Is Nature Photography Too Beautiful?

A move toward “truth in labeling” would bring photographic arts more in line with ecological science.

Robert Chianese in American Scientist magazine, 2014 January-February p. 67

I am enthralled by stunning photos of na­ture. You probably are, too. Gorgeous images of landscapes, animals, plants, and exotic, undisturbed places adorn our walls as well as our advertisements, calendars, screen savers, and museum galleries. We all seem hooked.

Dramatic images of nature help shape our consciousness about the physical world, and classic landscape photos by C. E. Watkins, An­sel Adams, Eliot Porter, and Robert Glenn Ketchum play a key part in modern cultural lit­eracy about the environment and our evolving relationship to it. For this very reason, contem­plating nature within the frame of photography also invites us to consider what sort of environ­mental understanding of our changing world nature photography does provide.

Conservation-minded photographers, such as the renowned Eliot Porter, often put photog­raphy to the political task of helping save the subjects they photograph. Even if you do not recognize his name, you surely know his work. His Glen Canyon series, The Place No One Knew (1963), composed for the Sierra Club, featured haunting, quasi-abstract images of rock forma­tions and watercourses that evoked the can­yon’s unappreciated, almost otherworldly maj­esty. By mastering Kodak’s new dye-transfer color process, Porter was able to craft tonally subtle images with the clarity and detail of black and white—the only respected medium of nature photography up to that point, made famous by his mentor, Ansel Adams. Sadly, even these new kinds of images could not stop the 1966 construction of the Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River, which put those spec­tacular locations permanently underwater.

Today, the digital revolution in photography results in natural scenery that never looked so alive, so vibrant and luminous, even transcen­dent, though many famous subjects we know are ecologically compromised, environmen­tally degraded, or simply destroyed. Nature photography today, with the added benefits of Adobe’s Photoshop, seems to revel in a hy­per “grandeurism.” An essential of most na­ture photography as a genre is to move us to love and revere it; it further assumes that only through such a response will we feel the urge to preserve or restore it.

Contrariwise, pictures of environmental deg­radation may incite us, but they may just as likely turn off donors and drive activists away. Beauty sells, ugliness might repel. So we buy the dazzling calendar and join the organization.

The acclaimed novelist Lydia Millet has a starkly different reaction. She blasts the lush photos in the promotional calendars of most nature organizations as “eco-porn”:

This is picture-book nature. . . . Tarted up into perfectly circumscribed simulations of the wild, these props of mainstream environmentalism serve as surrogates for real engagement with wilderness, the way porn models serve as surrogates for real women. They are placebos substituting for triage…. They offer comfort to the viewer: They will always be there, ideal, unblem­ished, available. They offer gratification without social cost; they satiate by pro­viding objects for fantasy without making uncomfortable demands on the subject.

Millet’s excoriating remarks force us to re­think what we are looking at in those glowing shots of nature, but even the most “seductive” scenery does not excite lascivious emotion nor the potential sexual release of pornography. I would argue we likely become even more static in our contemplative, aesthetic responses to them. Millet implies as much.

There are other, creative approaches to in­volve us. The 2014 World Wildlife Fund cal­endar features individual photo-portraits of iconic animals—a tiger, rhino, ape, and polar bear. However, as headshots in blank backgrounds, removed from natural settings, they appear less than alluring and may even hint of stress. It’s as if their physical surroundings would por­tray them as too colorful, secure, settled in place. These solitary, starkly depicted animals seem to look out at us—from jail? or limbo?—for some answers to questions we must pose for them; how can we stop threatening their survival?

The photos from last year’s WWF calendar may have seemed less trou­bling because we could glimpse their surroundings, though the “December” close-up photo of a mother polar bear with its cub on its back, looking di­rectly out at us, did make me worry about the cub’s future. That photo also included a conscientious truth-in- labeling caption: a short, unobtrusive, gentle comment at the bottom of the calendar section saying, “Polar bears are an indicator of conditions through­out the Arctic, and at-risk populations could signal threats in the marine eco­system.” Here we are invited to con­template the fate of an environment closely threatened by global warming by seeing one of its most beloved ani­mals not just as a familiarly iconic one, but also as an indicator species of the environment’s overall health, which is rapidly declining. Actual science enhances—”colors,” we might say—our response to the photograph.

Photographers might go further. They might try to make uncomfortable demands on viewers, with portraits of environmental ruin. There’s even a new movement called “ruins photog­raphy” declaring itself a purveyor of “ruin porn” (that term again), mainly focused on urban decay and post­industrial blight. It tends, however, to aestheticize damaged urbanscapes like Detroit and Rust Belt cities, provok­ing critics to attack it as insensitive to the impoverished places and destitute people who inhabit them. Blight, even beautified, is a hard sell.

