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Edite Haberman

It’s a Girl

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The visual story of a childless woman.

“It’s a Girl” started as a simple exercise and transformed itself into a potent self exploration through visual expressions of longing and loss. It is a conceptual story of childhood, motherhood, and the absence of children – a tragedy of the thwarted wish for children and the loss that this can signify.

There’s no lesson, there’s no cry; just an attempt for the need to express what no medium can, what no words or time could ever color, what no dreams or images could ever realize.

The indoor images were shot between bed sheets and bedspreads much like children in bed. The outdoor images were shot either on strollers or children’s playgrounds. Vintage doll heads sit on swings and slides that are not fully revealed – swinging, sliding, falling and playing as if they were children.

Being childless is a condition that society does not understand, nor has been able so far to accept. Being childless when one does not want to be, is an emptiness that cannot be explained. I am attempting to explain it through my images.

 

Bio

After studying architecture in Buenos Aires, Edite immigrated to the US where she received a degree in graphic design. She went to work for international advertising agencies in Los Angeles and San Francisco as an art director. Later she studied and graduated in film and directed and produced short as well as video and TV campaigns. After purchasing a DSLR camera a few years ago for an European trip, she went to study with some of the world’s finest photographers. “Photography for me is the culmination of all my experiences in architecture, design, film and art direction. It all comes together and this is where my passion is”.

Edite has been exhibiting her fine art and documentary photography in galleries and juried shows in the US and in Europe. Her project “It’s a Girl” won a honorable mention in 2011 from the International Photography Awards and an official selection from IPA in 2009. It also won a spotlight award from Color Magazine in 2011 and it’s been featured at OpenShow in 2012. Images from “It’s a Girl” have been exhibited in different galleries in California as well as in Europe. She has been the recipient of multiple awards for her other projects in documentary photography.

Edite is currently working on a book of “It’s a Girl” and has started the second part of this project – a documentary project that will follow this conceptual work. Her vision is to bring awareness at a national and international level about the stigma of involuntary childlessness. Her mission: to interview and portray women from different parts of the world who have experienced similar heartbreak with infertility and are living with it. She will document their stories and experiences – and through her images, Edite expects to put a face on a condition that still remains largely hidden and shameful.

Edite also works as a portrait and lifestyle photographer for private, editorial and corporate clients.

 

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Edite Haberman

 

97 thoughts on “Edite Haberman – It’s a Girl”

  1. Uhmm, hard to understand this kind of photography… and with only three pictures the essay is “done”. Too much repeated images in 03.20minutes. You need to find some others points of view…

    Edite, Feliz año nuevo judío! Abrazo porteño.
    P.

  2. Jim Powers, you obviously are not the audience this was intended for. If you bothered to read the text, perhaps you would be more respectful. I am sure you would not like to see that fist comment on your BURN. And they are not blown out by the way, nothing is.

    Gracias Patricio

  3. Oh, come on, edite. It’s self absorbed angst filled navel gazing. A paean to the Instagram generation. Three minutes of overly processed disembodied dolls heads. Geeze.

  4. Edite, I commend you.

    I feel the personal pain in the piece and I am moved by the highly personal nature of your project. Sharing any inner grief with the world must be a bold and difficult endeavour. I have been emotionally supporting my sister as she faces the same challenges and forced acceptances, so as much as any man is able, I relate to the significant turmoil associated with this issue. I am not aware of many artists addressing this matter, and I believe it should be more widely discussed. With ample room for diversified content, I look forward to seeing more of the project as it develops.

    Pete/.

  5. Unfortunately,I must also not be the target audience because I don’t get how
    a few images of vintage doll heads strung together with a melancholic sound track
    constitutes a project.
    But that’s just me.

  6. Burn is exactly the right place for this and any other kind of photography. Some of these reactions show the difficulty of accepting the issue, as well as an inability to understand the author’s sublimation and sharing that painful process through somewhat alienated (and perhaps also intentionally alienating) images of child substitutes (dolls). Not every photograph documents through camera-processed jpegs.

    I admire the courage of Edite to share this with the world, and to translate the alienation into art that elicits the expected reactions.

  7. John R. Fulton Jr.

    As John Szarkowski explained, referring to his “MIRRORS AND WINDOWS” exhibition and book at MoMA, “…personal visions take one of two forms. In metaphorical terms, the photograph is seen as either a ‘mirror’ — a romantic expression of the photographer’s sensibility as it projects itself on the things and sights of this world; or as a ‘window’ — through which the exterior world is explored in all its presence and reality.” Or looked at more simply – some photographers look out (window) on the world while others look back at themselves (mirror). That burn would choose to publish such a personal essay of photographs by Edite Haberman is to be cheered. Although not all will cheer the pictures they tell a very personal story about Edite. She is looking very closely in the mirror.

