Anita Douthat, Golden Lanterns, photograms on gold-toned printing -out paper, 1998
  
Introduction
 
 
 

On the verge of a new millennium, contemporary photography is enjoying a remarkably 
fertile period. In the aftermath of post modernism, the formidable driving force behind much of the work produced in the 1980s, there does not appear to be one dominant direction in photography. As a result of ground-breaking strategies that defined post modernism, such as the appropriation of images from popular culture, the pseudo-documentation of constructed realities, and gender-based art, photographers today are able to take advantage of a broader field of creative choices. The previous decade also witnessed the mercurial rise of photography and a consolidation of its acceptance by the art world--a phenomenon fueled, in part, by the increased scale of photographs and their recognition by museums and galleries. Photographers today are returning to a concern with technical processes (particularly earlier ones), an interest in abstraction, and a more personal kind of expression than that practiced during the post modern period. The increased experimentation with processes such as the photogram, signals a return to a more elemental way of working that is as much about personal vision as it is a response to our visual culture. 


Although photograms are often the first kinds of photographs artists and amateurs alike produce, few have used the technique as consistently and exclusively as Anita Douthat. For nearly twenty years, Douthat has been making photograms--images produced without a camera using objects that are placed directly onto light-sensitive paper and exposed to light. She is drawn to the process for its essential simplicity, its directness of means and its potential for limitless formal invention. As an undergraduate at the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Douthat investigated scientific photography. At the same time, she began taking straight pictures on the streets of Chicago, both as a way of learning her craft and learning about the city. Later, in the graduate program at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, Douthat stopped photographing her environs, principally because of her unfamiliarity with this southwestern locale. While she was fascinated by the diverse cultures surrounding her, she was sensitive to the idea that her street photography was perhaps too intrusive, and she retreated into a more private mode of expression. At the same time, Douthat was taking courses in the history of photography, which ultimately influenced the direction her work would take. 

The photogram appears with some frequency throughout the history of photography, and indeed, some of the first photograms, although fugitive images, occurred as early as 1800, decades before the official announcement of the invention of photography in 1839. By 1834, the British scientist William Henry Fox Talbot had succeeded in fixing his photogenic drawings, as his early photograms were known. For Douthat, Talbot summarized why this first and most basic of photographic processes continues to appeal to contemporary artists: 

          The most transitory of things, a shadow, the proverbial emblem of all that 
          is fleeting and momentary, may be fettered by the spells of our natural 
          magic, and may be fixed forever in the position which it seemed only destined 
          for a single instant to occupy.1 


In the late teens and early 1920s, the surrealist Man Ray and his European contemporary Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, rediscovered the photogram for its abstract and literal vocabulary, as a way of describing the chance intersection of seemingly unrelated events, and for its ability to evoke emotional responses. Similarly, Douthat uses shapes for their evocative and layered associations. She often employs recognizable, utilitarian objects that suggest human activity, without including the body itself. For example, in My Father's Stools (an homage to her father), Douthat imprints the stools designed and made by her father. The serial piece, Speedaway, carries multiple visual and cultural references, recalling the early motion studies of Eadweard Muybridge, Orson Welles' celebrated Rosebud, and even the legendary sled installation, The Pack, by Joseph Beuys from 1969. 


When objects are too large to be accommodated by the printing-out paper, Douthat uses miniature versions, such as model ships and toys, as in the four-part piece titled Armada. Within the limited range of colors that the gold-toning (added for permanence) yields, Douthat controls the color of the print according to the subject matter. She selectively manipulates the toning process's characteristic hues that range between warm purple and red, and a cooler silver or grey. 


A perennial interest in anatomical imagery and an invitation in 1994 from Joel Otterson and Jonathan Christie, led Douthat to create her anatomical series, Bone Scans. In Bone Scans: Body Double, an oversized diptych, Douthat approximates the human skeleton, albeit in a decidedly not anatomically correct fashion. Another of her most important precedents for this series was the production of The Beat: For Eddie (dedicated to her mother), which is composed of anatomical diagrams. Douthat further investigates the human form in the mysterious and humorous Double Dummy series, whose title derives from the game of bridge. Pyro Girl is a multiple exposure of assembled materials ranging from newspaper engraving plates of women's fashions, to anatomical diagrams, and engravings of fireworks (unrecognizable except for the reference to "Pyrotechny," which appears as "Pyro" in the finished print). Douthat also cites as influences the ocess-oriented  and conceptually-based work of photographers who rose to prominence in the late 1960s and early 1970s, such as Frederick  Sommer, Betty Hahn, Thomas Barrow and Robert Heinecken. These artists, among others, radically expanded the artistic vocabulary of photography to include references to or direct appropriations from the imagery of popular culture. Sommer often incorporated old engravings in his photographs and Barrow and Heinecken printed through entire magazine or newspaper pages in their photograms. 


Whether by working with objects directly, or by reference to them, Douthat contrasts permanent fixtures in the world with the shadows they cast. In her work, she presents the paradox of the immediacy of the thing itself with its absence, the fleeting with the permanent, and the narrative with the ephemeral. In this physically demanding, most low-tech process, working with elements at hand--sunlight, paper, objects and time--Douthat transports us to a dream-like world, full of familiar yet intangible images. 

Catherine Evans Curator of Photography 
Columbus Museum of Art 

Notes
1. W.H.F. Talbot, "Some Account of the Art of Photogenic Drawing," London: R. & J.E. Taylor, 1839 (reprinted). 
 

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