A few months back I posted on the particularities of bird photography. It seems to me a pretty utilitarian genre - concerned as it is with clarity and scientific definitiveness, but lacking that mysterious ingredient is necessary to be called "art."
The only bird photographer I know of who I would consider a great artist is Todd Forsgren. In his most famous series, Forsgren photographs tropical birds temporarily tangled in mist nets. The images are striking, and the viewer can't help but calculate his empathy for the birds with the value of scientific data gained from their confinement. Perhaps most interesting to birders is the conceptual link between Forsgren's mist net images and the artwork of James J. Audubon, whose globally-influential paintings were built upon the sacrifice of thousands birds unfortunate enough to meet the business end of his shotgun.
Todd was kind enough to let me talk with him over email about his idea on bird photography as art, how his series of photographs came about, and their reception.
More of Todd Forsgren's images can be seen at his website and via Heiner Contemporary.
Birdist: Which started first for you: birding or photography?
Forsgren: I was definitely a birder long before I was a photographer. I started
birding early, maybe 4th or 5th grade. I was a total bird nerd in high
school, heading out on VENT bird camps in Arizona and competing in
birdathons for the ABA's Tropicbirds youth birding team. When I first
went off to college, I thought it would be to become an ornithologist,
and I do have a degree in biology. It wasn't until my junior or senior
year at school that I started taking cameras seriously. Within a few
years after school, I decided that's what I wanted to do with my life:
make pictures. Photographing birds was just a matter of time.
Birdist: So you didn't start with photographing birds right away? What kinds of
photography did you start with, and which photographers do you admire?
Forsgren: No, the first subject I photographed was landscapes; fairly romantic
black-and-white medium format shots. That developed into a series of
photographs on urban and community based gardens. Typical wildlife
photos of birds requires lots of expensive, long, phallic lenses. Just
after college, as a struggling photographer who was living out of a
backpack, I didn't have the financial resources or space to deal with
such things. I knew I wanted to photograph birds, it just took me a
while to figure out how I wanted to photograph birds. Gosh, the list of
photographers I admire is long. That said, my so-called
'ornithological photographs' are a reaction to contemporary wildlife
photography and a response to ideas I had about species and
categorization. But in terms of artists they're in homage to, I'd say
they owe more to John James Audubon, Roger Tory Peterson, Sol Lewitt,
and Joseph Albers than they do to any photographers. But, if you like, I
could rattle off a list of photographers who are twisting the
boundaries of nature and documentary photography in ways that I find
pretty interesting...
Birdist: Yeah I'd love to talk about the twisting of nature and documentary
photography. That's the impetus for me speaking with you, actually. I
did a post not long ago about what I see as a lack of imagination in
birding photography - dominated as you point out by centered close-ups
taken with expensive and, yes, phallic lenses. Your mist net photos
were one of the few examples I knew of photography that elevated birding
beyond simply making the ID. When you were in that period of knowing
you wanted to talk about birds but not knowing how, what was the debate
you were having?
Forsgren: You know, just before heading down to Mexico I
picked up my first of those expensive and long lenses. The idea was to
play around with it while I was in the jungle waiting for other birds to
fly into the mist nets. I must say, it definitely gave me a new
respect for that genre of wildlife photography. It requires such a
large amount of patience and, what I would call, photographic
athleticism... You really need to know how to use your camera to get
those photos right! Though I have a system down in terms of
photographing birds in mist nets, I still need to work on my on my skills
in terms of wildlife photography in general. And I think it has an
important role in terms of conservation and documentation. As well as
that joy of identification and classification.
In terms of my own journey and trials in finding a method to photograph
birds, I don't know if I was having a debate. It was in the back of my
mind somewhere, that I wanted to take pictures of them. I was in a
very conceptual art school at the time (School of the Museum of Fine
Arts, in Boston) where I would've gotten ripped apart if I showed up at a
critique with the more typical style of wildlife photography. One
morning I was jogging along the Charles River and I saw a Black-crowned
Night-heron that had strangled itself on a barb wire fence, and found it
beautiful and captivating and tragic. And then I thought of Audubon.
And by the time I made it back from my run, I had basically formulated
how I wanted to photographic birds, minus a few technical tricks that
I've learned along the way.
Birdist: Can you articulate why traditional bird photos would have been torn
apart in art school? What is the ingredient that differentiates birding
photos from art?