  8. Sadly for me, I have an extremely slow wireless connection here on Barter Island today. I have been trying to download this for almost an hour now and the progress bar has barely budged. Yet, I know Edite and her sense of artistry well enough that even without seeing her essay, I feel confident the message she wishes to convey is there in her photos. It may not be visible to all, but I am certain it is there. I look forward to viewing the essay when I get a better connection.

  9. Nice one David…..You put this on here and then disappear on your Road Trip. I do admire your style !

  10. Congrats Edite
    Im glad to see your project finally here at Burn and happier that you found such a suttle, emotional and beautifully simple formula to throw spotlight in a issue rarely commented. And by doing this , in such underlying subjective way, there’s this generous space defying states of perception on what this is all about and what you intended to reach
    As a woman, Im also really proud for your braveness leaving your comfort zone to share ‘something'(emptiness, pain, reconciliation) that relates to you in a deep personal way. Thanks for your testimony, for bringing it to the table, calling attention and opening it for more discursion

  11. Congratulations Edite

    You’re a brave person to tackle this. This sort of highly personal artwork seldom resonates with anyone but the maker. I feel that at least on some level you have managed that here. The theme, and dolls in general, clearly will resonate more with other women. Decapitated dolls, some with their eyes gouged out, could be very creepy. Somehow this manages to avoid it.

    Overall, I like what you are trying to do here, although I found the first images with the high contrast and over-saturation became repetitive very quickly. The last few images works better for me. I must admit that I feel this whole essay could be distilled down to the second last photograph, which I find very moving.

    thanks for this

  12. A very strong story. I like they way you approached the topic.
    Not sure, however am I regarding the head without eyes. Is that a born-dead child?

    Congratulations for being published – this is what makes burn unique.
    Thanks DAH and Team to have this published.

  13. “burn is born from an educational imperative and to bring strong photographic essays and powerful text to not only photographers, but to anyone fascinated by a visual and literary interpretation of our complex planet. Your interpretations may be either journalistic in nature or esoteric subjective pieces. I hold all artists in high regard. With me as editor/curator you need never think “what does he want or like?” I will push you to do your thing, not mine…”

    This was copied straight from the Burn Magazine About section. Apparently the essay is perfectly suited for Burn and I for one hope there is more of this kind of work in the future. It’s a good day when one has to think and put themselves in the shoes of the artist to understand where they’re coming from and what they are trying to say. There is an infinite amount of stories out there and just as may ways to express them.

    Well done Edite. I look forward to seeing the second half of the project.

    Morgan

  14. Edite!!! I can’t say it better than these comments here.
    I cheer loudly with your fans here. And agree with this being a great venue to show.

    It is original and monumental. I think we are all digging for that truth inside that is real and one of a kind. I think you have achieved it.
    …and find myself on the verge of this decision in my life as well. It is very moving for me to see this.
    I love you- big hug xoxox

    I would also like to say that it is a very moving start to a road trip about family. (assuming David will find a way to make it start- it seems he will always find a way) To begin this adventure with an essay about the poignant absence of family I think will make us all appreciate it more. I feel now, having seen this essay, more grounded in the true purpose of the upcoming trip.

  15. Involuntary nulliparity is an immensely complex topic. Few issues have such stigma attached to it, especially in a culture obsessed with fertility as the externalized, visible manifestation of self-worth, identity, femininity and “value” to society. Few talk openly about the loss and isolation, much less make it the subject of an artistic endeavor. Few struggles are so deeply internal, yet are out in the open for all to see.

    Edite, I commend and respect you for taking this on in a manner that is not only deeply personal, but in a way that invites the kind of discourse reflected in this thread. As one that is also seeking to resolve “that which I wanted but never had” through art, this essay moved me deeply and I know you’re on the right path for the next phase of your project. Hats off to you!

    Where else but Burn for this work to be seen and discussed.

  16. It’s so nice to see this work on burn today. Knowing Edite’s story and process I feel its a strong presentation of very complex and interesting work, that comes out of a very real and personal dimension. If you’re looking at these photos from an expectation of seeing something that fits your criteria for “what should be seen here” I don’t think you can find that with this essay, but you are also not taking a very sophisticated view of things.

    I also don’t agree with the criticism that because each photo contains doll heads that there is something wrong or nefarious. Just because a photo series contains a common thread, the ways a talented photographer like Edite can expand upon and manipulate her technique within a certain framework can be very moving. There are plenty of portrait series that can seem similar when looking at them one after a time, however that looks past the care paid to the individual image as well as effect when watching the set together as a whole, set to music, etc.

    Edite I was very glad to wake up to see this today – I look forward to seeing more!

  17. “but you are also not taking a very sophisticated view of things.”

    I see. You have to be “sophisticated” to find the deep meaning in three minutes of over-processed photos of dolls heads. What piffle.

