Photographic Process as Desire: Mark Morrisroe's Late Photograms.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Photographic Process as Desire: Mark Morrisroe's Late Photograms.
Authors: MORGAN, NICHOLAS C.1
Source: Afterimage. Mar2023, Vol. 50 Issue 1, p24-48. 25p.
Subject Terms: *PHOTOGRAMS, *FORMALISM (Art), *LGBTQ+ people
People: MORRISROE, Mark, GUIBERT, Herve, 1955-1991
Abstract: Between 1986 and his death from AIDS-related causes in 1989, the Boston- and Jersey City- based photographer Mark Morrisroe produced a series of cameraless photographs with heterogenous material including fabric, pornography, and X-rays. This essay argues that these photograms move away from a dominant understanding of photography that celebrates stasis, legibility, and indexicality in favor of one concentrating on activity. Morrisroe's photograms cast the photograph as a process: the image unfixable and always under development, its matter flexing, sputtering, and shifting over time. For Morrisroe, this project was inextricable from an understanding of desire itself as processual. The essay positions Morrisroe's processual and desirous conception of photography as an instance of what has recently been theorized as queer formalism's capacity to galvanize queer politics and resist social violence. Morrisroe's formal experimentation with the medium and unorthodox use of darkroom materials countered mainstream, pathos-ridden representations of AIDS and imagined alternatives to the epidemic's fragmentation of queer worldmaking projects. Through intertextual readings with Morrisroe's contemporary Herve' Guibert, the essay shows how Morrisroe's anti-indexical and processual cameraless photography demonstrates the medium's potential as a vehicle for currents and transmissions knitting together spectators, bodies, and queer communities in flow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
More Details
ISSN:03007472
DOI:10.1525/aft.2023.50.1.24
Published in:Afterimage
Language:English