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May 18, 2008

Life Before Death

From lensculture.com:

Schels_3 Few experiences are likely to affect us as profoundly as an encounter with death. Yet most deaths occur almost covertly, at one remove from our everyday lives. Death and dying are arguably our last taboos – the topics our society finds most difficult. We certainly fear them more than our ancestors did. Opportunities to learn more about them are rare indeed.

This exhibition features people whose lives are coming to an end. It explores the experiences, hopes and fears of the terminally ill. All of them agreed to be photographed shortly before and immediately after death. The majority of the subjects portrayed spent their last days in hospices. All those who come to such places realise that their lives are drawing to a close. They know there is not much time left to settle their personal affairs. Yet hardly anyone here is devoid of hope: they hope for a few more days; they hope that a dignified death awaits them or that death will not be the end of everything. The photographer Walter Schels and the journalist Beate Lakotta spent over a year preparing this exhibition in hospices in northern Germany.

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 07:11 AM | Permalink

Comments

Nice blog!

For a nice treat I'd also recommend to explore the entire site!

More on the matter of Life and Death, Elisabeth Kubler-Ross On Death and Dying.

Thank you for a nice posting.

Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | May 18, 2008 7:41:26 AM

I don't understand why anyone outside a person's family would be interested in these photographs. To make an art exhibition out of such a private experience as dying seems a little - exploitative? And what is it with Germanic death cults anyway? Creepy and sick.

Posted by: Jared | May 19, 2008 10:41:33 AM

Yes, an amazing exhibit. I saw it in Lisbon last year, where the photos were presented at one of the branches of that city's Water Museum. Startling, and yet somehow calming, to see those images in a space where water ran in a large and beautiful reservoir. The exhibit is part of a video essay I made about the eerie and remarkable water museum and its four branches, posted here:
http://ninthletter.blogspot.com/2007/04/bring-me-head-of-diogo-alves.html

Posted by: Philip Graham | May 19, 2008 9:44:22 PM

Jared, sorry to break this to you, but some day all our own mugshots will be posted up there in that great PM Facebook in the sky! So don't be shy, mabe some cute blonde nematode will see your pic and desire to burrow intimately into your orifices.
As it happens, my wife is doing her PhD thesis on the subject of dying; more specifically on the readiness of the elderly and the sick to sign advance directives that would save them from over-treatment, excessive recussitation and the like, so as to allow them to go in some dignity, as in those hospices.

Posted by: aguy109 | May 20, 2008 9:45:03 AM

A few years ago I went to a concert of ancient Chinese music in Lijiang, China. The musicians were all in their seventies and eighties. It was a great night of music-making. Above the stage were dozens of photographs of those musicians who had died. All showed them with great respect and dignity as they were late in life. What is the point of displaying photos of people after death?

Posted by: Jared | May 20, 2008 10:22:53 AM

Jared, I can only speak for myself, of course, but I think the real power of those photos lies in the difference between the picture of the person when still alive and the photo of that same person after death. It's the contrast, which exists as a sort of invisible photo itself, that moves me.

Posted by: Philip Graham | May 20, 2008 10:54:10 AM

Jared,

Though I agreed wholeheartedly with your recent post on another thread, I have to diverge with you here. I think these portraits have a poignancy that's hard to pin down and it must be remembered they were all captured with informed consent.

It reminds me so much of the day in late 1995 when I spent some time at the beach in the afternoon with my maternal grandfather, yet by 9pm was staring at his de-animated snore, captured perfectedly mid-inhalation on the bed before me.

Such contradiction. The article points out, quite rightly, that we are today as unacquainted with death as any culture known to have existed. Given that it is such an important part of life, I welcome this exploration of the slightly taboo as a gentle push of the envelope back to reality. Nice stuff.

Posted by: MattInOz | May 21, 2008 2:15:40 AM

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