  18. Giving art some thought and some consideration DOES require a bit of sophistication, at the very least it requires opening your mind to different ways of dealing with issues AND with technology:

    Suppose, just suppose for a moment, that you are expected to fulfill some major expectation that your parents or your friends have of you, like creating a family. And you can’t … You keep turning that issue around in your head for many years, feeling inadequate and full of guilt. In your mind you process images of kids that take the shape of dolls, with harsh little faces, over and over again. THAT WOULD BE YOUR ONGOING REALITY. Translating that into photography, your images of these child substitutes are harsh in contrast, almost on the brink of overexposure, in an objectified barren space. As time goes by, you are kinder to yourself, you at least somewhat ameliorate the matter in your heart and mind, and the dolls are tucked into sheets, photographed more softly, YOU SORT OF ACCEPT IT.

    I’m a guy who along the way made choices not to have children, and even that causes people to question you. THIS ART SPEAKS TO ME! No need to attack it if it doesn’t speak to you.

  19. I’ve been deeply moved by some of the comments and reflections about my work on this thread.

    PETE & GERHARD. I was grateful to see your sensible and encouraging words that moved the discussion to open it up into seeing something different here.

    JOHN FULTON. This was certainly a project that started inward by looking in the mirror, and in my next phase, I will be looking out. I feel a lot better positioned to do my next project having worked on this essay.

    FROSTFROG. Dear friend, I hope you will get better internet connection so you can see this work.

    ROBERTA & MILLI. The words of encouragement and support coming from you both as you and as women, is a huge confirmation to me that this work will make an impact. I wish more women will enter this discussion. Roberta you are awesome and Milli, I love you too :)

    MORGAN. I thank you for quoting the About section. Not many traverse fluidly through art and document.

    GORDON. The fact that you found yourself looking at the photos over and over and kept thinking about them, I can’t ask for anything more.Thank you.

    ZUN. While we all go through hard things, some of us get it a bit harder and as they say: It takes one to see one. I thank you for your words and the encouragement for my next phase.

    ANDY KROPA. Thank you for seeing beyond the eyes of a photojournalist, something that as you well indicate, may be hard for many expecting to see what they have been accustomed to usually find.

    JIM POWERS. Burn is a forum of interesting and intelligent discussions, however I personally believe it should all be in the spirit of constructive criticism. And I know that when that criticism comes charged with such rage, it never has anything to do with the topic, but the one criticizing it. Perhaps you too should look in the mirror.

    Panos, thanks, I’ll be in touch, may be you’ll see me in Venice Beach.

    David and team, thank you for this gift.

    While there’s just no simple way to etiquette this topic, visually or otherwise, it’s even more difficult, in fact impossible, to fill the empty wombs and empty picture frames of a childless woman. And these images while very personal, can perhaps in a way start to fill those empty frames. Not just with art that will speak to some, but even more importantly, with much needed awareness and discussion of an issue that has been quietly going on for way too long and rapidly growing into almost epidemic proportions. Under our noses, in our backyards; in the sisters, the friends and the strangers who have no voice and face hostility and rejection, the shame and isolation of a “mommy and me” society and a world that throughout history, has only revered the mother and child.

  20. Or why not just photograph dead puppies picked up along the highway and say that symbolizes your loss at never having had children? Void the sentimental drivel in the artist’s statement, these would be just weird instagram style photos.

    Look, I can totally understand using photography to deal with your own emotions and disappointments. But this kind of thing doesn’t translate well outside your own very personal experience. And what purpose does it serve to dwell on disappointment, anyway? Life is too short. Photograph your collection of disembodied doll heads, put them away on a SD card, and move on with life. Screw your parents and friends expectations. It’s your life, not theirs.

  21. The “instagram style” (which Edite’s work is not) and video presentations are part of how we as photographers can relate to the world out there. The technical approach is different, yet speaks to the younger audience. You will find a preoccupation with death in many of the current instagram photos, a clear feeling of loss in our violence-oriented societies.

  22. JIM POWERS. I’m starting to see that my work pushes your buttons, and that’s fantastic. And while you may think that you’re only talking photo technicalities here, you for sure represent to me a large section of society that only knows how to be hostile when it comes to being unable or unwilling to accept change. Thank you for providing that mirror.

  23. Jim, you make me laugh. You’re usually the one with the most gumption to say what you really think although for the most part I notice you don’t like much that gets published here. Like a few others, I also don’t like the over processed images and find the latter ones much more pleasing to the eye allowing some of your pain and statement to reach us. I’m sorry for your circumstances, maybe adopting a child would bring some love to you. In any case, congratulations and I hope you consider all these comments to be constructive.

  24. “you for sure represent to me a large section of society that only knows how to be hostile when it comes to being unable or unwilling to accept change.”

    Pretentious nonsense produced in the name of art certainly does alienate “a large section of society.” Eventually, you end up talking to yourself.

  25. Congratulations Edite!

    Your series is quite far form what we’re “usually” exposed to at Burn, and in some ways that’s really exciting all by itself.

    I didn’t get the chance to actually watch the whole video before today, but have wondered for quite some days what the doll heads were all about.

    Children always tear some of their toys apart, I know for sure I did when I was a little girl. By curiosity or by accident, dolls always seem to loose their heads somehow. And bringing that aspect into the whole subject matter takes a lot of courage.

