“Sadie’s Choice”

As part of a larger project revisiting a variety of historic uses of stereo (3 dimensional) photography, “Sadie’s Choice” explores contemporary images of women and sensuality in contrast to the famous pin-up and glamour photography of the 1950’s, for which stereoscopic photography was a particularly popular application.

The title of the series, “Sadie’s Choice” reflects the American tradition of holding one dance a year in high schools that turned the traditional gender dynamic on it’s head and allowed the females to pick their male partners for the dance. Seen merely as a quaint idea nowadays, in the 1950’s it was weighted with complex implications for the changing culture. My decision to attempt to remove the context of the male photographer in control of a sexual photoshoot was to collaborate with female models who saw the project as a positive and creative opportunity to express their individual strength and sensuality. 

Peter Bahouth works in one of the oldest forms of photography.  Stereoscopic photography, having originated in 1860, fell out of favor by 1920. The once futuristic technology of stereoscopic photography now holds a retro charm and nostalgically mechanical sensibility in today’s world of electronic wizardry. The use of transparencies (slides) as the medium rather than their traditional role as just one component of the photographic process, the tiny size of the transparencies, (the opposite of the current dominance in photography of large format print images), and the required use of a stereoscopic viewer to actually see the images as only one person at a time can look through the viewer, result in a highly personal experience for the viewer as they discover the image, intimately and with the immediacy of the transparency, in a completely private moment.


A delightful visual bang is the reward of approaching the tiny lenses, peeking in and being confronted with a dramatically three-dimensional image that feels oddly more inside one's head than any exterior experience. The free standing "viewing stands" that hold and present the transparencies, themselves become enigmatic, sculptural, rather pop objects as they beckon, somewhat E.T. like, and innocently invite, with their secretive pair of round eye-like lenses, for the viewer to interact with them. The height of the stands are designed to cause most people to have to bend down slightly to look into the viewer which enhances the effect of secretive ‘peeking’ and emphasizes the 3 dimensional push-pull impact of the image. Building upon the private peepshow nature of the viewing experience, Bahouth is also subverting the current spectator sport nature of current artistic practice by denying the ability, partly by the nature of the medium and partly by design, for more than a single pair of eyes to discover the image at one time.


Artist's Statement by Peter Bahouth

I utilize stereoscopic photography as a medium to address aesthetic issues raised by the biology of vision and the problem of portraying space. Concepts of vision and perspective have been central to my work with stereoscopic photography, but I am equally motivated by a personal history with stereo images and my interest in their contemporary use.

Stereoscopic photography, as old as photography itself, has played various roles in society. From 1860 to 1920 stereo views were essentially the home entertainment of the times. More recently the View-Master, intended as a substitute to postcards, instead become the popular children’s toy. For many of us, this was our first art collection, and the stereoscopic images were an effective medium for creating the illusion of “being there”. In the early 1950’s, the availability of commercial “stereo” cameras made it possible to create amateur stereo images. Coupled with the introduction of ultra-vivid Kodacrome film, resulting images portray an intense perception of the time. It was my father’s stereo photographs of our family that formed my interest in stereoscopic images and their ability to convey spatial relationships and intensified perceptions of time, place and feelings.

Images of binocular space, and the super realism of stereoscopy are key elements in my photography. Stereoscopic perception, likes color perception, can be controlled artistically, and as such is an important medium in this context. The images are selected to address the issue of space in a contemporary context, and viewed through a viewer, which intensifies the experience through personal participation.

 

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