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After the first working photo booth debuted on Broadway in New York City in 1925, they began to pop up all over the place鈥攊n train and bus stations, stores, arcades, amusement parks and on the street. Anyone from any walk of life could step inside. It was a partnership between human and machine; no photographer told subjects how to hold their heads or where to place their arms or whether to smile. In this intimate space, they could do anything; they could scream, cry, kiss, make silly faces.
For a century now, this environment of accessibility, freedom and privacy has produced countless keepsake squares of memorable moments, but also photos for driver鈥檚 licenses and passports, for work and school IDs, and for posterity in yearbooks, newspapers and the like. The photos are a declaration: 鈥淚 was here.鈥 These quick and easy snapshots might not sound like art, but about two dozen 糖心TV students know better.
This fall, students taking 鈥淧erspectives on Photography鈥 with Lucy C. McDannel 鈥22 Professor of Art History and Anthropology Christopher Steiner and Associate Professor of Art History Karen Gonzalez Rice worked for over a month with 2024 Krane Art History Guest Residents Brian Wallis and N盲kki Goranin to interpret and curate Behind the Curtain, a Shain Library exhibit that showcased 鈥渁 seldom seen view of one of the most prolific forms of vernacular photography鈥攕mall photo booth portraits that reveal poignant moments of self-expression.鈥
Wallis, who is executive director of The Center for Photography at Woodstock in Kingston, New York, and was deputy director and chief curator at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York City from 2000 to 2015, and Goranin, a Vermont photographer and writer who owns the more than 100 of the photo booth portraits, self-portraits and related ephemera featured in Behind the Curtain, are the second pair of distinguished scholars and collectors to be selected for participation in the annual Krane Art History Guest Residency Program, which began in 2023 and is supported by a gift from Trustee Jonathan Krane 鈥90.
鈥淭he program is really revolutionary,鈥 Wallis said, 鈥渁nd everyone who is engaged with it as student curators or as visitors is really quite lucky, because there isn鈥檛 anything else like this in the world鈥攅specially this curatorial program that鈥檚 focusing on vernacular photography.鈥
At the exhibition opening in November, a few hundred people, including students, faculty, staff and the Krane residents, enjoyed a rented photo booth in Shain foyer. In the Chu Room, Wallis gave the keynote lecture, 鈥淲hat is Vernacular Photography?鈥 About 99% of all photos fall into this category, he said. 鈥淰ernacular photography is all those photographs that we have, that we cherish, that we compile in our phones and in our photo albums and in shoe boxes. 鈥 It is the people鈥檚 photography.鈥
In fact, the Museum of Modern Art, which Wallis said previously 鈥渟hunned鈥 vernacular photography, has now embraced it and defines it as 鈥渁n umbrella term used to distinguish fine art photographs from those made for a huge range of purposes, including commercial, scientific, forensic, governmental and personal.鈥
Vernacular photos may be considered ordinary, but Steiner hopes his students will continue to see what makes them special.
鈥淏y introducing our students to such distinguished scholars and leaders in their field, it is our hope that students will recognize the importance of photography and photo collecting in the study of art history, and in the social construction of contemporary identities,鈥 he said.