    Thank you for sharing your story, and good luck on the second part of this work.

    :)
    Frida

  26. Hi edite.

    Dolls.. When I first viewed the photos I actually thought I was intended as a comment upon either child abuse or infant mortality.. Second to those subjects I have also seen dolls employed to explore themes of feminism and beautification.. I was actually surprised to read the statement subsequently.

    For me, it is simply that the objects have been used in so many contexts for such varying metaphors that it takes some of the impact away from the work.
    I think the subject itself is extremely interesting and probably under represented in art circles.. Although I could be corrected there.

    It sounds as if you have a plan moving forward for a completely different approach to representing the issue, and that plan sounds more cohesive and developed, so I wish you luck with it.

    in this first working attempt you have opened the door by making public your personal angst.. While I think ‘congratulations’ may be to celebratory, I certainly commend you for that.. And add that perhaps the most difficult bridge has been crossed.. You have thought, begun shooting and begun showing.

    Look forward to seeing an evolution with more idiosyncratic approach..

    David

  27. :))….

    love it (actually, it was too short for me!; ))…honestly, even Jim, I can’t imagine how a viewer doesn’t feel the increadible forward moment of this piece pushing toward loss …building from abstract play and playful substitution to to quite powerful (visual and emotional) grown-up loss by the end of the sequence….the ending is really about loss (i watched it 2xs and didn’t even read the text until now)…actually, painful acceptance of loss (my first sense was that this artist had lost a child and was trying to come to terms with that…its so obvious in the ending when the dolls are discarded and all that beautiful, shadowy heart-opening loss….anyway…no need to write further, because there are so many rich and thoughtful and insightful comments above, nothing me to add, accept this,

    congrats Edite…will be interesting to see how this ‘internal’ piece plays off against your external gazing….

  28. Edite, today I have a faster connection – ethernet – but even so it is slow. I opened it two hours ago, went off and did other things, came back – and only 7 seconds had loaded! I might not be able to watch this one until I get home, or maybe it will come up in Barrow. This internet is run by the school district and I have never been able to load a You Tube video on it, either. Maybe they block videos.

  29. I surprise myself. I get it. As a parent I feel the angst. I know some men who would love to have children but continue to be childless for all sorts of reasons and that this is a sadness for them.

    Ordinarily I run a mile from these sorts of projects. This one moved me, though on a technical level it annoyed me several times but much of this is discussed above.

    Well done for being published here.

    – Paul.

  30. (This comment has taken me ages to write just to get my thoughts in some sort of order and I’ve rewritten it several times.)

    I usually don’t agree with Jim’s views but here I feel he is right. Dolls (and their heads) are serious cliché and so over used as a representation of children in Hollywood films, short stories etc and for any number for purposes that using them to express something so serious is beyond my understanding.

    I would love to have a child and I’m with the love of my life, but we will not be able to have children, and this causes me great sadness and pain. I could not express this in pictures or words.

    The artist states this best with “the need to express what no medium can, what no words or time could ever color, what no dreams or images could ever realize.” Yet then goes on to try and express this very feeling with such a god awful cliché as dolls heads, it fills me with … the best word is anger. The artist states that this feeling can’t be expressed then plays pictures of dolls heads… the most over used symbol I can think of.

    The first thing that springs to mind is the opening (doll filled) credits of the tv series American Horror Story

    Really? Really? Using Dolls heads to express the unexpressable?!!!

  31. Sorry, a bit more,

    I would not have minded the photos/music on their own, but after watching it and then reading the artists statement about what it was meant to show …arrgh!

  32. It is also a cliché that we must all reproduce in order to be considered worthy members of society.

    Why not use one cliché to visualize another? It’s been done before, but can be newly found.

    Obviously the approach is eliciting a variety of strong emotions, a mark of relevant art!

  33. “Everything” is a cliche, one way or another…
    “Everything” has been photographed million times before… that doesnt mean we have to stop shooting or trying to express ourselves..photography (for me at least) is a form of therapy…i need to keep shooting to “survive” (not talking $$), to stay healthy..in touch with my feelings , emotions, subconscious…
    thank you ALL

  34. The essay is pretty unresolved at this stage and lacks that universal platform that it seeks. Despite this it is Jim’s statements have given that extra dimension to the work that Edite failed to create visually. She should thank Jim for taking this to work another level.

  35. The work is a Beginning and not and end.. As all work is perhaps..
    The trouble with dwelling upon this price is that that negates the most important part of the statement above – which actually makes clear that this is a beginning of something which is underrepresented..

    Why not forget dolls heads and cliche .. Think about the fundamental point which has provoked the work.. And wonder if it is something which is worthy of continuation.. I think it is.

    If edite was sitting in my lounge, crying, telling me she was unable to have children THAT is a cliche.. What would you think of me to gruffly say,
    “This is just crap”

    All.. I have problems with this work, as it is and as I mentioned.. For the love of cashew nuts dig deeper though and empathise.. You don’t have to like this to encourage further development.. Further thought.

