Analysis Of In The Garden (Karin In Grass

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For this short analysis, I will consider Collier Schorr’s “In the Garden (Karin in Grass),” a photograph, for how it appears concerned with the (potentially) manmade confusion between what is real and natural, and what is artifice. At stake is the claim that humans are quite responsible for the rigid distinctions used to separate, identify, and qualify gender and, more poignantly, beauty. To begin in terms of formal components, Schorr frames his shot in what looks like an unremarkable field: There stands a tree in the immediate background, behind the subject who lay sprawled over long grass. It is the subject (his- or herself), therefore, that brings those elements into light, along with the photograph’s intentions. Indeed, the ???

“fluidity of identity,” as Robertson and McDaniel (2009, p.84) call it, stands out as the image’s foremost interest, particularly insofar as a close observation of the subject does not dispel doubt that he is a she, or she a he—nor how those terms have come to be defined. The formal choices responsible for creating that ambiguity are, first, the subject’s pose, which is historically associated with “Western male artists’ conventions of depicting the female” (Robertson & McDaniel 2009, p.84). Second, and intensely, …show more content…

Either way, an individual’s physical traits and his or her physical “quality” aside, Schorr presents his audience with the task of discerning the difference between a natural occurrence and a misplaced calculation. At least for me, the source of that task finds itself rooted in the juxtaposition of garments in the

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