---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Feb 18, 2021 at 7:09 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-AMCA]: Schwerda on Ritter and Scheiwiller, 'The
Indigenous Lens? Early Photography in the Near and Middle East'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Markus Ritter, Staci G. Scheiwiller, eds.  The Indigenous Lens? Early
Photography in the Near and Middle East.  Studies in Theory and
History of Photography Series. Berlin  De Gruyter, 2017.
Illustrations. 372 pp.  $80.99 (pdf), ISBN 978-3-11-059087-6; $80.99
(paper), ISBN 978-3-11-049135-7.

Reviewed by Mira Xenia Schwerda (Harvard University)
Published on H-AMCA (February, 2021)
Commissioned by Alessandra Amin

"No artist's brush such an image could create" has been inscribed on
a photograph of a group of poets in Shiraz taken by the photographer
Mirza Hasan (1853-1915) in 1894. Iranian poet 'Abd al-Asi 'Ali Naqi
al-Shirazi composed the poem specifically for the photograph. After
declaring "Praise be to the lord for this blessed page," he refers to
the unique nature of photographs as inimitable by the painter's brush
and then begins to praise those depicted (quoted in Carmen Pérez
González's essay in the volume under review, pp. 199-200). Fourteen
years earlier, the Ottoman photographer Muhammad Sadiq Bey
(1832-1902) also reflected on the medium after he had taken the
portrait of Shaykh 'Umar al-Shaibi, the guardian of the Kaaba: "By
means of photography, I depicted the highly esteemed one and sent him
[this photograph] with the following verses: 'My heart captured your
presence in the grace and luster of the Kaaba. My heart is burning
[with pain] because of the separation, and yet photographers are not
condemned to burn in fire [in hell]. You, I have drawn on paper in
friendship and memory" (brackets in the original; quoted in Claude W.
Sui's essay in the volume under review, p. 119).

Markus Ritter and Staci G. Scheiwiller's edited volume, from which
the two examples above are taken, came out of an international guest
lecture series titled "The Geography of Photography" at the Institute
of Art History at the University of Zurich. The book is intended to
balance and shift the narrative of photo history from a Eurocentric
or Western-centric perspective to a more inclusive and global one. It
introduces new research on early histories of photography in the
Middle East. Many of the essays not only highlight previously
unpublished photographic material and new archival research but also
give the historical actors themselves a chance to speak by quoting
letters, inscriptions, diary entries, and article excerpts. Giving
voice to these actors might not seem remarkable for a historical
study, yet in a field that for a long time has favored textual and
visual accounts of Western visitors in its understanding of Middle
Eastern history and culture, this is an important shift.

The book is divided into four sections: "Histories," "Biographies,"
"Practices," and "Archives." Many other divisions would have been
possible, as there are many connections between the thirteen essays.
One theme that comes up often is authorship and acknowledgment.
Others, unsurprisingly, are the topics of nationalism and modernity
in the Middle East. The issue of translation of both technological
treatises on photography and of visual norms and codes also plays an
important role and is linked to the movement and mobility of ideas,
concepts, and technologies.

Part 1, "Histories," consists of two essays. In the first essay, "The
Search for an Ottoman Vernacular Photography," Edhem Eldem urges
photo historians to consider previously overlooked sources of Ottoman
photography, including work by provincial photographers and by
photographers who, though based in Istanbul, did not cater to an
elite. He specifically mentions postcards as an undervalued resource:
"the combination of image and text allowed for a contextualization of
a single item in ways that are unthinkable for a stand-alone
photograph" (p. 52). The second essay, a translation by Reza Sheikh
of Mohammadreza Tahmasbpour's "Photography during the Qajar Era,
1842-1925," provides a short summary of the history of photography in
Iran and begins by correcting a widely believed myth: the
daguerreotype camera did not arrive in Iran as a diplomatic gift from
the British and Russian courts, argues the author, but had been
formally requested by Nasir al-Din Shah himself. This statement,
which is indeed important as it emphasizes the king's early interest
in this new technology, calls for more information yet sadly little
is provided. However, the scholar's thirst for ample information and
interesting primary sources is thoroughly quenched in the second part
of the essay, where Tahmasbpour discusses how photography became a
valued tool of political propaganda and contributed to the events of
the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1906-11).

