When Joanne Leonard's photo collage
In his well-known
Photographers have increasingly turned to fantasy as autobiographical expression. Both the image and the title of
Joanne Leonard uses the photo collage on the cover of her autobiographical book,
Joanne Leonard, 1972,
In this article, the link between personal expression and artistic form suggested by Janson as well as the transformation of autobiographical content in works of art will be used as points of departure in order to analyse and discuss the autobiographical nature of the photos and photo collages in Leonard's photo memoir. The selected photographs and collages that are presented in the memoir refer to important events in Leonard's life as an individual and as an artist, and progressively construct an autobiographical narrative. The constructive nature of autobiography will be used as the key to interpret Leonard's techniques of deliberately creating visual metaphors by combining existing or ‘real’ materials with elements of fiction and fantasy in collages. The collage is then ‘fixed’ in a photograph. Whereas iconic photographs transfix a moment in time and refer to a recognisable person or object, the constructed collages are images that refer to the artist's emotional state or her view of matters at a certain point in time. In both cases, the final photograph will be open to multiple interpretations, but in the case of the constructed metaphoric nature of the photo collages, the ability to generate meaning will be even greater. Leonard's photographic collage techniques graphically illustrate an extreme example of the constructedness of autobiography, and the way in which multiple layers of representation are incorporated in these works will have to be taken into consideration when interpreting Leonard's art photographs.
This article discusses, in consecutive sequence, the artist's impulse to work with autobiographical material as part of a concern with identity, the constructed nature of all representions and especially represented autobiographical narratives and, finally, the understanding and functioning of memory. Though these three theoretical aspects are explored separately in the article, in practice, they are, in this case as well as in all autobiographical writing, interwoven to such an extent that the distinction is only valid as part of the structure of the critical and theoretical argument. In the discussion of the art works, these three aspects will overlap as Leonard's work in particular illustrates the interactive and holistic nature of autobiographical activity. The creative freedom in Leonard's work will be emphasised; the essayistic form of the present interpretation of her work is an attempt to echo this freedom.
The point that Leonard herself makes about her work concerning her awareness of the inevitable link between the private and the public is important, not only as an aspect of all published communication but especially in the case of photography, which has become one of the most common and most accessible forms of information exchange as well as personal and cultural memory making today.
In the introduction to the book, Leonard (
The first part of the title of Joanne Leonard's photo memoir,
Over the past four decades, critical and academic writing about ego documents or life writing of whatever nature, be it letters, journals, autobiographies or blogs, has almost without exception stressed the connection between writing about oneself and identity. Whether identity needs to be remembered, found or denied, whether the intention is the discovery or the construction of an identity of an individual, or of a person amongst family and friends, in a smaller or larger community, during a certain historical period or in an unfolding present, the quest for a formulation of the who, what, where, when, how and why of an individual's life underpins almost all autobiographies (Eakin
Joanne Leonard, Joanne in mirror (self-portrait), silver print, 1960's.