    Mat of the comments here are cliche.. Most of the comments authors parodies of themselves..

    Bah.
    D

  36. Sent the wrong text should read………..The essay is pretty unresolved at this stage and lacks that universal platform that it seeks. Despite this, Jim’s statements have given the work a extra dimension that Edite failed to create visually. She should thank Jim for taking this to work another level.

  37. The sadness is that a play regarding philistine vr artisan, albeit unresolved, is well below the idea and concepts potential.

    The limelight stolen so easily.. When the frustration, rage, bitterness and perhaps resignation of a fuller piece could have affected a different response..

    And also – as in 2nd post.. Many of the comments leave me cold.. It’s not only the neigh Sayers that are guilty of condescension.. Many of the comments leave me cold.. And perhaps that is the works failing also.

    As usual, jim just requests, and gains, more attention.

    Hey – did you know about mirrors and windows?

  38. I wish a man to be brave enough to express their impotence ..
    Be it effectively or less so..

    Good luck edite.. As with many here, I’ve friends unable to bear children and can well see where words fail them..

  39. David really helpful comment, especially regarding cashew nuts,

    I’m not questioning the emotion which, I think is one I have felt myself. What I struggle with is the use of pictures in this essay to try and represent those feelings.

    Panos, not everything is cliché, whilst almost everything has been done in one way or another, the use of over used symbols in photography without using them in a new or meaningful way should be avoided.

    In my earlier response I tried to avoid criticising the actual pictures, I had wanted to try and convey my upset that a very difficult topic should be addressed using such over used and trite pictures. The pictures used, as another person in these comments has said, could be applied to other child issues, such as abuse.

    The emotion and feelings I can sympathise with from the artist statements, but not the pictures. Whilst Jim’s comments are blunt, I feel they are reasonable.

    In other genres (such as short story) the use of dolls as an easy to use symbol has been been equally criticised.

    There are certain over used tropes in pictures and writing that have been used, of which dolls are one, that are over used, and I feel this essay over uses them.

  40. And so the essay does fail in it’s intentions.. In the form it stands it says nothing of a specific anguish, nor pays that anguish tribute enough for the pain it must cause..

    A case of showing work early? Of rushing to print? Or wanting to become accustomed to others dissecting our most personal aspects that greater work can grow..

    What’s not in the photos is in the text.. Beginnings..
    BURN must have room for that.. It’s where it began..

    Enough from this ego for one night.. Good luck edite.
    D

  41. “Being childless is a condition that society does not understand, nor has been able so far to accept” …….. Not sure what rock you are hiding under but with a 10% Gay population, all those that have chosen not to have children and the barren the numbers are quite significant………… maybe some may not understand but it is all quite acceptable in our 21st century society.

  42. BURN must have room for that.. It’s where it began……. sure but without an end in sight it is all a bit like walking into a half baked exhibition where the artists says I didn’t have time to finish what I wanted to do but this is good enough. It also makes it easy for the creator to dodge any critique as being meaningful.

  43. Knowing Edite personally I have a differen take than some of the first responders.

    When I first saw some of the doll heads by themselves I thought they were weird. Later when Edite shared her story and the rest of them I was moved to tears. In fact, when they were shown at presentation by Edite it was pretty overwhelming for me.

    For someone to share her pain like Edite has takes enormous courage. I have other photographer friends that had similar reactions, but when they knew the story they had the same reaction as I did.

    Kudos for Edite for her courage and bravery! Very few men or women have this kind of courage, in my opinion.

    You have my vote of confidence Edite!

  44. And that’s part of the rub, Eric
    Without the benefit of the written explanation or the benefit of knowing Edite personally
    and hearing her story the images,themselves, are unable to even hint at the condition Edite
    wishes to convey and,as such, they fail ,in my opinion.
    They no more illustrate the topic than does a series of photographs of torn paper does to
    illustrate divorce.

  45. For once I am in agreement with Jim. Photographing doll heads is a Photo 1 cliche. The soundtrack to this sounds like the unwanted music that plays when you arrive at the website of a bad wedding photographer.

    As someone who has experienced child loss and the inability to have children amongst my friends and family, I am very aware of the pain and difficulty of this issue… It is immense, and truly, not often talked about… Certainly a deserving topic of a photographic essay.

    These images however, do not get me there. I can see the work as a therapeutic self-therapy, and with that function in mind it is certainly worth creating. But it does not escape the level of cliche, due to the subjects of the photographs. I will grant that the images get more interesting as the essay goes on…

    Though I am not a big fan of this work I commend Burn for including work out of the PJ box…

  46. Eric this brings up the question. Is this an essay for a wider audience or just someone’s expression pain and grief? I can see how all this works for people in the know or Edite’s contacts but for the rest of us …….if no artist’s statement then the childless aspect is lost. This means that it cannot stand alone visually or be removed from the artist
    .
    Courage and bravery millions of people show this everyday it isn’t something that special.

