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Alise Tifentale

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News

Current work in progress by Alise Tifentale: news about upcoming talks, new articles and book chapters, working notes and findings of dissertation research about photography in the 1950s, and observations about contemporary art and architecture.

New peer-reviewed article: "Sophie Thun Interprets Zenta Dzividzinska’s Negatives"

March 7, 2023 Alise Tifentale

Hot off the press! New peer-reviewed article:

Alise Tifentale, “Sophie Thun Interprets Zenta Dzividzinska’s Negatives: A Case Study of Exploring and Re-evaluation of a Private Photo Archive,” in Mapping Methods and Materials: Photographic Heritage in Cultural and Art-historical Research. Proceedings of the National Library of Latvia 9 (XXIX). (Riga: The National Library of Latvia, 2022): 254-274. Open access.

Download my article as a pdf here.

Download the full volume from the publisher’s website: https://dom.lndb.lv/data/obj/file/33771027.pdf

Abstract of my article “Sophie Thun Interprets Zenta Dzividzinska’s Negatives: A Case Study of Exploring and Re-evaluation of a Private Photo Archive”:

Based on a case study of the private archive and estate of Zenta Dzividzinska (1944-2011), a Latvian artist and photographer active locally and internationally in the 1960s, the article highlights some of the difficulties of preserving forms of cultural heritage that so far have eluded the attention of both the professional art world and official memory institutions. Curator Zane Onckule envisioned a new model of collaboration between the estate of a deceased artist, the practice of a contemporary artist, and the labor of an archivist. The unusual vision resulted in the solo show of Austrian contemporary artist Sophie Thun, “I Don’t Remember a Thing: Entering the Elusive Estate of ZDZ” at the Kim? Contemporary Art Center in Riga, Latvia (July 15 to September 12, 2021). Onckule invited Thun to exhibit her own work as well as to study Dzividzinska’s archive. During the exhibition, Thun discovered Dzividzinska’s negatives and printed new images from them onsite. Thun referred to her practice as interpreting Dzividzinska’s work. Archivist Līga Goldberga opened the boxes where the family had kept Dzividzinska’s archive, described their contents, and helped Thun with the selection of negatives. Departing from the concepts of kinship, collaboration, and affective labor, Onckule, Thun, and Goldberga engaged with Dzividzinska’s archive to create an evolving space for a caring conversation. By physically bringing her archive into the gallery, the exhibition attempted to reverse the history that too often had overlooked and forgotten women photographers’ work. By centering the project around darkroom work, usually the most invisible part of photographer’s labor, the exhibition challenged the cultural status of that labor and encouraged a broader re-evaluation of Dzividzinska’s oeuvre. After the exhibition, part of Dzividzinska’s archive found a permanent home at the Latvian National Library.

Learn more about Zenta Dzividzinska’s life and works here: www.artdays.net

Mapping Methods and Materials: Photographic Heritage in Cultural and Art-historical Research is a peer-reviewed volume that I co-edited with Katrīna Teivāne and which includes articles by Maria Garth, Leila Anne Harris, Elita Ansone, Baiba Tetere, Stella Hermanovska, Aigars Lielbārdis, Kate Švinka, Līga Goldberga, Mārtiņš Mintaurs, Liāna Ivete Beņķe, Šelda Puķīte, Ieva Melgalve and Andra Silapētere. 

The volume grew out of an eponymously titled photography research symposium and summer school that Katrīna and I organized in August 2021 at the National Library of Latvia and Art Academy of Latvia—read more about it here.

 

In 2022 NEWS
← New article and new research direction: "Photography Without Images"Joining the faculty of the City University of New York in fall 2022 →

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