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	<title>Comments on: Photographic Truth, Part II</title>
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	<link>http://emu.edu/now/restorative-justice/2010/03/21/photographic-truth-part-ii/</link>
	<description>Dr. Howard Zehr, Professor of Restorative Justice at Eastern Mennonite University\&#039;s graduate Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, discusses restorative justice issues, reflects on other issues from a restorative justice perspective and dialogues with others around justice issues from a restorative perspective.</description>
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		<title>By: Dick Lehman</title>
		<link>http://emu.edu/now/restorative-justice/2010/03/21/photographic-truth-part-ii/comment-page-1/#comment-6754</link>
		<dc:creator>Dick Lehman</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Mar 2010 20:31:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>The new blog post is both powerful and somewhat provocative for me, Howard.  This discussion of &#039;photos sometimes needing words&#039; is in some ways similar to the longstanding debate in the ceramics community about whether pots/pottery/ceramic art need words or not: one side says that if the object needs words, then it is not art;  the other, that words sometimes help establish context, meaning and values --  while still being art.....still being able to be received differently by different people.

I read parts of the last two paragraphs with interest**....thinking about it it the context of the exhibition that I am curating (exhibition focus is exploring how objects may become infused with meaning...surpassing their &#039;object-ivity&#039; and commodity) which includes a portion of my Japanese pottery collection with a collection of articles that I have written about some of the pieces.  All the meanings that are caught in those pieces would never be known without the writing  and the extended captions that I will be including.  The works would be lovely and powerful, but the meaning and intention for including them in the exhibition would be lost without the words.

For example, the extended-caption for the little karatsu-yaki cup tells the story about what was, for me then, a new learning, touching as it does on the idea of unintended consequences coming out of good-hearted motivations.  I never see or use the piece without re-experiencing the &#039;new truth&#039; that I first encountered almost 30 years ago....something no one else would know if I offered no words to accompany it.


** The photos are expected to stand pretty much alone, however.  There are extended descriptive captions but they are in the back of the book and easily overlooked.  The essays in the book include an interview with the photographer and two essays about him and his work.  I like the book and have it in my collection but it does not tell me as much about South Africa as did some of his earlier work exploring the nature of apartheid. (See, for example, his classic Some Afrikaners Photographed in its new edition, Some Afrikaners Revised.)

None of this is to say that photographs cannot stand on their own.  Many can, and should, but it depends on our intent.  If our goal is to help the viewer confront and understand historical reality, we may need to add words.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The new blog post is both powerful and somewhat provocative for me, Howard.  This discussion of &#8216;photos sometimes needing words&#8217; is in some ways similar to the longstanding debate in the ceramics community about whether pots/pottery/ceramic art need words or not: one side says that if the object needs words, then it is not art;  the other, that words sometimes help establish context, meaning and values &#8212;  while still being art&#8230;..still being able to be received differently by different people.</p>
<p>I read parts of the last two paragraphs with interest**&#8230;.thinking about it it the context of the exhibition that I am curating (exhibition focus is exploring how objects may become infused with meaning&#8230;surpassing their &#8216;object-ivity&#8217; and commodity) which includes a portion of my Japanese pottery collection with a collection of articles that I have written about some of the pieces.  All the meanings that are caught in those pieces would never be known without the writing  and the extended captions that I will be including.  The works would be lovely and powerful, but the meaning and intention for including them in the exhibition would be lost without the words.</p>
<p>For example, the extended-caption for the little karatsu-yaki cup tells the story about what was, for me then, a new learning, touching as it does on the idea of unintended consequences coming out of good-hearted motivations.  I never see or use the piece without re-experiencing the &#8216;new truth&#8217; that I first encountered almost 30 years ago&#8230;.something no one else would know if I offered no words to accompany it.</p>
<p>** The photos are expected to stand pretty much alone, however.  There are extended descriptive captions but they are in the back of the book and easily overlooked.  The essays in the book include an interview with the photographer and two essays about him and his work.  I like the book and have it in my collection but it does not tell me as much about South Africa as did some of his earlier work exploring the nature of apartheid. (See, for example, his classic Some Afrikaners Photographed in its new edition, Some Afrikaners Revised.)</p>
<p>None of this is to say that photographs cannot stand on their own.  Many can, and should, but it depends on our intent.  If our goal is to help the viewer confront and understand historical reality, we may need to add words.</p>
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		<title>By: mario mattei</title>
		<link>http://emu.edu/now/restorative-justice/2010/03/21/photographic-truth-part-ii/comment-page-1/#comment-6640</link>
		<dc:creator>mario mattei</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Mar 2010 18:31:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>This is certainly a challenging reality. I look forward to seeing what others will comment on. I haven&#039;t done stock but I know some great guys who do. I wonder what their take on this is.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is certainly a challenging reality. I look forward to seeing what others will comment on. I haven&#8217;t done stock but I know some great guys who do. I wonder what their take on this is.</p>
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