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Critics' Forum: Raffi Hadidian's Los Angeles Photographs

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  • Critics' Forum: Raffi Hadidian's Los Angeles Photographs

    Critics' Forum: Visual Arts


    Raffi Hadidian's Los Angeles Photographs:
    Isolation and Movement in the Big City

    by Ramela Grigorian Abbamontian


    Lebanese-Armenian photographer Raffi Hadidian (b. 1972) has had a
    camera in his hand since the age of 19, but his love of images and his
    realization of their power in storytelling began many years earlier.

    At the age of six, Hadidian arrived in Los Angeles from war-torn
    Lebanon. Soon thereafter, he was using visual images to reconstruct
    and make sense of his birthplace. The first time, around age seven,
    he used Matchbox cars and small paper boxes to create a makeshift city
    in the sandbox with his brother Ara. As his brother lit a match,
    Hadidian photographed (using a 110 Kodak camera) the flames of a
    burning city. This early memory of image-making reveals a desire to
    understand the city of his origins as well as its conditions. The
    pictorial series he has created in the last decade reveal a
    deep-rooted desire to comprehend his current home of Los Angeles, to
    present a democratic photographic representation of its inhabitants,
    and ultimately - as I suggest - to transform himself, as well as his
    viewers, from voyeurs to witnesses and participants.

    Like many photographers, Hadidian works serially. The late social art
    historian Albert Boime suggested, in conversations with the author,
    that artists work serially because their experiences cannot be
    captured in a single image. In other words, the very act of creating
    a series becomes a process through which the artist explores not only
    his subjects, but himself as well. Hadidian's series' subjects are
    varied and include the following: fellow drivers in nearby cars in
    "Portraits in Motion" (2005-ongoing), people and places photographed
    while driving in "Drive By Shootings" (2005-ongoing), street scenes in
    "Boulevard of (Broken) Dreams" (2005-ongoing), cyclists around town in
    "Wind in My Face" (2006-ongoing), quiet moments in "Tranquil Stills"
    (2007-ongoing), architectural stability in "Structures" (2009),
    nature's wonders in "Backyard Living - It's a Jungle Out There"
    (2008-ongoing), espresso pulls in "Holy Shot!" (2008), and
    breathtaking scenery in "Yosemite 2011." (There are sometimes over
    400 images in each series. None of the individual photographs in the
    series is given a title, confirming the necessity of multiple images
    to capture the subjects and experiences.)

    Geoffrey Batchen, in "Forget Me Not: Photography and Remembrance"
    (2004), asserts that "[p]hotography is privileged within modern
    culture because, unlike other systems of representation, the camera
    does more than just see the world; it is also touched by the world"
    (31). In a similar way, Hadidian's photographic series allow him to
    explore his contemporary reality: a displaced diasporic artist making
    his home in multi-ethnic Los Angeles. Each series, therefore, is a
    process through which he engages the environment around him, uncovers
    the subtleties of the city, grapples with his role as an artist, and
    attempts to decipher the experience of living in Los Angeles.

    As Hadidian explores the fast-paced experience of living in Los
    Angeles, in some ways he appears to capture an alternate reality. For
    example, we are always in motion in Los Angeles - in cars and freeways
    - rushing from one location to the next. But through his photographs,
    Hadidian slows us down long enough to draw attention to the things
    typically overlooked: the homeless on city streets, drivers in nearby
    cars, people on their bicycles. By creating engaging photographs, he
    draws viewers into a dialogue with realities that are often avoided.
    It is almost as if the work unveils the "white noise" of big city
    living.

