"Green is beautiful. Because every time I like something, I'm told
it's green. Grass is green, trees, leaves, nature too... I like to dress in
Green" (Extract from 'Blind')
A few weeks ago,
while browsing in the Whitechapel book shop, I came across one of Sophie
Calle's many fantastic collections of work exhibited in a coffee table book,
entitled 'Blind' that she collaborated in 1986. Although I wasn't fortunate
enough to see 'Blind' in an exhibition, The publication was enough to
completely en-captivate me into trance of sheer beauty and admiration for such
an incredible group of inspirational people as well as further admiration for
one of the most innovative and interesting photographers of my time; Sophie
Calle.
Sophie Calle
exhibited 3 different types of people who contracted their condition; people
visually impaired from birth, people that lost their sight over a gradual
process and people who became blind in a short period of time. The book
consists off series of portrait photographs with a narrated description aside
each one accompanied with a further picture of what they defined as beautiful.
Their responses to
what their take on ‘beauty’ was, consisted of incredibly intricately detailed
and touching responses and in addition to Sophie Calle’s powerful photography,
it was enough to completely blow me away, and further question my own take on
what beauty was.
I am not one to
constantly conjure moralistic values from frequent occurrences in life, but
Sophie Calle’s exhibition of ‘Blind’, enforced me to further support the well
know statement that ‘Beauty’ is stronger ‘within’ rather then things that may
appear to be ‘visually beautiful’. I am by no means undermining the existence
of visual beauty however ‘Blind’ just distinguishes the fact that beauty can
exist in all aspects of life; beyond our conceptions. Beauty is only a
perception that can be seen in so many different perspectives.
"I saw my son in a dream. He was 10 years old. He was in pyjamas.
He looked at me and smiled. He walked towards me. I thought it was very
beautiful." (Extract from 'Blind')