  47. This possibly sums up my feelings about this piece from the film Adaptation:

    Charlie Kaufman: The only idea more overused than serial killers is multiple personality. On top of that, you explore the notion that cop and criminal are really two aspects of the same person. See every cop movie ever made for other examples of this.

    Donald Kaufman: Mom called it “psychologically taut”.

  48. I’d rather read 100 first impression experiences than a long thread about what someone thinks about someone else’s first impression experience. Here is my first impression of the photographs. You can then decide if that teaches you anything about the photographs or not. Each individual will have their own experience.

    As I viewed the photographs I got the overwhelming impression that this was a story about both miscarriage and abortion. The theme was the death of unborn children in its various tragic and horrific forms. A carriage of overturned heads symbolized miscarriage. A baby head in what appeared to be a hospital like environment, detached from its body. Doll heads on a playground swing, like baby ghosts haunting the place. Strange colors and overexposure, as if lit brightly by an overhead operating room lamp. Finding out you had a baby girl in the most horrific, terrifying, and grisly way imaginable; By viewing the dead body of an unborn human once inside you. It left me feeling quite ill and rather emotionally disturbed. It didn’t seem ambiguous at all, I got it loud and clear.

    On the other stuff…
    If you are familiar with a photographer’s explanation before viewing the explained photographs then you are missing the pure first impression. When a photographer explains her photographs to a viewer before the viewing, she is irreversibly changing the viewing experience. The photograph can be a vehicle for the explanation in the form of attached words, or it can contain an idea itself without words. This is not a moral issue. I wish there was a word to describe it. Thinkography? Wordtography? Just let it exist. There is room for it. Become its master. Why not use every tool you’ve got?

    I don’t think the actual content in the main article did any of the above. I’m only mentioning it because it seems some people skipped the presentation, went to the story, then went back to the photographs. I don’t think that was the intention of the photographer at all, and I don’t want to imply that it was. Which is why I’m giving you this tedious explanation! If you viewed it out of the intended order then you are responsible for changing the viewing experience. Don’t blame the presenter. It is like watching a movie when you know how it will end. We call that a spoiler because it spoils the experience of the work itself. Irreversibly destroying the intention of the creator to be viewed without expectations of the work.

  49. “Don’t blame the presenter”……..The photographer is in control of the presentation, if there is a certain manner that the audience should view the work then it should be structured that way.

  50. As im reading comments i cant help some thoughts and gotta be honest im a little envy (jealous;) , smiling….i cant really remember what was the last time an essay got so SUCCESSFUL so fast, in such a limited amount of time Burn on fire…so many comments within 24 hours or so…was it that amazing “Black Girl” essay published a year ago, was it Bob Black’s “Bones of Time” or was it Patricia Lay Dorsey’s “Falling into place” or was it Imant’s 1st essay …doesnt matter which had more impact , but this essay is definitely one of those…Strong Impact..(and heavy impact brings a lot of love and lots of hate which the other side of same coin)
    Usually when we are afraid to say i love you we choose to say “i hate you” but nobody can sit on the fence on this one…
    Why ? i asked my self…what makes most presentations boring and dull but this here got so powerful, why did it become from a little storm into a hurricane 3 so fast..? smiling smiling..
    Well obviously because it hit the nerve, the weak spot in most of us (even jim’s maternal insticts this time)…Im not gonna explain why it hit the nerve, why the controversy, i know most know it already, you dont need me to explain…If you are a sensitive human being you already know those answers..im not here to play “teacher”,,,laughing…nah not me…
    but my question is : Should Art do that?
    Is FRIDA KAHLO , (yes yes the “disturbing” for many Frida) , controversial? who needed Frida when we had mainstream muralist Diego Rivera that “anyone understands” ? Why Frida is more important? why ??? still asking??? because just like Edite’s work here and Patricia’s “falling into place” they MIRRORED THEMSELVES TO THE POINT IT HURTS…
    Anyone heard about Antoine D’Agata? so much controversy about this philosopher (sorry, photographer) that even half magnum didnt even know what to think of him..why??? still asking??? He mirrored himself..he didnt STEAL a snapshot of the poor homeless guy in skidrow and then run in the comfort zone in his cozy hotel…nahhhh…he slept next to him, shared the same syringe…he dug deep into his soul and cut his wrist , just like Frida and gave it to us to drink , yes us the Art Vampires, the judgmental audience…
    now check this out:

    “I don’t believe that Photography or Art in general, have anything to do with culture. Art is the designated enemy of culture, it points fingers at culture. Art making is a solitary action, I will go as far as saying that art making is an anarchic action, not to be interpreted as having purely political undertones but an action where the artists’ voice is saying something to the world about the artist and the world itself. By integrating Art in culture, which is a widespread activity in todays society, you take away it’s very power. Oh, yes, educational institutions tell you that Art is indeed culture, but not for one second I entertain the idea of that possibility.”
    Domenico Foschi

    whats the point of Art tthat had its balls cut off?
    who needs that? well Safety/Culture/Tradition/Religion/Capitalism needs that…
    1) if your art does not Bother Anyone then you only thing you actually do is BEAUTIFICATION…landscaping and boring postacrds/sunsets…You’re are not an artist then…you’re just a interior decorator…
    2) If you’re not a Doer, a creator then you’re just a believer…good luck.
    3)in other words if you’re Not a Producer then you’re simply a leech sucking blood from that ugly animal’s back called Culture….

