In the wake of “Black Panther” and the unveiling of the Obamas’ official portraits, there has been a renewed discussion of the importance of black representation in visual culture. What we mean, of course, is not simply an increase in the number of black bodies visible in movies, tv shows, music videos, magazines, and so on, but rather an important shift in how these bodies are being represented.
As an art historian, I’m particularly interested in how images circulate in society and impact our habits and expectations of each other. As a Christian, I’m interested in what our moral responsibility is when we look at highly charged images. So, in a series of three posts, I’d like to explore why images matter when it comes to race, how we can evaluate images through multiple lenses, and, finally, how we might practice restorative looking when engaging difficult images from the past.
Images and the Origins of Scientific Racism
The very notion of race as a social category is inextricably intertwined with visual representation. When 19th-century scientists wanted to prove racial inferiority or the theory of polygenesis, they turned to images to make their point. In 1839, for example, Samuel Morton published comparative charts that aligned African skulls with apes. In 1854 and 1857, Josiah Nott and George Gliddon released large, lavishly illustrated volumes that used images to prove the existence of a racial hierarchy.
But it was perhaps photography, more than any other medium, that impacted American notions of race. Artist and theorist Coco Fusco writes, “Rather than recording the existence of race, photography produced race as a visualizable fact.” Anthropologists created a set of visual tropes that codified racial difference. By emphasizing certain physical characteristics, posing bodies in particular ways, and framing the image with text, photographs offered “proof” of racial difference.
Images as Control
Racial hierarchies were visually enforced through both subtle and overt means. In the early 19th century, the Long Island artist William Sidney Mount achieved great acclaim for his “genre paintings”: naturalistic scenes of everyday, country life. Free black figures appear regularly in Mount’s best-known paintings, and he has been praised for his dignified portrayals of African Americans. As some scholars have pointed out, however, Mount’s paintings consistently depict blacks in subservient positions or on the literal margins of the painting. In Rustic Dance After a Sleigh Ride, for example, a black servant pokes his head in through the door, another tends to the fire, and a third plays the fiddle for a mass of white revelers. Their cheerfulness at the edges of the scene –and, by extension, society – suggests that a peaceful, racially integrated society is possible as long as blacks accept the “natural” order of things and stay in their place.
But images could also do much more vicious policing. In the late 19th and early 20th century, lynching became a powerful tool of racial control in the United States, particularly in the South. Racial lynchings were public spectacles, intended to terrorize blacks and assert white dominance. Many of these lynchings were photographed, but not for the purpose of exposing the crime. Instead, the images were turned into postcards and sold as souvenirs to attendees. In one particularly chilling example from Temple, Texas, in 1915, a man mailed a postcard of the dangling, burned body of Will Stanley to his parents. “This is the Barbecue we had last night my picture is to the left with a cross over it your son Joe,” he wrote on the back.
Photographs like these, proudly annotated, crisscrossed the country via the U.S. Postal Service. The effect was not only the emboldening of white supremacist but a kind of visual script for black Americans. As Shawn Smith has observed, James Cameron – who miraculously survived a lynching in Marion, Indiana in 1930 – described his experience in photographic terms; the mob became a “flat image” and “film negatives.” These image of racial terror even shaped individuals’ personal experiences of trauma.
Images for Equality
It should come as no surprise that photographs also played a key role in abolition and civil rights efforts. Frederick Douglass remains the most-photographed person of the 19th century, urgently crafting a public vision of what black dignity looked like. As many scholars have noted, photography is also closely tied to the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements of the mid-20th century. Mamie Till chose to photograph and publish photographs of her son’s brutally disfigured body as visual proof of the reality of brutal racism in the South. “They had to see what I had seen. The whole nation had to bear witness to this,” she said.
But as Martin Berger has argued, these photographs followed a specific formula of black bodies in distress as helpless supplicants, dependent on white intercession to save them from white abuse. Civil Rights photographs of active black bodies were largely relegated to the black press because they departed from the accepted format and could not be absorbed into a mutating form of white supremacy.
Images as an Archive
These images from the past matter because new images are neither created nor viewed in a vacuum. They are always referencing other images as a means of accruing – or sometimes undercutting – authority.
As viewers, we each carry a mental archive of images. We might not be able to name all of the images, and some of them might only exist as half-remembered shadows, but nevertheles,s we are constantly interpreting and categorizing images in relationship to those things which we have previously seen. We might liken our archive to a Google Image search in our brains. If we input something as innocuous as “sunset,” a host of highly saturated, glowing photographs appear, all of them vaguely familiar and all of them reinforcing what a “good” or “photo-worthy” sunset look like. But the archive can also be more socially charged. A search for “women’s hair,” for example, exclusively returns images of white women with long, silky hair, suggesting that such hair is the de facto standard.
Our visual archives are particularly potent when it comes to identifying and policing bodies. Images – particularly those of people on the social margins – teach us what heroism, morality, and fame should look like, and they do so largely through contrast. This is what is desirable and powerful; that is what is not.
In our next post, we will explore some practical ways that we can engage with images from this archive.