The impulse or the need to obtain a grasp on your life by telling your story is a universal human activity. Narration as such implies the need to understand and explain events and people, to consider and describe relations between people, objects, circumstances and events. It has to do with structuring information in order to obtain a grasp on events and actors in reality or in fictional worlds. In classical narratology, these aspects are regarded as some of the main functions of narratives (Bal
… autobiography is not merely something we read in a book; rather, as a discourse of identity, delivered bit by bit in the stories we tell about ourselves day in and day out, autobiography structures our living. (p. 122)
Cognitive postclassical narratologists like David Herman (
This is true for all stories but even more so for autobiographical narratives. In autobiographical narratives, somebody's own life is scrutinised to identify the salient moments of change and development, and these are then arranged and structured to form a narrative. In this process, however, existing narrative patterns or schemata will influence the choice of and the value accorded to events and experiences. The representation of the self will therefore refer to
People indeed do not live in isolation but in communities, and ‘… identity provides a way of understanding the interplay between our subjective experience of the world and the cultural and historical settings in which that fragile subjectivity is formed’ (Gilroy
I can’t think of a better way to suggest the dual nature of this book: as personal as medical histories yet with a public in mind of those who might be both intrigued and captured, as I am, by the prospect of exploring women's lives through pictures and stories. (p. 3)
This intention is reflected in the book as a whole as Leonard includes not only personal and family photographs but also collages about historical events such as ‘Red triptych’ (Leonard
The argument that autobiographical activity is concerned with identity and that autobiography almost inevitably includes the construction of a narrative, that the whole process is dependent on memory with all the complications of unreliability and retrospective re-evaluation, is underscored by Mark Freeman in his article ‘From substance to story: Narrative, identity and the construction of the self’ (Brockmeier & Carbaugh
Leonard's book can be described as follows. The memoir tells the story of Joanne Leonard as a developing and later established photo artist living alongside and moving amongst other people, including family members and friends. The story is told mainly in pictures, but each photograph is accompanied by short autobiographical comments. The artist selects and orders photographs from her extensive portfolio to represent momentous or memorable occasions from a continuous life. In the written text, she presents retrospective commentary, describing the context of taking a specific photograph or making a specific collage, but she also adds remarks from her present perspective. Her present view of herself and her work may contain changed and changing and perhaps even quite different views of her previous life and her former self, but the photographs themselves cannot change. The narrative is therefore clearly and openly constructed and is in fact a story with many gaps or open places and spaces, a fragmented narrative centred on specific events and moments caught on camera. Leonard rereads and (re-)constructs her own story as reflected in her own pictures, and the reader of her book also constructs a story from the pictures, as is illustrated by Mieke Bal in her narratological analyses in
There are in Leonard's impulse to share her life with other people a generosity and an openheartedness that is most apparent in the text accompanying the photographs and collages. This is clearly in contrast with many contemporary literary autobiographies in which the authors actually hide themselves, like Karel Schoeman hiding his feet in the cover photograph of his autobiography to indicate that he has the right to keep certain aspects of his life from his readers (Van der Merwe
Paul Ricoeur writes extensively on memory and the narrative structure of identity (Ricoeur
Another aspect that is relevant to Leonard's autobiographical memoir concerns the fact that her artworks are explicitly made and constructed. The processes of making and construction, the creative processes as such, result in a concretisation of the self-scrutiny that bears witness to an action. In an early article, Ricoeur (
Action deserves its name when, beyond the concern for submitting nature to man or for leaving behind some monuments witnessing to our activity, it aims only at being recollected in stories whose function it is to provide an identity to the doer, an identity that is merely a narrative identity. In this sense, history repeats action in the figure of the memorable. (p. 187)
In an almost uncanny way, Leonard's photographs mark actions that collectively constitute a narrative. As these photographs and photo collages are works of art, they serve no pragmatic purpose, but they do generate meanings concerning the private life of the artist as well as the public sphere in which the artist works and functions. They are therefore concerned with private and collective identity in a number of ways.
Ricoeur's view of narrative identity can be summarised as follows:
Because my personal identity is a narrative identity, I can make sense of myself only in and through my involvement with others.
In my dealings with others, I do not simply enact a role or function that has been assigned to me. I can change myself through my own efforts and can reasonably encourage others to change as well.
Nonetheless, because I am an embodied existence and hence have inherited both biological and psychological constraints, I cannot change everything about myself. And because others are similarly constrained, I cannot sensibly call for comprehensive changes in them.
Though I can be evaluated in a number of ways, for example, physical dexterity, verbal fluency, technical skill, the ethical evaluation in the light of my responsiveness to others, over time, is, on the whole, the most important evaluation (Dauenhauer & Pellauer
This formulation applies directly to Leonard's autobiographical text in which construction, narrative and identity are inseparably interwoven.
The theoretical views of autobiographical texts and the writing of autobiography in its many guises have undergone radical changes over the centuries. Elisabeth Snyman (
The important point that Snyman (
Autobiographical writing can, therefore, be regarded unequivocally and inevitably as a constructive act and not as a mere exercise in referentiality. The hermeneutic process and the narrative structure thus both contribute to the constructed nature of the autobiography.
