Aperture 250 - Spring 2023
We Make Pictures in Order to Live
“We Make Pictures in Order to Live” explores the relationship between photography and storytelling across generations and geographies. Featuring visual stories that illuminate daily life, this issue evokes the late, celebrated writer Joan Didion, who declared, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.”
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Issue Details
This spring, Aperture magazine presents issue #250, “We Make Pictures in Order to Live,” which explores the relationship between photography and storytelling across generations and geographies. Featuring visual stories that excite, surprise, and illuminate daily life, this issue’s title is a nod to the late, celebrated writer Joan Didion, who declared, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” Aperture contributors explore the quiet poetry— or clamorous disorder—of the everyday, and attest that making photographs is a way of being alive
In a sweeping introductory essay, Brian Dillon asks how we might view Didion through photography, and what images come to mind when we think of her writing. Thessaly La Force profiles Bieke Depoorter, who sees documentary photography both as a listening exercise and a form of investigation, blurring the lines between authorship, fiction, and truth. Alistair O’Neill takes stock of Nick Waplington’s vibrant records of subcultures on both sides of the Atlantic. Lena Fritsch writes about the “exquisite world-making” of photographer Eikoh Hosoe’s collaborative practice. Tiana Reid reconsiders Charles “Teenie” Harris’s vivid, midcentury portraits of Black life in Pittsburgh, several of which are published for the first time in this issue.
Among the portfolios, Casey Gerald discusses Adraint Bereal’s images depicting the agony and ecstasy of being a Black college student in the US today. Yvonne Venegas searches for family ghosts in the Mexican landscape, which poet and novelist Daniel Saldaña París describes as “an exercise in freedom and intelligence.” Kamayani Sharma looks at Gauri Gill’s images of a community masquerade in the Indian state of Maharashtra, and its potential to reverse power dynamics inherent in seeing and being seen.
Durga Chew-Bose meditates on the photographs of Mary Manning—also featured on the cover— and their poetic sensitivity toward story and the everyday. For Endnote, Aperture poses six questions for the painter Jordan Casteel.
In The PhotoBook Review—included within every issue of Aperture—Bruno Ceschel speaks with photographer, bookmaker, and publisher Alejandro Cartagena about his work. Lou Stoppard reviews a trio of photobooks about domestic spaces, and Aperture’s editors review a range of recent publications.
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of pages: 136
Number of images: 0
Publication date: 2023-03-07
Measurements: 9.25 x 12 x 0.6 inches
ISBN: 9781597115476
Support has been provided by members of Aperture’s Magazine Council: Jon Stryker and Slobodan Randjelović, Susan and Thomas Dunn, Kate Cordsen and Denis O’Leary, and Michael W. Sonnenfeldt, MUUS Collection.
Table Of Contents
Front
Agenda
Sharjah Biennial, Ming Smith, Georgia O’Keeffe, Evelyn Hofer
Timeline
David Campany on the many lives of a famous Walker Evans portrait
Viewfinder
Elianna Kan on photography in Ukraine before the Russian invasion
Dispatches
Andrew Russeth on the changing cityscapes of Seoul
Studio Visit
Tiffany Lambert on Rosalind Fox Solomon and her downtown New York loft
Backstory
Max Pearl on a long-overdue retrospective of Darrel Ellis’s experimental images
Curriculum
Alessandra Sanguinetti on Fernando Pessoa, Sally Mann, and the political art of David Wojnarowicz
Words
Editors’ Note: We Make Pictures in Order to Live
The Afterimage of Joan Didion
An iconic writer’s relationship with photography
Brian Dillon
Conversations with Pictures
How chance encounters drive Bieke Depoorter’s collaborative storytelling
Thessaly La Force
Histories from Below
Nick Waplington revisits three decades of subcultural studies
Alistair O’Neill
Mythic Worlds
Folklore and fantasy in the work of Eikoh Hosoe
Lena Fritsch
The Edges of Memory
Charles “Teenie” Harris’s midcentury portrait of Black culture in Pittsburgh
Tiana Reid
Pictures
The Black Yearbook
Adraint Bereal’s chronicle of student life at US colleges
Casey Gerald
Sea of Cortez
Yvonne Venegas’s search for family ghosts in the landscape
Daniel Saldaña París
Acts of Appearance
In India, Gauri Gill creates a community masquerade
Kamayani Sharma
New York Joy
Mary Manning sees gifts in the everyday
Durga Chew-Bose
Back
The PhotoBook Review
A conversation with Alejandro Cartagena, Lou Stoppard on domestic life—and a selection of recent photobooks
Endnote
Seven questions for Jordan Casteel