Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings
Peabody Essex Museum, Salem
Through September 23, 2018
Clicking on images opens a bigger file.
Perhaps you’ve seen the
wonderful Sally Mann retrospective that’s already cycled through several
museums. I caught the show at the Peabody Essex Museum, where (alas!) it will
only be on display for a few more weeks. But because it is a retrospective, pieces of this exhibit are likely to find their
way closer to you and, indeed, Ms. Mann (born 1951) has been so prolific that
any institution with a reputable photography collection will surely have some
of her work.
Mann, a native Virginian who
still spends much of her time there, always dazzles the eye. She also
occasionally ruffles feathers. This is especially the case of images from her
collection Immediate Family (1990)
that is as advertised: gazes into the lives, faces, and bodies of husband
Bruce, son Emmett, and daughters Jessica and Virginia. Some are metaphors—such
as a rather obvious evocation of birth—that would
be banal, were it not so striking. Some critics have panned such tableaux-like
poses as artifice over art, but that’s small potatoes compared to the moralist
outcry against unclothed images. Pat Robertson leveled child pornography
accusations against Mann. I suppose one could raise consent issues, given that
Mann’s children were minors, though her rejoinder has always been that casual
nudity was a way of life on their backcountry homestead. You can make up your
own mind, but to me there’s a prelapsarian innocence to these images. In fact,
I admire the agency she gives to kids. Some exhibit gauzy dream-like qualities;
others are like a Pre-Raphaelite painting come to life. One image invokes what
the hidden child in Dorothea Lange’s iconic Migrant
Mother might have looked like. And whom among us would not like to
recapture the swagger and confidence of youth etched upon the face of Emmett
Mann and his friend?
Speaking of Emmett, they say
that no one critiques the South like her own sons and daughters. Mann’s Deep South (1999) and other such
projects aren’t preachy, but they often resonate with underlying tension. The
diffused light of a grove of trees draped with Spanish moss is otherworldly in
an attract-repeal fashion. If you detect a ghostly presence of shots of the
Tallahatchie River, it’s deliberate. They depict the exact spot where Emmett
Till’s body was found in 1955. (And, yes, Till is Mann’s son’s namesake.)
Images of Civil War
battlefields also haunt us. Mann uses large-format cameras, but skews
perspectives and overlays the foreground with collodion washes on glass plate
negatives that are eerie and messy, as if she is peering through the fog of the
past to render sanguinary spills in monochrome. One shot of Antietam—shot from
the upward-looking perspective of a trench in which hundreds died—invoked a
line from a Neil Young song of a young man's moment of death: “Then I saw black/And
my face splashed in the sky.”
The sense of loss and impermanence
also mark Mann's 2003 collection What
Remains, though to my eye her images of decaying churches are only poignant
if you know the back stories, in which case you probably don’t need the image.
I found this the weakest part of the show as Mann took too few measures to
explain why the images mattered, and most of the decay images lacked intrinsic
interest.
The saddest images come from
Proud Flesh (2009), which documents
her husband’s demise from Muscular Dystrophy. Is anything more horrifying than
the journey from robust virility to bone sack death? I took no pictures of
these. If any of Sally Mann’s photographs are too personal and too obscene,
surely it is these. I wondered how she managed to focus the lens and snap the shutter.
I suppose that she managed because genius dwells outside of the human heart.
Rob Weir
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