Ricoeur also acknowledges the contingency and relativity of the reconstruction of identity in narratives, but then he introduces an ethical element into the argument. Robin Wagner-Pacifici (
Ricoeur seeks to resolve the sensed uncertainty about narrative identity by appealing to an almost transcendent notion of a true ‘self-constancy’ with ‘ethical responsibility’ as its highest factor. Narrative identity without this ethically informed selfconstancy is, at best, unstable. And in its instability, it is not to be trusted. (pp. 933–934)
It would indeed be difficult if not impossible to vouch for the ‘truth’, authenticity or ethical value in any autobiography. Yet the intention of being as honest and as responsible as possible, to accept accountability for what is represented and for the way in which it is represented can perhaps be deduced from a text.
The crucial aspect of Leonard's photo memoir is that, when she reconstructs her life, the hermeneutic process not only draws on her memory but is directed at and determined by the existing photographic texts that represent salient moments and events in her life as member of a family and as an artist. The written commentary provides the historical context of how and when a photograph was taken as well as information about the referential aspects of the photo content. She also gives information about the development of technical possibilities in the making and manipulating of photographic material and what she wanted to achieve with specific photographs. The commentary, however, also contains autobiographical information. The artist wants to tell the reader what the specific artwork means to her as an artist,
Whereas the photos and collages exist independently and remain the same, the information, the analysis and interpretation of the photographic material as well as referential autobiographical information about her life and circumstances are provided from a retrospective perspective. The photographs and photo collages guide her reconstruction of her life, but these visual texts are fixed material objects that exist and remain stable. They cannot change or be changed, but the artist's interpretation of the texts as artworks may and probably has changed over time: Her recollection of the context of the taking of the photograph, the making of the collage and her recollective rendering of the impulse behind the artwork depend on memory with all the slips, inaccuracies and unreliability associated with memory.
The main difference between this memoir and written narrative autobiographies is that this autobiographical text does not only use words and language to construct and tell its story but scrutinises photographs taken a long time ago. Many of these photographs are, moreover, complex artworks made up from autobiographical photographic material. As objects, the artworks retain a special type of authenticity and integrity, an existential ‘fixedness’, but they can and will be interpreted in different ways by onlookers as well as by the artist herself.
Taking a photograph is a process; it implies planning and execution. The collages are carefully and wilfully constructed objects of great complexity. Both these types of text, photographs and collages, are clearly constructed with an intense awareness of the processes involved. Although photographs and collages represent photographed elements and objects, the visual texts as artworks transcend referential or realistic truth and rather recreate various versions of artistic truth. They do not exist on account of their iconic content but as metaphors of the artist's life and her views of the lives of those around her.
The constructedness of this memoir is therefore an integral part of what it actually is and does. It is not necessary to foreground the artistic process or the metaphoric quality and open-endedness of interpretation because it presents itself as a series of artworks in which relativity of meaning is inherent.
The structure of the book itself can also be linked to this constructedness. The content of the photo memoir follows a chronological order but is divided into sections. In one sense, Leonard simply tells her story in a seemingly uncomplicated way. As one works through the book, one becomes aware of the interplay between the two mediums, language and image, of the artistic ambiguities in every image and of the increasing complexity as the artist finds and develops her own style. The earlier and later works are also intratextually linked.
The first three sections in the book provide introductory information about the artist's family, her parents, her twin sister, the younger sister and a beloved uncle. Then there are sections in which the development of her work is the main focus, and in others, personal circumstances and prominent events are highlighted. She states and visually reinforces the main themes of her life – her quest to become an artist, to find places and spaces to develop her artistic skills as well as the importance of personal relationships with her twin sister and other family members and with different lovers. The importance of being a woman, a female photographic artist, but also a mother and one link in the consecutive generations of women in a family figures prominently right through the book. The relationship with her daughter is especially dear to her, and she speaks openly about it in the comments accompanying the many photographs taken of her daughter at various stages of her life. The concluding sections seem to provide a type of conclusion, not to a life but to a specific point in her career.
The photographic material can be divided into two main categories: the more realistic photographs in which the focus is on a person or object as such and the collages, which are intentional artworks, planned, constructed, manipulated and directed at creating new meaning and not at representing existing realistic images, as will become apparent in the discussion of specific photographs and collages below
The family photographs in the first sections (Leonard
Joanne Leonard, 1968,
Joanne Leonard, 1968, Alfred Leonard and dog, Connecticut.
