CLOSER
My mother was the first person I ever
photographed and I still take pictures of her obsessively. Quite literally, in
more than one way, she was - she is - my natural point of origin. My connection
to the world. I used to think that the struggles with her, as well as the sense
of closeness, security and warmth, the whole way I related to her during
childhood, would somehow naturally end with the end of childhood. Perhaps they
were transformed, elevated to other levels. But in many ways, they never lost
their power over me.
I started taking pictures of her when I was
fifteen. I used my father's old Canon camera. Gradually, in concentric circles,
the subjects of my work expanded. From my mother, to my father and brother, to
the extended family, until, in recent years, the center shifted, at least
partially, to my husband, Eran. I no longer see my mother only as a strong
person, she is no longer my only source of security, of power, of beauty, but I
do measure my own femininity, my own self, as a distance from her. When she
prepared me for the world, she showed me the world through her eyes. It was, or
is, a long process. When I was twenty-two she put lipstick on my lips, her
lipstick. This was one of many things that were both, somehow, continuity and
separation. My own femininity, yet always drawing on hers. Oddly I still felt
her lipstick would somehow protect me. But this closeness was, in a way, also
what enabled me to move away, to enlarge the circles of both life and work, and
finally to shift much of the focus to Eran, even to myself. The camera was, in
this sense, both a way to get close, and to
break free. It was a
testimony to independence as well as a new way to relate. A boundary, a
distance, as well as the documentation of closeness. I could see my mother, my
husband, my father, at once in a detached and a related way. In the first few
years I was mostly intuitive, even impulsive, in the way I shot. After a while,
however, I tried to turn to what I thought of then as more professional
photography. I began shooting series of black and white pictures, my mother and
myself as their subjects. They were structured, posed: Mother looked too ready
to be in a photograph, well prepared, presenting herself to me. It's not that we
weren't candid or open. We were, and we did try to recreate real scenes, actual
situations. But something was missing. I didn't like what came out. I stopped,
took a break for a few months.
When I returned to photography -- I was
about twenty-one years old then -- I took one step back. I stopped trying to
recreate, stage, things that happened, in a controlled way. Rather, I tried to
do what I did when I first started: shoot things as they were happening. I began
to work in color too which is, for me, warmer, more vivid. I gave no advance
warning, required no cooperation, shot in quantity. Snapped, developed, looked
at the results, and over again. For the most part it was still my mother and
myself, but working intensively, and instinctively, everyone who was intertwined
in our lives - my father, my brother Pinni, Eran, my grandparents, my cousins -
all were drawn in. The frame became flexible and hospitable. Things I had
previously considered marginal drifted to the center and often became themes in
their own right. Ironically, the closer I got to the details, the more I zoomed
in the more universal the themes turned out to be. Moving in turned out to be
moving out. Work on minute details - a mark on the skin, a stitch, a hair, an
eye, a kiss - carried the work beyond the boundaries of my family.
The
presence of the camera too became more familiar, more relaxed. Still, it
generated, not just documented, situations. Not because it had a personality,
but because it aroused an attitude. By the very fact of documenting, the image
competed with its object, showed it in a different, yet not at all false, light.
It's like facing a mirror: when you look into it, you tighten your face muscles
slightly, change your expression. I found myself and my family discovering more
about ourselves, or at least, discovering nuances we couldn't otherwise see.
Sometimes, the photographs came before I could articulate what it was that
triggered them, giving form to some unformed feeling. More than that, the camera
sometimes dares say what I don't dare think. These lines, between what I thought
I saw in life, what I saw in the photographs, what I thought I saw in the
photographs, became confusing in many ways. Like a permanent double take, I was
not always sure if something - a mood, a sigh, a frown - captured an actual
event, or if I was imposing on my memory a fraction the camera had caught. It
often feels like I have two, parallel sets of memory. And yet, as complicated as
the relations between representation and life may be, I do trust the camera, and
what it captured is,
in many ways, real. The camera is, in fact, often
less biased than my eyes. And since it preserves something from life - It would
not otherwise be valuable for me - it is also a record. When I have something in
a photograph, I feel like it is safe from time, I feel like I can also part with
it. It gives me the illusion of having the actual past for safekeeping.
The work was never a burden for my family. As revealing as it might be,
I never subscribed to the idea of art over life. Certainly in my relationship
with them. That is not to say there are never any temptations. I caught myself
once, when my father was ill, in bed with high temperature, running for the
camera. I stopped. These would be too alienated. Too alienating. Both in terms
of human relations, and in terms of art. It is the temptation of the provocative
and the vulgar and I try to resist it. Then there is also the relationship
between art and life that can't be preserved, as I see it, if my photographs
become too intruding. They thrive on intimacy and can't afford to undermine it.
I can't show intimacy in any general way, if there is such a thing as general
intimacy. I can only say something universal about intimacy through actual
intimacy. Mine. The actual real relationships I have with specific people. With
these people that I love. The deepest I can reach is within what is most
familiar and close. And so I set limits. I don't pounce on my mother when she's
waking up. Don't get the camera when I have a fight with Eran. Don't stand aside
to document when someone is crying. In many ways, they not only helped me. They
became part of the work to such an extent that I can't consider it only as my
own. It is, truly, also theirs.
Elinor Carucci