Socially latent images: Eva and Franco Mattes's personal photographs
Date
2020
Authors
Warren, Kate
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Intellect Limited
Abstract
The age of ubiquitous photography has not only embedded the ability to easily share photographs, it has also constructed widespread expectations of content being shared. Such presumptions of sharing are profoundly influencing our relationship with photography, particularly as the hypervisibility of shared images produces an increasingly unstable invisibility of 'unshared' images. These contemporary concerns can be productively explored and theorized by considering the work of artists Eva and Franco Mattes. In recent works that use personal photographs, the Matteses reveal prescient insights into photographic concerns around latency, (in)visibility and shifting distinctions between personal/private/public. By investigating the Matteses' works through these prisms, I argue that the age of social media entails internalized and naturalized presumptions of sharing. This has not only affected how and why photographs are taken, it transforms the status of contemporary photography more generally, creating conditions where once unshared/private personal photographs may now instead exist in a broader state of 'social latency'.
Description
Keywords
social latency, Eva and Franco Mattes, photography, photosharing, social media, latent image
Citation
Collections
Source
Philosophy of Photography
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description