When Leonard includes in her commentary a letter from her father to his daughters on an American Field Service trip in Germany, another dimension is added to the photographs. Joanne Leonard's parents met and fell in love in the late 1920s in Berlin. Her father was a young German-Jewish lawyer, dedicated to fight against the rise of fascism and anti-Semitism in Berlin, and her mother was a young American-Jewish woman who went to study in Germany. When her father's name appeared on the first arrest lists of the Nazis, her mother helped him to escape to America where they were married in 1933. The children knew that their father was reluctant to speak of the land of his birth and, therefore, wanted to visit Germany. In the letter that he requests them to read on the boat after departure, he describes his conflicting emotions about Germany, a wonderful country with a wonderful cultural heritage which was taken over by the barbarism of power. He ends the letter with a remark about great men and evil men, and also himself: ‘Neither has any value, merit or even meaning when taken by itself. One can be good or bad as a German, good or bad as a Jew’ (Leonard
Döring (
Viewing, or re-viewing, the familiar face in photographs is thus dramatized as an uncanny moment of return, a haunting, a confrontation with a past which must appear so ghostly even as it so lively re-appears and whose effect is so unsettling because it confronts the beholder, too, with his own death. (p. 691)
Even though Barthes makes the point that photographs do not recapture time but defeat it, Susan Sontag writes: ‘All photographs are memento mori’ (Döring
In these family photographs from many years ago, of Joanne and other little girls, of unknown children in a garden, Joanne and her twin sister, a young family with their baby, and so on, one sees how the past is brought into the present, confronting the photographer as well as the reader of the book with the complexity of temporal experience. The pictures contain and preserve time but also illustrate and emphasise the passing of time.
Döring (
In the second-last section of the book, Leonard (
Joanne Leonard and Judith Fuss Adell, ca. 1960, Two children and lily, silver print.
Joanne Leonard, ca. 1994, Map of that Ground-note, silver print from laser-copy transparencies with collage, white ink, translucent plastic stars and leaves, 19 inches X 42½ inches, collection of Diane M. Kirkpatrick.
The hermeneutic impulse therefore does not only apply to Leonard's recollecting her life in writing and putting together the photo memoir. The very act of making the photo collages is and was in every case an act of self-interpretation and an attempt at expressing emotion and experience. As an artist, she has been analysing and interpreting her life hermeneutically from very early on in her career and has been giving expression to thoughts and emotions in her work by constructing and reconstructing visual images as metaphors. How truthful or authentic are these representations and what is the role of memory in the reconstructions in this photo memoir as a whole? What is truth and what is fiction, and where does fantasy come into play?
Exploring issues of truth, fiction, fantasy and representation in this photo memoir is a fascinating undertaking. Reconstructions of any kind are dependent on memory, and memory is fallible and untrustworthy in most aspects. According to Ricoeur (
As mentioned before, the photos in the book, like all photographs, possess a certain degree of authenticity because they either completely or partially contain analogical or iconic images. First and foremost, the artist-autobiographer ‘reads’ her own photographs when she provides them with commentary. The interpretation becomes more complex when readers read the book, the photos, collages and the commentary with the intent to analyse, understand and interpret.
The reader can of course doubt the validity, the truthfulness of and the ethical intention in Leonard's choice of photographs as well as in the written commentary, even if the visual images speak for themselves. Any autobiographer can be guilty of ‘hineininterpretieren’, but autobiography, just like any other genre, must be practiced and interpreted within its own constraints. Ricoeur (
The constant danger of confusing remembering and imagining, resulting from memories becoming images in this way, affects the goal of faithfulness corresponding to the truth claim of memory.
And yet, we have nothing better than memory to guarantee that something has taken place before we call to mind a memory of it. Historiography itself, let us already say, will not succeed in setting aside the continually derided and continually reasserted conviction that the final referent of memory remains the past, whatever the pastness of the past may signify. (p. 7)
I regard especially the photo collages as complex metaphors constructed by the artist in order to give expression to her feelings at a certain moment in time. Her own process can be described as follows: A collage is put together by arranging selected objects in a specific structure, in which the artist strives to achieve a powerful visual impact through either juxtaposing or relating elements. This is done with an eye for composition, line, shape, form and colour, and then the arrangement is photographed. These photo collages are intentional artworks, deliberately defamiliarising ordinary objects and elements by creating new relations and structures in order to generate new meanings or to indirectly comment on situations.