    please watch the documentary “EXIT THROUGH THE GIFTSHOP” and you’ll see exactly what i mean…
    think of “cultural events” for example.In your own city , no matter where you live…go to the local museum and watch the spiders making new webs…folks call them Art Museums instead of calling them Tourist Traps..think the exploitation of Alamo(museum) or those scary looking statues of child molesters/(saints) in front of churches…that’s “culture” and thats disgusting and thats what any revolutionary artist should stand against…but who has those balls?
    Question : why in most greek statues in museums all over the world (stolen ones) but also in Athens museum all Statues are mutilated? genitalia cut off? laughing…please do not blame the talibans on this one…or blame them…Religion ( a strong propaganda tool to domesticate the artist to begin with ), “culture”, “tradition”…the 3 arch enemies of contemporary art…
    Why Oscar Wilde got imprisoned back then ? (oh because the status quo decided that homosexuality was a crime)..go figure

    but but but why people hated Frida? or Eminem, or 2Pac?
    Why did people BOOED BOB DYLAN OFF STAGE AT NEWPORT FESTIVAL IN 66?
    Booing Bob Dylan for crissakes… yelling TRAITOR TRAITOR to him…why Jesus got crucified? why the old does not like the new?
    Well feel free to answer that…im not your mommy, tired feeding you, use your own forks por favor

    (hold on, phone rings , i’ll be back)

  51. When Frida try to express her Pain ( of miscarriages , accident etc ) very few if nobody got it.. Very few accepted it, don’t ask again why please.. Everyone wanted another Diego..
    Safety zone…
    When Elvis started shaking his butt TV wouldn’t play it..
    Jim Morrison got slapped by Ed Sullivan for disobeying orders and performed “girl we couldn’t get much higher ” in national tv..
    My good friend Jim P here, as always honest, disagrees with this kind of mirroring kind of work…and I’m fine with that.. CLASSIC PHOTOJOURNALISM THOUGH its not Art nor it intended to be, so I understand standing his ground defending the local press.. He makes his living this way and I respect it totally..
    But remember:

    PRESS / MEDIA IS : The ideological wing of capitalism.

    ART IS NOT.. Art is the ENEMY and that’s what I’m defending!
    Anyone with me on this one? Is it too early?
    Will my ideas become the Status Quo 200 years from now? Of course they will, but till then I’ll defend art..
    Art against this rotten system , Art against “culture”, “tradition” and FEAR!!!
    Thank you all and thank you Edite for the FOOD FOR THOUGHT YOU PROVIDED..
    Waiting for more, I’m not here to just “defend” you… Laughing, I’m not a lawyer , I’m the one in jail, remember ?
    ( I’m defending ART , that warm gun ;)
    soonest
    ps: of course I expect denial and provocation on what I wrote above but that’s the least of my concerns ;)

  52. I am stunned. This is not only excellent, it is masterful. It is flat-out one of the best pieces I have ever seen on Burn. From the first frame to the last, I was moved – haunted – by the overwhelming sense of loss. I am in the field right now, privileged to see and experience many wonderful things, but when I looked at this, I thought of my own children, my three grandsons, and both how privileged I am to have them and yet what a temporary and ephemeral thing it is and how little or cumulative time together will be. I wanted to jump on a plane and go south, just to be with them, for whatever moments I could.

    Even without Edite’s narrative, her essay would have evoked the same haunting sense of loss in me; I would have known the loss involved a child, whether by lack of conception or death. Edite makes it clear that loss of a child, even the child that never was, is loss just as great. Words and photos go good together. Edite used just the right blend of words and photos and found the perfect music.

    She created a single artistic package of great power.

    I have moved from Kaktovik village on Barter Island to Barrow and, as you can see, I finally have an Internet connection strong enough to view the essay – fortunately for me.

  53. Panos, I’m not an enemy of art. I’m one of the founding members, 10 years ago, of our area art league. The art that hangs on my walls is not photos, but geometric abstract and non-representational paintings. And no maternal instincts here. My wife and I have have been married 34 years and have no children. Never had a moments regret about it.

    And I still think these photos are over processed crap.

  54. You deserve it, Edite. You are a true artist – as I knew from the moment I first saw your slaughterhouse work in New York, then your Hasidic essay, now reconfirmed here.

  55. It is possible to be too close to your subject, I think. This essay may indeed have great meaning for its author, but it is utterly meaningless to me. I kept thinking that I should **feel something**, but I didn’t. There is nothing here for me to connect to, nothing that relates to me or my life at all, just strange photos of dolls heads. I knew it was important and deep to somebody, but just not to me.