The second part, "Biographies," begins with Elahe Helbig's essay
"Geographies Traced and Histories Told: Photographic Documentation of
Land and People by 'Abdollah Mirza Qajar, 1880s-1890s." Helbig
analyzes the photographic exploration and visual narration of the
periphery of the Guarded Domains of Persia (_mamalek-e mahruseh-ye
Iran_) as a part of Nasir al-Din's project of knowledge production.
'Abdollah Mirza Qajar's photographs had a direct and indirect
political subtext as he captured political events--for example, in
the group portraits of prisoners connected to the rebellion of the
Turkoman Yamut tribe in 1889--and depicted contemporary Iran through
its peoples, architecture, and landscapes, instead of focusing on
Iran's past in the shape of historical and archaeological monuments.
In the following essay, "Early Photography of the Holy Sites of Islam
in the Arabian Peninsula," Claude W. Sui discusses the work and lives
of the photographers Muhammad Sadiq Bey and al-Sayyid 'Abd al-Ghaffar
(active in the 1880s), both of whom photographed the holy sites of
Mecca and Medina. Sadiq Bey used his photographs in his own four
publications and displayed them at international exhibitions
(Philadelphia 1876 and Venice 1881), whereas 'Abd al-Ghaffar's
photographs were published without the acknowledgment of his
authorship in two books by the Dutch Arabist Christiaan Snouck
Hurgronje. Yet 'Abd al-Ghaffar's glass plates show that he himself
had signed the images as _Fotografiyyah al-Sayyid 'Abd al-Ghaffar,
tabib Mecca_. It is unclear why he was not acknowledged by name; on
the one hand, it was fairly common practice for Western scholars to
reproduce photographs taken by Middle Eastern photographers without
naming them, but on the other hand, it also could have been to
protect the photographer, and Sui points out that association or even
collaboration with Snouck Hurgronje, who had been exiled from Mecca
in 1885, could have endangered 'Abd al-Ghaffar. In the final essay of
the second part, Scheiwiller discusses the Iran-based photographer
Antoin Sevruguin, or in her words, she relocates him: "Relocating
Sevruguin: Contextualizing the Political Climate of the Iranian
Photographer Antoin Sevruguin (c. 1851-1933)." Scheiwiller analyzes
Sevruguin's multilayered identity and defines him as a "cultural
citizen" of Iran shaped by his upbringing in the country and
illustrated by his chosen sobriquet "nurtured by Iran" (_parvardeh-ye
Iran_) (p. 148). Through unpublished archival material she sheds new
light on lesser-known periods of Sevruguin's life, discussing the
context of the establishment of his first studio in Tabriz and his
participation in the Iranian Constitutional Revolution. Scheiwiller
discovered important new textual sources, while my own work based on
unpublished glass plates and albumen prints by Sevruguin held in
private collections introduces and analyzes important new visual
sources that complement her findings: the artist's little-known
photographs of the events of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution,
which earlier could not be attributed to him.[1]

In the third part, "Practices," art historian Wendy M. K. Shaw's "The
Ottoman in Ottoman Photography: Producing Identity through Its
Negation" asks what photography can tell us about a collective,
proto-national Ottoman identity. She describes Ottoman participation
in a global visual culture and states that "what would become Ottoman
photography was not a means of showing Ottomans in alterity, which
was both constructed by and attractive to European gazes; rather,
Ottoman photography emerged in an attempt to represent the empire and
its subjects as a self-reflexive representation--not so much of being
Ottoman but of (also) being modern" (p. 179). The following essay by
photo historian Carmen Pérez González, "Written Images: Poems on
Early Iranian Portrait Studio Photography (1864-1930) and
Constitutional Revolution Postcards (1905-1911)," delights the reader
with selections of Persian poetry inscribed on photographs and
picture postcards. The author reproduces the poems both in the
original and in translation. She interprets the messages of the
postcards, several of which depict postmortem images, as relating to
loss, despair, and nostalgia. In the next essay, titled "The Gate of
the Bosporus: Early Photographs of Istanbul and the Dolmabahçe
Palace," architectural historian Esra Akcan examines the photographic
visualization of the Dolmabahçe Palace (built 1843-56), an icon of
the Ottoman Empire's modernization efforts. Photographs of the palace
were often prominently placed on one of the first pages of city
albums by prominent photographers like Pascal Sébah or the Abdullah
Frères, underlining the building's importance as a symbol of the
sultan's power. The depictions of the palace with its neoclassical
columns and its state-of-the-art glass ceiling showed how modern
"Ottoman palaces were not radically different from their European
counterparts, [thereby] falsifying the Orientalist dialectic between
'the West' and 'the East'" (p. 227). The penultimate essay of this
section, "The Heroic Lens: Portrait Photography of Ottoman Insurgents
in the Nineteenth-Century Balkans--Types and Uses," written by art
historian Martina Baleva, discusses the self-fashioning of identity
through photography in the Ottoman Balkans. She contextualizes the
sartorial choices of the sitters, who in these portraits are in fact
more often standing than sitting, and develops a social and political
history of the fustanella, a pleated white skirt, which symbolized
"male courage and national pride" and was worn by many of the
insurgents portrayed (p. 243). On the final pages of this longest
section of the book, Stephen Sheehi examines the rise of amateur
photography among the Arab middle class and its coexistence alongside
professional studios in the essay "Glass Plates and Kodak Cameras:
Arab Amateur Photography in the 'Era of Film.'" He regards Arab
amateur photography, which celebrated "an _individual_ and
individuated _subject_ [that] rest at the heart of the image," as a
part of _al-nahda _photography, which reproduced modernist values
while, at times, mourning the ways of a bygone era (p. 272).