Joanne Leonard, 1972,
The cover picture of the book, which is also the photograph that made Leonard famous, is part of a series of collages called ‘Dreams and nightmares’ that she made after her husband had left her. In her commentary, she explains it as follows:
The difficulties of my marriage had been partly obscured by an overriding romanticism; the loss of some of my romantic dreams is the theme of these window collages. I have selected elements to recall feelings of longing, loneliness, the passing of time and anger. (Leonard
It is also relevant here to mention the conventional gender difference by which words have traditionally been credited with masculine power and the silent image with feminine expression. The suggestion would then be that the image cannot speak for itself and would need male verbal explication (Döring
In the ‘Dreams and nightmares’ series, the basic elements in all the works remain the same. Leonard's sleeping husband lies on a bed in front of a window, and there is a picture hanging on the wall. This image is then manipulated in a series of improvisations. The picture hanging on the wall and the window are different in every collage, and in the last one, the trees outside the window enter into the room and spill over into the whole image.
The series culminates in the picture that contains an ultimate reckoning with her own dreams, namely
The commentary added by the artist-autobiographer reinterprets the collage and the context of its origin, and of course, the readers or onlookers construct their own interpretations, but the initial impulse of the artist was to render emotion as authentically as possible. To do so, she manipulated materials and devised new techniques, not only photographical techniques but also compositional techniques such as juxtaposing fantasy and myth with reality. The artist went to great lengths to capture something of herself, to represent emotion truly felt and an insight achieved at great cost.
With regard to the fallibility and untrustworthiness of memory, Ricoeur (
… the tendency of many authors to approach memory on the basis of its deficiencies, even its dysfunctions … It is important, in my opinion, to approach the description of mnemonic phenomena from the standpoint of the
The arguments about the unreliability of memory in autobiographical texts should therefore be applied differently in the case of Leonard's memoir, not only on account of the views expressed by Ricoeur but also on account of the specific type of text with which the reader is confronted. It is generally assumed that an autobiography is always partly imagined and fictionalised, either in order to present a certain image of the self or because of the unreliability of imagination. Gudmundsdóttir (
Gaps in the narrative – the space where forgetting impinges on the writing – are an inevitable feature of any text of remembrance … The writing process reveals a need to confirm or deny memories. (p. 9)
The interesting thing is that this series of collages is as true a picture of Leonard's feelings as she could produce at the time. Visually it is neither referentially authentic or true nor is it analogical to any realistic set of pictorial elements. Yet, it is truer than what she could have said or explained in words at the time. It is a reflection or representation of the image she had of herself at the time of her loss. As such, this work of art can be seen as an attempt to achieve an authentic rendering of emotion, and yet, it can afterwards be interpreted in many ways.
In the process of making the collage, the emotions of the artist are the signified for which she needs to find a signifier. Later on, she uses words to describe and explain the collage that then becomes the signified of her words as signifiers. For the reader of the book, the collage exists as an aesthetic object and is as such also a signified to which the reader reacts with another set of signifiers. In the artist's comments, she is not completely free to re-interpret and adapt her past to suit more recent views of herself as the fixedness of the collage cannot be denied and restricts her freedom – she cannot tweak or twist or adapt her memory as freely as literary autobiographers can. However, the richness and complexity of the collages suggest aspects of meanings and associations that she was not even aware of at the time.
The artworks, amplified by the explanations and discussions in the commentary, tempt and tease the reader of the book to make further and multiple interpretations. In this staggered process, layer upon layer of meaning come into existence, and the status of the linguistic and visual texts is repeatedly re-evaluated, compromised, complicated, undermined or augmented. Signifiers become signified and are signifiers on the next level or next stage of interpretation, and in the end, interpreter and the interpreted material are simultaneously bound or limited (or even fixed),
The use of fantasy in this case provides the artist with a means to construct a visual image that is more powerful than a realistic picture can ever be. This is done by activating cultural and visual associations and by appealing to and undermining expectations of visual beauty. It reminds one of the old saying that writers (and artists) lie truthfully, that the artist's truth is a lie truer than truth. What they depict, suggest or evoke through indirect aesthetic means calls forth meanings truer and richer in association than scientific or realistic information. In creative processes, fantasy is therefore a potent instrument to carry ethereal meanings.