Forsgren: I'm not really one to construct hierarchies when it comes to calling one
type of photograph 'art' and another 'not art.' If Duchamp can call a
toilet art, then certainly we should have a more broad idea of what it
is and how it can function than a narrow one. I do consider 'birding
photos' art, and they do interest me in a number of ways. That said, I
do make different value judgements based on how and why a
photograph/photographer interests me. The critical debate going on at
academic institutions like the SMFA puts a very high priority on
innovation... My peers would've told me to show them something new.
For me, looking at more traditional bird photography is a wonderfully
hedonistic experience of appreciating and being in awe of nature, and I
think there are plenty of 'new' things to show in approaching
photography that way. But with my ornithological photos, I'm trying to
tangle the viewer as much as the birds are tangled.
Birdist: So how did you get from the tangled night-heron lightbulb moment to your
mist net photos? Once you knew what you wanted to do, how did you go
about doing it?
Forsgren: It's always difficult for me to explain or quantify those 'eureka!'
moments of life. If I understood them better, or what led to them, I
think I might have such moments more often. I suppose it was a series
of quick little lightning bolt like flashes through a lot of the bird
art I'd liked growing up crashing against the influences that were
having more of a draw on me in art school. It was actually kind of a
messy morning: I had just realized that a relationship I was involved in
was coming to a crashing end and I had a mild hangover. I was about to
move out of the city and I was feeling incredibly lost. But somehow,
my mind was on overdrive, and those thoughts started to fit together.
The good news about doing typographic work like this is that the one
eureka moment has led to several years of productive photography. I
started out by contacting a few friends who were working with birds.
They let me come out and take a few photos. After a few other
distractions, like a diversion to Mongolia to photograph vegetable
gardens and going to graduate school and working on more studio based
practice, the project has gained its own momentum from there.
Birdist: Are the photos taken in the field? Are they on mist net jobs you're working on anyway?
Forsgren: Yes, the photos are taken in the field. I bring along a portable photo
studio that I can set up at a moment's notice. I'm always working
alongside biologists... Although my photographs often focus on the
by-catch that flies into the nets as well as their study species.
Birdist: Some articles about your work describe it as "controversial" or that it
"ruffles feathers" (their 'hilarious' pun intended). What's been the
response to your work? Has it surprised you in any way, or is a certain
initial distaste for the images part of the process?
Forsgren: Ultimately, no. I don't mean for the work to be controversial. I
hope that in the end, the viewer agrees with my taking the photographs
as an interesting document of a unique moment. But controversy is a
small part of the experience I hope viewers have when they look at the
work, a sort of initial response. There's a vocal group that doesn't
like mist-netting/bird banding at all. They obviously don't like these
photos one bit either, except for appropriating them as propaganda
against mist-netting. A few others have criticized my work in a more
nuanced way, saying that they think it's acceptable for biologists to
work with birds, but that they're not sure if it's acceptable for me to
delay this process for art's sake. That's perhaps closer to the
questioning and reasoning I hope people go through when they approach
the photographs.
I'm certainly not trying to
make images that are easy or simple to digest and consume. That is in
part because I find some elements of the "consumption of nature"
quite... problematic. People experience the work differently depending
on what they know about the process. For folks who don't know about
mist-netting at all, the initial thought is that I'm photographing an
environmental tragedy. If they take the time to read my statement, they
start to see a bit of the art history behind the images, as well as how
it relates to contemporary science. Through this process of
understanding, I suppose I hope that they might have an experience that
starts with revulsion and moves to acceptance and ends with appreciating
the beauty of this unique moment and opportunity.
As a total bird nut, I've always found the precious opportunity to work
with wild birds is magically. Every time I band birds, I'm in awe. But
I think most people who care about birds are, like me, also a bit
conflicted about it. Ultimately, we come to the conclusion that the
research being done is important. That the tax and stress on a few
individuals gains valuable data that helps us understand the populations
and better manage and conserve these species. Ultimately, our respect
for these individual birds that we're lucky enough to come in contact
with is derived from deep care for them. I hope that in part, my
work is a provocative education tool to this end; a complicated look at
how we appreciate wildlife. I feel lucky and honored that so many
biologists have agreed with me enough that they have been willing to let
me join them in the field and photograph the birds they work with.
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