Some nature photographers special­ize in bizarre alien landscapes, ones we have tarnished and trashed. Richard Misrach, whose subjects have ranged from seascapes to nuclear test sites, cre­ates eerie scenes of desolation in pho­tographing our desert intrusions. His scenes are at once grotesque and hypno­tizing, surreal, but not without a kind of apocalyptic beauty. In a radical section of his Desert Cantos series, he trains his camera on a bomb crater and destroyed convoy in the Nevada weapons testing range. Could there be anything less al­luring and more unnatural than this?

Misrach himself denies he’s invested in ugliness, nor does he see himself as an environmental activist. He does, however, criticize some foundational nature photographers, such as Ansel Adams, for deflecting us from reality with their commitment to beauty:

My main problem with Adams’ perfect unsullied pearls of wilder­ness, and with the Sierra Club and the Ansel Adams clones, is that they are perpetuating a myth that keeps people from looking at the truth about what we have done to the wilderness.

Does Misrach protest too much? Per­haps he believes that he alone serves up objective reality, cold truth, while famous others peddle the hot, alluring beauty-myth. Still, his photos have a formal artistry, deliberately limited to­nality, and studied grotesqueness that make them appear anything but unfil­tered reportage. He may be stuck in the beauty box too.

So is nature photography never able to en­gage our activist emotions for amelio­rating the plight of the Earth? Perhaps we need to inform all the environmen­tal organizations that bank on it. In her famous collection of essays On Photography (1977), Susan Sontag theorizes that the medium of photography itself keeps us outside the frame: viewers become voyeurs and uninvolved consumers of millions of images, distanced from the subjects.

We have at least one famous exam­ple of photographs of environmental degradation that sparked reform: the 1930s Dust Bowl photos of Dorothea Lange and other Farm Security Admin­istration photographers. They trained America’s eyes onto human-caused soil depletion in a period of prolonged drought that literally blew the land away. Lange’s “Migrant Mother” por­trait has become rightly famous, and dust storm photos brought the double dangers of drought and improper plowing into view.

The effects of these government-spon­sored photographs, coupled with an all-out national effort to reduce poverty and change farming practices during the Depression, altered the consciousness of America about the connections between economy and ecology. These words have the same root—”ecos,” or house­hold; we live in and depend on both, and we still struggle to devise policy based on their interconnections. These 1930s photos have a powerful, black and white naive realism about them that seems far removed from the color-wheel aesthetics of nature photography today.

Consider the potential impact of a new school of “expose photography,” one that lays our pollutions bare. We could create a calendar decked out with toxic damage photos, 12 months of unaesthetic environmental horrors! The website Shutterstock offers more than 1,850 different photos of landfills. Under the heading of “environmental dam­age,” the stock photo website Inmagine displays nearly 6,000 images that could fill up hundreds of calendars: the McMansion Footprint Calendar, the Urban Blight Calendar, the Junkyard Calendar (probably a favorite), the Clear Cut Cal­endar, the Smokestack and Dirty Skies Calendar, and so on. Acting on this no­tion, the BBC Wildlife Fund has already created an award-winning “Almost Ex­tinct” calendar, in which each day of the year features an animal under the stress of our intrusions.

Again, this may be a pointless en­deavor, if photography by its very na­ture aestheticizes and distances its sub­jects from viewers. But critical theory points out something much more obvi­ous about photography, and potentially more useful. We capture a shot, shoot an image, thus metaphorically “kill” it by freezing it in time. We train our controlling eye and magisterial gaze on a scene and own it by snapping it. We hold it still, forever—in fact, a still life.

All photography, we might argue, is, therefore, elegiac—a meditation on time and fleeting subjects caught and then lost to the ongoing present. This may be easiest to see with family pho­tos. Elegies can be meditative without being mournful, formally acknowledg­ing the passing of a moment or scene or prospect even as that subject carries on in real life.The photo is a fleeting moment etched by light, taken out of time, and stored on film or chip.

With nature photography, though, the subject all too often goes on to de­grade and suffer damage large and small, placing those elegies in a differ­ent context. If we adjust our concept of nature to fit truer ecological realities, we may be able to see nature photogra­phy itself reflect them. A glorious image of Yosemite’s entrance can hold within it a sense of loss, an elegiac longing for the time when it was fully vital and powerful. Gorgeousness and grandeur themselves can come to signify loss.

This evokes an even more basic epistemological conflict: the tension be­tween appearance and reality. Our eyes are an unreliable source about what’s actual, since our concepts drive our vi­sion. Immanuel Kant formulates it this way: “Concepts without percepts are empty; percepts without concepts are blind.” Our dominant cultural concept of the natural world still carries over from the romantic nineteenth century, where Nature was posited as pure, wild, healthy, and endlessly regenera­tive. This can blind us to its present di­minished state. The camera’s images, beautiful or not, depict a reality we currently cannot or dare not see.

One strategy to bring the camera’s images a little closer to reality is a practice I call “photographic calming.” This is a technique of toning down, so that the gleaming light and colors in typical nature photography become subdued, tuned to meditative reflections on our threatened world. The range of exposure levels, contrasts, color saturation, and what Photoshop labels “vibrance” can be narrowed, not to take the blush off the rose, but to avoid de­picting it with an enhanced ultra-radi­ant perfection.