The fourth and final part of the book groups three essays under the
heading "Archives." Photo historians Khadijeh Mohammadi Nameghi and
Mohammad Sattari's contribution, "The Photography Studio of the
Naseri Harem in Nineteenth-Century Iran," tells the history of the
Imperial Harem Studio at the Golestan Palace during the era of
"photographer king" Nasir al-Din. The studio was managed by Amineh
Aqdas (d. 1893), a_ sigheh_ (temporary wife) of the king, who also
featured in a lot of the photographs he took. The essay also
addresses how later on the taboo of photographing women was
undermined, yet not abolished, with the beginnings of celebrity
culture and the selling of female portraits at the bazaar. The
penultimate essay by Alireza Nabipour and Reza Sheikh, "The
Photograph Albums of the Royal Golestan Palace: A Window into the
Social History of Iran during the Qajar Era," provides insight into
the holdings of the Golestan Palace's photographic archives by
studying a sample of 116 "shadow albums." These shadow albums are the
only resources that are available to researchers in the archive as
the originals are not shown anymore. The shadow albums are
black-and-white hard-copy print-outs of photographs recently taken by
the staff of the Golestan archive of some of the photographs and
photographic albums in their archive. A total of 116 albums of a
collection of over 1,000 albums in the archive have been made
available to researchers in this way. The authors used this sample of
album copies to analyze the difference in Nasir al-Din's and Muzaffar
al-Din's approaches to photography, briefly highlighting the son's
interest in experimental photography, which includes staged comical
photographs, then presenting a longer analysis of the photographs
taken by and for the father and his engagement with the albums, which
included different sets of handwritten annotations. In the last
essay, "How a Former Museum of Modern Art Curator Assembled an
International History of Photography Collection for Iran in the
1970s," Donna Stein, who published some of the earliest work on Qajar
photography, looks back on her time as an advisor to the Tehran
Museum of Contemporary Art. She describes the collection of European
and American photographic works, which was acquired on her advice.

The edited volume by Scheiwiller and Ritter features intriguing new
research from scholars around the world, accompanied by many
well-reproduced photographs. Its insightful essays will undoubtedly
enrich many syllabi and inform our understanding of Middle Eastern
modern art history. Yet two specific oversights stand out. First, an
essay on photography in Armenia or Armenian photographer networks,
sadly missing here, would have enriched and connected the individual
essays even more successfully. While the Armenian connection appears
regularly in the volume, especially in the two wonderful essays by
Scheiwiller and Sui, the subject is never the central focus of an
essay, and no Armenian-language sources have been consulted for any
of the essays. The lack of such an essay is also emblematic of a
larger problem in the field: the artificial disconnect between Middle
Eastern and Caucasian photography studies. Second, another important
addition would have been an essay investigating transnational
printing and photography networks used by Middle Eastern
photographers and publishers at the beginning of the twentieth
century. The Geneva-based engraving and printing company Sadag, for
example, printed the photographic illustrations for the Armenian
revolutionary journal _Droshak_ (Banner), while also being involved
in producing Sadiq Bey's illustrated publications on Mecca. The
reoccurrence of specific European printing companies is clearly not a
coincidence and it would be great to learn more about these
international exchanges.

In a nutshell, this well-researched edited volume is mandatory
reading for everyone interested in the history of photography.
Contributions like these will shape the critical study of photography
as a global phenomenon, helping curators and educators reframe its
history as diffused and diverse, rather than anchored solely in the
West.

Note

[1]. See Mira Xenia Schwerda, "How Photography Changed Politics: The
Case of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1905-1911)" (PhD
diss., Harvard University, April 2020).

Citation: Mira Xenia Schwerda. Review of Ritter, Markus; Scheiwiller,
Staci G., eds., _The Indigenous Lens? Early Photography in the Near
and Middle East_. H-AMCA, H-Net Reviews. February, 2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=53248

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#6506): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/6506
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/80745024/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to