Captions Gone Bad

or

When Looking Back Really Makes You Cringe

or

Alan does not know crap about art.

In my recent presentation on Looking Through The Lens I spent a little time riffing on Errol Morris’ New York Times column Liar Liar Pants on Fire.

Morris leads us down the path to show that the question of “is it true” has no meaning for a photograph that lacks any kind fo caption or context. And how that meaning changes when the context is current

I have often wondered: would it be possible to look at a photograph shorn of all its context, caption-less, unconnected to current thought and ideas? It would be like stumbling on a collection of photographs in a curiosity shop – pictures of people and places that we do not recognize and know nothing about. I might imagine things about the people and places in the photographs but know nothing about them. Nothing.

I want to ask a relatively simple question. Are these photographs true or false? Do they tell the truth?

Without a caption, without a context, without some idea about what the picture is a picture of, I can’t answer. I simply cannot talk about the photograph as being true or false independently of beliefs about the picture. A captionless photograph, stripped of all context, is virtually meaningless. I need to know more.

And yet, this idea that photographs can be true or false independent of context is so ingrained in our thinking that we are reluctant to part with it.

He makes a fantastic case for captions, a.k.a meta information a.k.a context.

As I do for shared photographs, as something plopped on flicks with only Image9654.JPG as a title has no context.

So transport to today, when of all things, I am in the mens rest room of the Driskill hotel looking at this Frederick Remington print

(click for full size)

Okay, it is turn of the century cowboys and indians.

But wow, I must have had to go, because I read the caption

Mexican Monte

We take life easy with a will,
Do I and my young foreman, Bill;
Daily we find at every hand
Agreeable methods to expand.

With redskin maidens we romance
We play their brothers games of chance;
For by this means, as can be shown,
Much that was theirs becomes our own.

I’m a bit horrified at this context. yes, on one hand, it was western expansion white man perspective, but thinking again how the world sees America– “Much that was theirs becomes our own.” is not much to be proud of.

But again, Morris is right, without this context, the image has less meaning, and no sense of truth or falseness.

What does it have with the caption?

I’m not even sure why I am taking it this far. I have no desired to demand the hotel remove the print. It is s snapshot of a past mindset.

a past mindset.

A past mindset.

True?

Lost in Austin, lost in art, lost in context

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The Captions Gone Bad by CogDogBlog, unless otherwise expressly stated, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.

4 Responses to “Captions Gone Bad”

  1. cogdog says:

    CogDogBlogged: Captions Gone Bad http://bit.ly/hDjTal

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  2. anderscj2 says:

    New Post: Captions Gone Bad: or When Looking Back Really Makes You Cringe or Alan does not know crap … http://bit.ly/hvzITI by @cogdog

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  3. Tom says:

    I was at the Driskill last month I think. I missed that one but did see this one. I could spend a lot of time there taking pictures, captions or no.

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