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April 19, 2009

Impenetrability

afghan_ferguson.jpg

Yesterday, I had an interesting conversation with Loret Steinberg, R.I.T. professor of photojournalism and an adviser to the site, about the slideshow as an under-appreciated visual form existing between the single still-image and more full-blown multimedia.

The image above is drawn from a TIME slide show of Adam Ferguson’s photos, and does a convincing job of capturing — almost exclusively through sequential, visual storytelling — the almost futile task of American troops having any substantial impact in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley. The show transitions from an awkward, inconclusive meeting with local tribal leaders to patrolling, coordinating, firing, waiting, sleeping, eating, and patrolling again. Much of the story is told through the lighting, the facial expressions, even the camera jitter and, if the result of the show is a flat and meandering sense and a feeling of murkiness, that’s clearly the point.

(It’s too bad, by the way, TIME’s software is so unfriendly, at least with my browser. It doesn’t allow you to page back at the end, and doesn’t transition from frame-to-frame without awkwardly refreshing the whole page.)

The image above, is the third in the set. The caption reads:

A Bravo Company soldier provides security wA Bravo Company soldier provides security while members of his unit interview residents of Loi Kolay, another village in the valley. A Bravo Company soldier provides security while members of his unit interview residents of Loi Kolay, another village in the valley while members of his unit interview residents of Loi Kolay, another village in the valley.

The building seems like the perfect metaphor. It’s like a jungle itself, a house-of-cards, a haunted house, and also an echo of Vietnam, maybe. Of course, the soldier’s expression and his looking back-and-away is an invitation to appreciate any number of variations on impenetrability.

(image: Adam Ferguson for TIME. Accompanying story: The U.S. in Afghanistan: The Longest War)

  • Matthew Platte

    Their slideshow transition method is lame: Probably so they can artificially increa$e their site’s number of page view$, and charge their adverti$er$ accordingly.

  • dada

    For pure fun, I like NewYorkTimes’ audio slideshow series One in a Million & On the Street with Bill Cunningham.
    Very well done & the format works smoothly.

  • http://www.lindahansonphoto.com Linda Hanson

    Interesting color in all of those slides. Very cold, not exactly underexposed but desaturated and very dark – almost monochrome. I’m inclined to think they were LightRoomed or Photoshopped a bit. Nothing wrong with that but it’s interesting. Does anyone else see it that way?

  • Jonathan

    I keep focusing on the building, which I think is beautiful (if haunted-looking). Has anyone seen the book “Architecture Without Architects”? As well as evoking human violence, images like this make me think of old and ancient places getting all shot up.

  • http://profile.typepad.com/johntanton jtfromBC

    The mood of this powerful series feels like ‘Apocalypse Now’ in slow motion, and a verse from Rudyard Kipling – (‘a prophet of British Imperialism’ – George Orwell)
    ‘When you’re wounded and left on Afghanistan’s plains, And the women come out to cut up what remains, Jest roll to your rifle and blow out your brains An’ go to your Gawd like a soldier.’
    http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1146.html
    What we don’t see, are the beleaguered soldiers being supported by Drones sitting in Nevada, flying aerial drones in this Valley of Death, directing awesome firepower from helicopter gunships and jets unloading unimaginable quantities of bombs and creating a Valley of Destruction in the process.

  • http://caraf.blogs.com caraf

    Loret is right: we really need to pay more attention to the visual form of the slideshow. The Obama White House presents nearly everything photographic in slideshow form in the photo gallery. There are some still images on the blog, but there they are frequently using slideshows too.