A final remark on
Remembering is not only a personal matter necessary for our sense of identity and mental wellbeing, it is also a very public matter, formed by social situations and often politically contentious. Our lives are intricately and sometimes drastically linked to and/or inseparable from what happens in the society we live in. (p. 45)
Leonard is particularly sensitive to the way in which artworks as products of subjective understanding of the self interact with cultural and historical settings. Many of her collages illustrate how an individual subjectivity is formed and develops in its fragility and/or strength over time. This becomes more and more apparent in her later work.
After separating from her husband, she decided to have a child with someone she respected but whom she knew she would not marry. However, she then had a miscarriage. She explains that ‘[s]ome of my strongest work seems to come from my capacity to meet anguish with artistic output’ (Leonard
What strikes me as remarkable about this book is that the artist often turns her eye upon herself through the lens and becomes conjoined to the lens of her camera. However, she also edits and censures herself relentlessly (Leonard
But a mother's act of paying close and frequent attention to her child through photography can be read in many ways, including as devoted and attentive or as horridly intrusive, too objective, and thus cold, exploitive, or even pornographic. (Leonard
Thus, she does not only open up towards her audience by representing her emotions in visual format, but she also writes in words about shortcomings and the many pitfalls of her trade. This is to my mind another indication of her search for identity: What is it that she is doing and why? The book abounds in (poetical?) meta-artistical commentary and remarks.
The second-last collage in the book was made after the 9/11 disaster of 2001. Leonard (
Joanne Leonard. 1977. Julia, half asleep, silver print.
Joanne Leonard, ca. 2003,
Being part of a twin became the theme she then explored further. She collected material about twins and put together a circle of images called
This once again illustrates Joanne Leonards’ hermeneutical view of her life and work as an extended search for and development of identity, attempting to find in each situation her own unique reaction and representing the reaction as well as the processes of working through the experience through her art. She is concerned with how she, as an individual with specific sensibilities and abilities, reacts to the world in order to say, in the words of the psychologist James Hillman (
Hillman believes that every person has an inner core that is the blueprint determining what the person does and how that person reacts in different sets of circumstances. The core is like an acorn that contains in its small self all of the eventual oak tree. It causes a person to be ‘… answerable to an innate image’ (Hillman
Ricoeur (
One does not simply remember oneself, seeing, experiencing, learning; one rather recalls the situations in the world in which one has seen, experienced, learned. These situations imply one's own body and the bodies of others, lived space, and, finally, the horizon of the world and worlds, within which something has occurred. Reflexivity and worldliness are indeed related as opposite poles, to the extent that reflexivity is an undeniable feature of memory in its declarative phase: someone says ‘in his heart’ that he formerly saw, experienced, learned. In this regard, nothing should be stripped from the assertion that memory belongs to the sphere of interiority – to the cycle of inwardness, to borrow Charles Taylor's vocabulary in
It seems to me that Joanne Leonard approaches her art as a means to strip herself of subjectivist idealism (for example in the
This photo memoir once again illustrates that studying autobiography in its many guises remains a fascinating process. In spite of the philosophical assertions of unreliability, untruthfulness, even lying, the evasions and deliberate lacunae, something of the inner core of the acorn of a personality will still be discernible in any well-written autobiography which will make reading worthwhile. Autobiography remains an important literary or visual format to account for identity and individuality, more so if this self-conscious cultivation and exploration of identity and individuality is done living in and interacting with the world with a sense of historical awareness and consciousness. Autobiographical writing therefore seems to be an almost archetypical activity without which the world of art and literature would be much poorer.
The author declares that she has no financial or personal relationships which may have inappropriately influenced her in writing this article.
Barthes experienced an epiphanic moment when he looked at a specific photograph taken of his mother in a winter garden when she was a child, and he regards that special quality of photography as its distinguishing characteristic (Döring 2008:680).