The first few sentences, sometimes the first few paragraphs, do it for me – or they don’t. In any book, and that includes photo-books.
Lisa
Kahane’s “Do Not Give Way to Evil” starts like this: “The
past is never over. Image
outlives
fact.” It hit me, immediately: Exactly, so true, this is why
pictures are more telling than
words.
Images
carry feelings, and these we remember – this is why images are so
powerful.
The
book shows photos of the South Bronx between 1979 and 1987, “not
just another
neighbourhood
but another realm, visible but incomprehensible, an urban wilderness
actively populated by ghosts.”
What
is true for the first few sentences is likewise true for the first
few photographs. In “Do Not
Give Way to Evil” it was the first one that did it for me – the
abandoned Bronx Borough Courthouse.
I instinctively knew that I would like Lisa Kahane’s other pictures
– and I did. Moreover,
I loved her introductory text. For its humaneness, its
unpretentiousness, and its insights
– it made me look at her photographs with sympathy.
Here are some
excerpts:
“Change
is a constant in New York City and it’s usually considered
progress. In the Bronx, it was extraordinarily brutal. Portrayed
either as a garden spot or a wretched failure of civic life, the ruin
of the Bronx, part natural progression of the American Dream, part
intentional destruction,
was a long time in the making.
Fewer
things than one imagines are coincidences. What is made to seem the
inevitable process of history is often the interplay of money and power.
Withdrawal
of federal funds, diminishing city services, and dependence n welfare
turned the American Dream into an American Nightmare. Anger and
frustration turned to cruelty, and boredom to loss of hope.
Drugs
were easy to get. Widespread fires, unknown since the early
nineteenth
century, made a comeback. Counterproductive government response made
arson profitable for landlord and tenant. In the 70’s the borough
averaged 12,000 arson fires a year, over thirty a day.
There
are books now that explain it all and yet explain nothing. The
devil’s best game, the poet Charles Baudelaire wrote, is to
convince us that he doesn’t exist. Even though it’s always the
present tense in a photograph, the spirit of the time can only be
represented, not recalled or recreated. The best thing about these
pictures of devastation is that they can’t be taken in the Bronx
anymore.”
“Do
Not Give Way to Evil” by Lisa Kahane was published in 2008, in the
‘Miss Rosen
Editions’,
Power Books, Brooklyn, New York.
http://www.powerhousebooks.com
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