important  and through specific practice it was also an aesthetic way of looking at things.
The act of photographing means to observe or describe something and as a form of pointing, conveys or implies a polemical position. The photograph is a synthetic visualization mediated through optical and chemical processes; it is concurrently a representation of things and an organization of abstract ideas. While a strength of photography appears to be its descriptive power, abstraction is a fundamental attribute of even the simplest photographic image. The elusive and abstract potential of photography is em-bedded in the word itself; for a literal translation of the Greek roots (phos-graph) of the word photography, as any history student knows, means "writing with light".
  The photographs of John Divola set up a dialectical discourse between experience 
  (what is known of the world) and visual sensation (what is seen in the image), 
  and balance two endemic features of the medium. First, that a photograph has 
  an unprecedented, unique and direct connection to the world as an indexical 
  sign of physical traces much like that of a fingerprint or footprint. Second, 
  it is a referential form of representation and is removed from experience itself. 
  Divolas work accepts the inherent limitations of the medium (an image 
  is always the product of compromise), and the authority of photographic description, 
  and uses the potential of these features to playfully and intuitively investigate 
  the medium itself.
  The black and white Vandalism photographs consist of the spray paint markings 
  which Divola made on the interior surfaces (floors, walls, ceilings) of abandoned 
  houses. These marks (dotted grids, short curving strokes) look like arbitrary 
  graffiti or systematic conceptual gestures. They visually compound a perceived 
  dimensional space in the photographic view, simultaneously appearing to be on 
  the flat two-dimensional photographic paper, and within that "real" 
  three-dimensional space of the original scene. The marks are both an alteration 
  of the space and the visual residue of a physical activity. An indeterminate 
  time frame is capitulated by his use of electronic flash and a relative neutrality 
  of the locations. The photographs question the descriptive powers of photography 
  as a medium, and the accepted concepts of reality. As the spray paint vandalizes 
  the houses, so too do the photographs "vandalize" a tradition of straight 
  photography.
  The Zuma photographs utilize many of these same strategies, but are more complex 
  through the incorporation of new elements such as color, the natural world, 
  and an observance of how things change. The colors applied to the building interior 
  appear bold and garish, particularly when compared to the serene atmospheric 
  lushness of an exterior natural world. The cyclical appearances of the ephemeral 
  exterior views, which in recent photographic history have assumed cliched proportions, 
  are played in contrast to a linear disintegration of the physical man-made shelter. 
  The house, ever present through the group of images, becomes a representation 
  of mans rational logic. There is a magic in the Zuma images for, despite 
  the familiarity or shocking qualities of their parts, they retain a compelling 
  and evocative visual mystery.
  It is, perhaps, useful to digress for a moment, to better understand Divolas 
  subsequent work. His fascination with descriptive photographic representation 
  is partially due to noticing many years ago (prior to the Vandalism photographs) 
  that art reproductions as photographs  particularly of performance or 
  conceptual art, but certainly including all forms  could be interesting 
  images, but as photographs were a secondary form of information. He subsequently 
  became interested in making  transforming, changing, constructing, investigating 
   a situation so that the photograph would be a primary form of compelling 
  experience. There is an insistent visual quality in all of his photographs, 
  whether as observations of atmospheric phenomena in the natural world or presentations 
  of constructed symbols. His work after the Zuma photographs may be subdivided 
  into three groups, although they are not codified as series, which are; diptychs; 
  images of "sculpture" in the landscape; and studio constructions.
  The diptychs embody a relatively pedagogical syntax and, as a deliberate juxtaposition 
  of incomplete or fragmentary values, intellectually address photographic meaning. 
  The nature of photographic interpretation and representation is investigated 
  through a bicameral juxtaposition of representation (what things mean as an 
  image) and strategically effect (how things can be changed). The visual orchestration 
  of photographic conventions (such as the use of a colorful wash of light) pragmatically 
  pushes an image to a fulcrum point where it teeters between specific representation 
  (the image represents this particular woman at one time, one place) and symbolic 
  representation (the image as a general description of woman).
  The things appearing in the diptychs have a resonant physicality as: sensorial 
  experience (fan/ice); anthropomorphic projection (woman/animal); rational intelligence 
  (constructed geometrical shapes); and: the natural world (a raw tangle of bushy 
  chapparal, or ocean edge). A fundamentally different use of things appears in 
  the later, single views. There is a degree of opacity in the melancholic representation 
  of a wolf as a cardboard cut-out  a blank symbol or sign. These later 
  constructed shapes are a generic representation of things and, in contrast to 
  the mysteries of the natural, assail representation itself. This devolution 
  of "object meaning" in an image addresses how symbolic meaning may 
  shift through a lapse of time.
  In retrospect, an idea running throughout his work is the investigation of descriptive 
  photographic representation. There is a progressive attention to marks, color 
  and shapes, which are measured or balanced against the forces and qualities 
  of a natural world. The landscapes in his Vandalism photographs are the private 
  and hidden recesses of abandoned houses, and these images address the unseen 
  potential of landscape as a subject. The Vandalism and Zuma photographs are 
  visually connected to other visual forms of art, such as action painting, performance 
  and sculptural installation. The diptychs expunge that narcotic visual wonder 
  dominating the Zuma images and, as they are not fully abstract, use it as an 
  alluring factor of sensorial familiarity. This sensorial familiarity  
  what is essentially an inherent and recognizable element of the natural world 
   is utilized as the basis for a further investigation of photographic 
  process and seeing.
  There is a consistent progressive investigation and phenomenological exploration 
  of objects, symbols and signs throughout Divolas work. In his most recent 
  images, a viewer is assailed with the generic representation of a complete image. 
  Things of the natural world, replete with the mystery of physical forces, are 
  photographically reduced to a shell-like state. The images are an almost transparent 
  form of representation  a reduced visual essence of matter, like the skin 
  of a snake. Over fifty years ago Laszlo Moholy-Nagy marveled at the mysterious 
  power of x-rays; materiality became transparent in the x-ray, and through this 
  transparency structure became apparent. Moholy-Nagys untenable excitement 
  about the conceptual implications of x-rays is applicable to Divolas recent 
  images. Viewer expectations are intertwined with the unique qualities of the 
  medium and, under the aegis of art, neurological, sensorial and experiential 
  approaches to the photographic image and the world are penetrated and reshaped. 
  These images are a synthetic and modern dematerialization of photography itself, 
  a morphosis of that process generated and governed by optical and chemical laws. 
  The medium of photography has become a content in this imagery, for what is 
  assumed to be transparent has become opaque and the invisible has been made 
  visible. The descriptive power of photography is not immutable, for Divola has 
  moved the realm of a photographic image beyond mere description; it has assumed 
  new dimensions as a fact of the imagination.
  © Mark Johnstone