JHU Student-Curated Exhibition Examines the Photography Debate between Documentation and Art

image Ara Güler / İshak Paşa Palace, Doğubayazıt, 1965. Silver gelatin print / Photo Courtesy of Freer Gallery and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archive, ELS2013.9.9

Throughout his career, acclaimed and prolific photojournalist Ara Güler, Turkey's most well-known photographer, took more than 800,000 photographs documenting Turkish culture and important historical sites. Opening Dec. 14 at the Smithsonian's Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, 'In Focus: Ara Güler's Anatolia' reveals a selection of his never-before-shown works of Anatolian monuments, taking the viewer on a historical journey through the lens of one of the world's most legendary photojournalists.

Running through May 4, 2014, the 24 works on view also challenge Güler's definition of himself as a photojournalist, not an artist, and engage visitors in a critical debate about whether photography is an art form or a means of documentation.

image Ara Güler / Yakutiye Medresesi (detail), Erzurum, 1965. Silver gelatin print / Photo Courtesy of Freer Gallery and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archive, ELS2013.9.1

'In Focus' was curated by students from the Johns Hopkins University's Program in Museums and Society, under the supervision of Nancy Micklewright, the Head of Scholarly Programs and Publications at the Freer and Sackler Galleries. During the 2013 spring semester, the students worked with the archival collection to develop an exhibition proposal, along with labels, programming ideas and Web content.

Using a variety of vantage points, dramatic lighting and strong contrasts, Güler expressed a unique and instantly recognizable photographic point of view. Güler's ability to capture fleeting moments and his fascination with storytelling are evident in several of the works on view, such as 'Gök Medrese' (school), which captures a child running past a ruined façade, an open doorway allowing a glimpse of a larger world beyond. Since 1965, when these images were made, some of the historic buildings Güler depicts have been extensively renovated to become tourist sites and some have deteriorated even further-in both cases, Güler's photographs provide a poignant and valuable record of a moment in time.

image Ara Güler / Gök Medrese, Sivas, 1965. Silver gelatin print / Photo Courtesy of Freer Gallery and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archive, ELS2013.9.10

Bearing witness to the now lost Turkey of the 1950s and 1960s, Güler assembled a rich and diverse body of work. Extracted from his extensive portfolio, the works on view in 'In Focus' will feature a set of magnificent archeological sites of medieval Seljuk and Armenian monuments across Anatolia, the Asian mainland of Turkey.

The exhibition will also feature a short video, 'Ara Güler: A Lifetime Achievement' by FotoTV (2010), which will allow visitors to hear Güler's own thoughts on photojournalism, art and his career.

Güler (b. 1928) took his first photojournalism jobs at local newspapers while studying economics at Istanbul University in 1950. In 1955, he became head of the Photography Department at Hayat (Life) magazine, and soon after began working for international media. He photographed for Turkish publications such as Yeni Istanbul (New Istanbul) and Hayat magazine, and major international publications, including Time Life, Paris Match, and Smithsonian magazine. In the 1960s, he worked alongside acclaimed photojournalist Henri Cartier-Bresson at Magnum Photos. Now 85, Güler continues to live and work in Istanbul.

image Ara Güler / Walls of Ani, Ani. 1965, Silver gelatin print / Photo Courtesy of Freer Gallery and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archive, ELS2013.9.21

The works on display are part of a set of 53 photographs of architectural monuments donated to the Freer and Sackler Archives in 1989 by Raymond Hare, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey (1961-1965). The collection of photographs was selected to reflect Hare's lifelong interest in the architecture of the region, and presented to him by his colleagues upon his departure from Turkey.


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