    In "Boulevard of (Broken) Dreams," Hadidian captures people often
    disregarded on the streets: "[It] focuses on our daily lives and
    people who live in and among it, but somehow we have deleted their
    presence from it" (conversation with author Oct. 18, 2014). The
    subjects of this series are wide-ranging and include homeless people
    sitting at bus stops and curbs, pedestrians rushing across crosswalks,
    consumers pushing shopping carts, vendors walking with their ice cream
    carts, and men playing checkers on the sidewalk. By their very
    nature, these photographs require inclusion of more of the environment
    in order to place the subject in a specific context. As such, the
    environments become extensions of their inhabitants and a critical
    part of their identities. Hadidian uses well-known photographer Paul
    Strand's dictum to explain his motive for this series: "It is one
    thing to photograph people. It is another to make others care about
    them by revealing the core of their humanness" (quoted on Hadidian's
    Facebook page). Could it be suggested that a witness to turmoil and
    upheaval in another country develops a sensitivity to the plight of
    humanity's suffering in his new home? Hadidian states: "Armenian
    struggle in the diaspora of surviving [has] made me more sensitive to
    human beings surviving" (conversation with author Nov. 1, 2012).

    [Figure 1 - see attachment]

    One of the key themes that emerges from this series is the human
    disconnect that is prevalent in our contemporary lives. In a specific
    photograph from this series [FIGURE 1], two seated men parallel one
    another's folded arms and crossed legs. This visual congruency is
    paradoxically contrasted with the disengagement of one with the other.
    Instead of conversing with one another, the men are isolated in their
    own worlds - visually emphasized by the bars separating their spaces
    on the bench; engrossed only with their own thoughts, their gazes are
    directed outside the composition. Further, the men are in the
    partially-enclosed space of the bus stop, waiting for the bus, thus
    emphasizing the decline of public space in large car-driven
    metropolises such as Los Angeles.

    Hadidian explicitly articulates his desire to be a witness, yet also
    admits to feeling like a voyeur when taking these photographs,
    concerned that he might be "taking something from them [or] from that
    moment." In general, the boundary between voyeur and witness is
    thought to be indistinct; Hadidian's images mediate between these
    roles. As one art commentator has observed, "There is the image as an
    act of witness, concerned to convey a reality we ought to know about
    or bring awareness of a situation that requires a response. And there
    is the voyeuristic image, driven by the delight in seeing, in the
    exhibition of suffering or the exposure of privacy. On the one side,
    a means subordinated to an end: on the other, the means as an end in
    itself: on one side, some kind of reaching out to the other, on the
    other, nothing but self" ("Witnesses and Voyeurs," Art Press,
    Nov. 2001). Hadidian, whenever possible, engages the subjects in
    conversation. During these exchanges, he explains that he wants to
    publicize an issue - the streets and the reality of the conditions
    that exist. In response, subjects have asked him to "show them
    properly" (Hadidian, interview with author, Oct. 18, 2014). Hadidian,
    with raw and powerful images, empowers his subjects by giving them
    pictorial space - they become central subjects of the photographs'
    compositions. Consequently, Hadidian and his photographs become
    witnesses to the absent presence in Los Angeles.

    "Drive By Shootings" is comprised of photographs taken while Hadidian
    is driving and "spots something or mostly someone interesting in [his]
    view." I believe that our lives are very product-oriented - our
    primary focus seems to be entirely on the end result. I suggest that
    our home of Los Angeles visually conveys this movement from one point
    to the next: the environment abounds with infinite streets and
    unending freeways, often with lonesome travelers headed to their
    destinations. Rather ironically, Hadidian is driving while he takes
    these photographs of interesting subjects in his view - many in their
    cars, others on the streets. In this way, his "still" photographs
    appear to stop time and motion long enough for us to witness the
    details.

    [Figure 2 - see attachment]

    Whereas the compositions in "Drive By Shootings" include the subjects
    within the larger context of the environment, "Portraits in Motion"
    contains up-close photographs of people in their cars (taken while
    Hadidian is also driving). In this example [FIGURE 2], it appears as
    though the older gentleman is totally unaware of Hadidian's camera;
    his younger passenger, on the other hand, confronts the camera - and
    therefore, Hadidian - directly. Her calm face, with its quiet gaze
    and expressionless lips, conveys deep sadness. Yet she engages the
    camera so honestly that one might ask if she is yearning for human
    contact of any kind, even if it is through the lens of a camera. The
    photograph seems to expound on the isolation and loneliness
    experienced in an urban environment where human contact exists, but
    only superficially. The two subjects sit in the same intimate space
    of a car, yet are disconnected on a personal level with no
    conversation between them. It might then come as no surprise that the
    subjects in Hadidian's photographs are anonymous. Is contemporary Los
    Angeles comprised of such a large population that any type of
    meaningful contact has become rare? Does this alienation and
    isolation define our contemporary lives, our relationships?

