The General Idea

This blog is about humor in art--especially humor in photography. I'm not sure where it's going. I am not a scholar of humor nor of art, though I have fleeting knowledge of those fields. I would be happy to receive reading recommendations.

But first things first: let's all agree that we know that humor is very subjective--that one woman's "funny" is another man's "bad taste". We know that. So--maybe you'll find none of my pictures funny. For instance, the background picture here makes me laugh. My housemate shrugged. "The woman could just as easily have been a buffalo," she said. So the picture falls short technically--it doesn't show the woman clearly enough. Also, I suppose it is mostly a "dog persons' joke". For me, the humor lies in the symmetrical balancing of the, apparently, laughing dog and the woman who stoops to pick up the dog's crap. It opens up questions like, "What do dogs think of our interest in their poop?"

Another--more pithy--issue is whether something can be both funny and "art". Is "funny" automatically "light" and therefore not "serious" art? There's light verse. My memory fails me now--are there any "great" poems that are funny?

But, in any case, as Maurice Sendak says, "Let the wild rumpus start!"













Monday, May 28, 2012


And, going back to poetry--consider Billy Collins (former Poet Laureate of the US). His poems are often funny. But I know people, sorry Billy, who consider his work "light" and essentially not really "poetry" (whatever that is). Does the humor somehow detract from his status as a "true" artist?

I hear my old mother muttering, "Define your terms."

Maybe humorous photography is only "Art" when it has a satirical, or "deeper" meaning? Of course, I have a knack for reading something into everything, so I could try to defend my funnies as going a bit deeper than slapstick. (Though, thinking about it, slapstick can be pretty profound.)

So--let's look at this one. Immediately amusing--at least to me and a few others--what else does the image deliver? The title says part of it: "Tied Up". The free-ranging connotations here attach to various parts of the image: there is the juxtaposition of those sharp little teeth close to those pitifully unprotected ankles. There is the excessiveness of the leash, wrapped more than once. And there are all sorts of implications about how we are entangled & impeded by the small and dear. The small and dear, here, is imprisoned too, but looking pretty triumphant anyway.

What I'm getting at is: would one hang something like this on a wall? And how? Might it sit in a little frame on the desk of the woman who is tied up? Might it make a cutesy poster? How outrageous would it be to develop it large, in the darkroom, as a platinum/palladium print?

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