Click image to enlarge

These two photographs of Yosemite Valley show different versions—”hyped” versus “calmed”—of the same scene. (Photographs courtesy of the author.)

Practicing this sort of tonal control would reveal by contrast that much of nature photography today is overly sat­urated with light and color. (This effect may be partly an artifact of our state-of-the-art digital cameras, monitors, and projectors, whose multi-bit pixels en­hance light and color and seem to “tone up” or brighten most photos.)

Perhaps such calming is itself a dis­tortion, an environmentally correct pall draped over the majesties of na­ture. But those glories are fading, and distorting them toward a subdued and tonalist register may be approved as a distortion that clarifies. We don’t need a Natura Noir, a dark and forbidding photographic vision of the grim fate of the Earth; nor its contrary, the blare of Natura Gloriosa, with its hyped gor­geousness, which also obscures. Both enhancements and diminishments re­flect values about what we see and un­derstand about the natural world.

I’ve adjusted my own photo of Yosemite Valley both ways—hyped and calmed. We would not know from the hyped view that human-caused global warming afflicts Yosemite with a variety of ills. The massive Rim Wildfire nearby burned with such fury in August 2013 because of prolonged drought, brittle-dry vegetation, insect infestation, and numerous other effects exaggerated by climate change. Luckily the fire did not encroach into the valley itself, though smoke obscured its vistas. Ozone from cities floats into the valley as well. Heightened temperatures make it dif­ficult for alpine creatures, such as pi­cas, to survive at lower elevations as they once did. With less snowfall, trees proliferate and overshadow mountain meadows, stunting wildflower growth, and warmer temperatures shrink Yosemite’s glaciers. None of this finds di­rect expression in either photo.

The less color-saturated photo, with its browner and grayer tones and less luminous sky and paler green vegeta­tion, still expresses the scale and maj­esty of this famous prospect, but it in­sinuates all is not well, which it is not. It hints at fire, air pollution, and drought. Is it a lie? Perhaps, as is the one on the left, but its image is closer to the sci­entific and ecological truth rather than the glory shot on the left. The eyes of a viewer without environmental knowl­edge of the growing threats might “see” the hyped view, while the ecologically informed might look on the famous scene with a combination of respect and dread. Our conceptions drive our perceptions, and more accurate concep­tions point to the calmed photograph as more “honest.”

Photos of that nearby Rim Fire con­flagration might serve a larger eco­logical purpose if they themselves did not become exciting, inflammatory icons with their own pop fascinations. Slightly more effective might be shots of the blighted aftermath of the fire, with dead trees littering the scoured, lifeless Earth. However, they provoke a whole new set of environmental con­cerns, from extensive winter flooding to demands by logging companies to clean up the 400-square-mile area by extracting trees, without regard to the ecological process of successional forest regrowth that requires them.

Finally, the features of Yosemite at risk from global warming can’t fully be seen in the calmed photo, nor in the shots of flaming redwoods or burned forest floor. To convey that would re­quire a narrative. We can, therefore, ar­gue for a “truth in labeling” feature for nature photography. This would re­quire an up-to-date scientific gloss on any subject, using the latest ecological information about the environmental health of it, visible or not.

More than a short comment about the scene, animal, or plant, such a science-based label would bring pho­tographic arts in line with ecological science. Surely professional nature pho­tographers, who are usually environ­mentally informed, need to affix such comments to their works the way news photographers or editors do, clarifying what we are looking at; they can con­sult with scientists as well. Nature pho­tography would find a purpose uniting visual aesthetics with ecological expla­nation. It would help revise both our stubborn percepts and concepts about nature along more realistic lines, and add to our general scientific literacy. Im­ages of nature with commentary then could be in the service of preservation, bringing photographic art back to a classical program of being aesthetically “pleasing” and useful at the same time.

Bibliography

British Broadcasting Corporation. 2011. Al­most Extinct Calendar. London: BBC. www.olivermaltby.com/BBC-Wildlife-Fund-Al-most-Extinct.

Millet, L. 2004. “Ecoporn exposed,” High Coun­try News, in the Utne Reader September/ October. www.utne.com/2004-09-01/Eco-porn Exposed.aspx Porter, E. 1990. Amon Carter Museum. www.cartermuseum.org/collections/porter/col- lection.php?mcat+3&scat+12

Sontag, S. 1977. On Photography. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Tucker, A. W. 1966. Crimes and Splendors: The Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach. New York: Bulfinch Press, Little Brown, with The Mu­seum of Fine Arts, Houston.

 

 

Robert Louis Chianese is a professor of English emeritus, California State University, Northridge; a 1979 Mitchell Prize Laureate in Sustain­ability; and past president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Pacific Division (2012), the only humanities professor selected in its 100-year his­tory. The AAAS-PD has just published his monograph, Art Inspired by Science.
E-mail: rlchianese@gmail.com

www.americanscientist.org

2014 January-February 67

×