    An important signifier in this photograph is the window that
    separates, both literally and figuratively, the photographer from his
    subjects. Indeed, it begs the question: Where is the boundary between
    private and public space? Hadidian himself is aware of this and
    comments, "I find it interesting to see where we might cross the line
    between public and private. Is a piece of glass a false sense of
    privacy?" (from Hadidian's Facebook page). As the window negotiates
    the boundary between the public and private, the act of photographing
    also mediates between the roles of voyeur and witness noted above.

    [Figure 3 - see attachment]

    Hadidian's fascination with vehicles of transport as a means of
    exploring our experiences in Los Angeles is also highlighted in
    another series, "Wind in My Face," that includes people from all walks
    of life on their bicycles, as shown in this example [FIGURE 3]. His
    photographs add another dimension to the viewer's perception of Los
    Angeles as a city dominated by lonely cars and endless freeways; it is
    indeed a city that has a cycling subculture. Once again, Hadidian is
    photographing people with objects of movement, yet his photographs
    appear to stop time and their actions long enough for the viewers to
    notice.

    [Figure 4 - see attachment]

    In the example [FIGURE 4] from "Holy Shot!" Hadidian has subverted the
    signifier of communal activity: cups of espresso. It could be
    suggested that the half-full espresso cups might indicate a drink
    interrupted by a busy life. Further, the lone cups might come to
    represent the illusion of getting together with family and friends,
    but highlight the reality of the disconnect and isolation that is
    symptomatic of our contemporary lives. The aerial perspective - and
    therefore, distanced viewpoint - further exemplifies this notion of
    contemporary disconnect characteristic of our lives in Los Angeles.

    In conclusion, Hadidian's photographs assert the presence of the
    subjects that are often purposely deleted from our everyday
    experiences. Social and critical theorist Roland Barthes claims in
    "Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography" (1981) that "every
    photograph is a certificate of presence." In other words, the
    photograph's strength as a medium potentially also lies in its ability
    to serve as proof - of existence and of survival. This very facticity
    of photographs, I would argue, reveals the preservation impulse at
    play in the works of many diasporic Armenian artists: the desire to
    record and preserve aspects of their history, whether past or
    contemporary. This impulse to preserve transforms the photographer -
    and by extension, the viewer- into a chronicler, a witness, and even a
    "voice" for his subjects and their experiences. As a firm believer in
    art's power to transform us, I suggest that Hadidian's photographs
    acquire a certain urgency: as they reveal the modern human condition
    of life in Los Angeles, they simultaneously awaken our consciousness
    to the disconnect and isolation that is prevalent in our culture.
    Consequently they prod us to consider change. And possibly, our
    position as bystanders or voyeurs can transition to witnesses and
    participants . . . in one another's daily lives.


    Hadidian's photographic series have not been exhibited anywhere but
    may be viewed on Flickr and Facebook. Hadidian is also a professional
    commercial photographer, having photographed well-known international
    clients in the luxury goods industry. His photographs have appeared in
    over 90 magazines worldwide, including "Vanity Fair," "Vogue," "Town &
    Country," "WhiteWall," and "Elite Traveler." You can view his works
    at https://www.flickr.com/photos/23122935@N05/sets/ and
    www.facebook.com/raffi.hadidian.


    All Rights Reserved: Critics' Forum, 2014. Exclusive to Asbarez.

    Ramela Grigorian Abbamontian received her PhD in Art History from
    UCLA. She is currently an Associate Professor of Art History at Pierce
    College.

    You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum
    at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
    in this series are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To sign
    up for electronic versions of new articles, go to
    www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics' Forum is a group created to
    discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.

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