  56. Chairman’s comment is exactly how I felt. For me, watching this was like opening a strangers journal and not being able to read the language; but trying to study the handwriting to get to know the individual. I suspect many commentators here exaggerate just how well they understand the piece… feeling obligated to be understanding and encouraging due to the sensitive subject matter. I’m not saying that because I didn’t understand it… just from impressions.

    I didn’t connect with the images at all. But I am glad it was posted here because it sparked a fascinating conversation. I’ve always learned more from the essays on Burn that I don’t enjoy, than from the ones I do.

    Edite… I am glad I saw your essay. I hope you don’t just accept the compliments as valid and dismiss the others.

  57. Robert…. Hmmmmmmmmm… You don’t get something, therefore those who claim to must be exaggerating…

    This would include David, who has not expressed an opinion but obviously thought enough of it to put it on Burn.

  58. Some art reaches some people, other art reaches others.

    Art works best when it’s full of ambiguity (unlike photojournalism).

    It’s fine if any particular work of art doesn’t reach anyone in particular, as long as it reaches some. No need to feel bad if a particular piece doesn’t reach you.

  59. Frostfrog… I do not say that because I DON’T GET IT. I’d say the same thing about something I do get, if I felt that it might likely be the same. Don’t twist my words. You changed the wording and therefore the meaning. I did not point my finger everyone who claims to understands it, and then state that they actually do not. I just get the sense that some of the positive feedback is coming from a place of insecurity rather than actual understanding. I cannot prove this… I know. It’s just an impression I have… you can consider for yourselves if I am right or not.

    “It’s fine if any particular work of art doesn’t reach anyone in particular, as long as it reaches some. No need to feel bad if a particular piece doesn’t reach you.”

    Gerhard… I couldn’t agree more.

  60. I suspect many commentators here exaggerate just how well they understand the piece…………..hindsight mentality dictates a lot of the comments.

  61. Robert, I made no attempt to quote you and so I did not change your wording or twist your words. It may be that I misinterpreted your intent, but I do think “you don’t get it,” to be a logical interpretation of “For me, watching this was like opening a strangers journal and not being able to read the language.”

    You might argue that, “but trying to study the handwriting to get to know the individual,” implies otherwise, that maybe you did get it, but I think that is a bit of leap. I think you could study the handwriting of most people for a long time and never get them.

  62. FrostFrog… I don’t get it. Thats is what I was trying to say. The opposite of getting it. I was saying that I do not understand the piece. But that does not mean I believe, simply for that reason, that many others do not as well.

    Two separate things. There is my understanding of the piece, and then there is my interpretation of the comments themselves.

    Imants… ah yes! Hindsight bias. You said it much more clearly than I did.

  63. We all live in our own reality. Our reality is unique to us therefore when we are presented with words, images or concepts that dont fit within our values or conceptions of the world/people around us we either choose to let it go or voice an opinion or become militant. This is a personal journey that Edite has chosen and whether you resonate with the series or not its irrelevant. Her reality is based not only on her physical and emotional experiences since birth but also the Karma of past life experiences brought forward into this life. Her expression of her personal pain is via imagery and it will resonate deeply with others who have that same pain.

    Creativity is a reflection of our personality and an expression of emotion. Without emotion your just an automaton regurgitating someone else’s concept or style. When you create an image are you copying another’s style or using imagery as a metaphor for your emotional pain/communication as a way of understanding that pain more or just going through the motions subconsciously taking the same type of image over and over again?

    I began a series of images about woodlands and specifically trees last year. In an intense romantic relationship I knew long before it ended that it would end and the woodlands series is about my intense feeling of love for her and our times we spent in nature. I continue the series as a release for my heartbreak.. It will see the light of day and when I have finished it I will have resolved my loss. I understand Edite very well because I suffer loss albeit a different form. If you have never suffered loss then this work will go over your head.

    Say what you feel about this work.. free speech rules but to completely dismiss another’s heartfelt creations.. their emotional release is just plain nasty.

    Thats my reality speaking!!

  64. Excellent observations, Stewart.

    Free speech rules, but on a website for photographers one would expect less nastiness than in the rest of the internet. One could just accept another person’s reality and emotions as they choose to express them through their art without attacking the art. But then, throughout history, all new artistic expression has been attacked because it presented unexpected artistic style(s), and maybe also because it confronted people with issues they did not want to face.

  65. Personal interface with these universal, yet totally fresh, images was haunting and full; all senses engaged in receiving a very subtle and tender experience: MY experience, as it was so artfully evoked by Edite’s beautiful piece.
    Such spaciousness and clarity allowed a healing in the moment. I wasn’t suffocated by an over-intensity of imagery or superimposition. What a relief! No need for the intellect to become involved. (How would anyone benefit from such a useless overlay onto this material, anyway?)
    I am grateful for the opportunity to just breathe it all in …

    Dawn

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