The Leeds School of
Art, Architecture and Design

Research One

Clive Egginton | The City as Bricolage


An investigation into developing a photographic acquisition strategy for archives.

...the direct, uninterpreted and authentic voice of the past: the primary evidence of what people did and what they thought; the look of places and events recorded through images-both still and moving; life’s beginnings and life’s endings; the growth and decline of industries and the ebbs and flows of communities and cultures. The archive record is the foundation on which are built all our histories, with their many and varied voices...[1]

The recently refurbished Sheffield Archives on Shoreham Street house and make available, for a variety of reasons, items and artifacts dating from the 12th century. Amongst them are business records, ecclesiastical records, family and estate records, local government records, local public records and records from individuals. The archive is however aware that their profession is currently undergoing unparalled changes in the wake of technological developments. This not only brings with it new social and cultural dimensions, but also a shift in the accepted role of an archive. Nationally this has been recognised too and in May 2006 the National Archive launched a 4 stage program called Access to Archives or A2A. Its main function seems to have been distributing National Lottery funds for regional archives to digitise their collections. This program is now over and by their own evaluation have gathered and made available 30% of what are in our regional collections. This was clearly an ambitious project and brought into stark contrast a few of the challenges facing contemporary archiving.

Off the back of A2A came “Archives for the 21st Century”, a government white paper from November 2009 seeking to summerise and outline the importance of this sector. It is, as one would expect, riddled with references to new technology and whilst this is a very thorough document exposing expectations from the public about everything from 24 hour access to equiping archivists with the new skillsets they will require, there is precious little about those who are the collectors. It’s as if the expectation is that this will happen automatically without regard to planning or method. Added to this comes the historic value of archives, that is, not recognised as the equal of museums and libraries in terms of budget priorities.[2]

The motivation for this research is derived from a few key areas. The cities archive recognises that their collection policy is effectively a passive document. There is an acceptance that they need to be more aggressive in their collecting, aquiring archives that are representitive of the community they serve. Current policy nationally is only geared to digitising what has already been collected it does not address ways of collecting for the digital age. Finally, clear gaps in the cities collection can be identified. This research aims to test a documentation programme to rectify this.


Program of research.

Aim

This research aims to investigate methods that will ensure the photographic records of the city are as accurate and representitive as possible.

Objectives

To understand the value of our photographic records.

To investigate ways of making new work that addresses the contemporary requirements of The Sheffield Archives and to research the most effective means of responding to these requirements.

To experiment with and assess a range of methodologies relevant to the above aim and in order to ensure that the records of the city are as accurate and representative as possible.

To collect material relating to Sheffield's communities and organisations in order to ensure the city's diversity is represented in the collection.

To explore and evaluate the most effective ways to maximise access to archival material.

The research question 

What is the role of a photographer within the context of contemporary archive practices?

Subsidiary questions that will inform the approach to the investigation of the central question are:

What methodology will ensure the aim of the program is met and what are the ethical implications? 

What new challenges does any archive face in the transition from the analogue to the digital and how does this affect the decisions a photographer might need to take?


Rationale

Sheffield archives currently have 55,000 photographs in boxes waiting to be categorised. This has come about for a number of reasons and one could look at the current collecting and acquisition policy to address this, however that is not within the scope of this research.

The research proposes methods of collecting data not readily available to the city's archive. The archives practice can be broken down into four categories: transfer, donation, revocable deposit and purchase. In essence, there is no policy of commissioning or making new work with the distinct ideal of future preservation.

I want to find out if, in by making new work using a variety of methods, the city can start to think in terms of a “living archive”. I conceive of the “living archive” as constructed on an  understanding that by critically examining decisions in the present about what we wish to preserve for future generations, a broader and richer collection can be made.

Dialogue with the archive also exposes gaps within the collection. We could link these gaps to groups of people who have been marginalised for a variety of reasons: examples might include asylum seekers, the gay community, and older people.

What I wish to study is the viability of different methods of collecting data for archive purposes using photography, testimonies and moving image.


Towards a new Archive 

The research methodology I propose to use is action research combining both ethnographic, case study and action research approaches.[3] Action research means integrating research into the development of the intervention. Flexible by nature this kind of research is responsive to the needs of the intervention and the particular socio-cultural context. Case studies are a qualitive research method characterised by the in-depth study of a particular example. Ethnography is the study of a culture in all its rich detail. The methods or “tool box” will include; photography, moving image,residencies, workshops and interviews.

I envisage three phases for the research.

Collection

Over the duration of the research I will look at three main areas: work, leisure and health.

Archives as institutions, and the collections within them, are generally acknowledged by both academics and society at large as a passive source of information to be exploited for a variety of reasons. What has not been acknowledged is the relationship between the archive and power, or access to social capital. 

I envisage the research highlighting this in terms of what kind of data can be collected. For a photographer access is everything:  does this therefore imply that certain aspects of any archive will be missing because the photographer is unable to access certain communities? While certain social groups may be reticent about such endeavours I wish to ascertain how a diverse range of groups can be supported to produce their own images and testimonies? I will, therefore, explore examples of work produced by "amateurs", reinforcing the idea of photography being the most democratic of recording mediums available to us, or as Coleman would put it, "Photography is too important to leave to photographers."[4]

Editing

What to collect - and who is interested?

Widespread access to recent technology means that an ever increasing number of photographs are produced. The program of research will therefore attempt to outline what tools of decision making could be developed for such an archive. I will examine what defines photographic quality for archival purposes, as opposed to other uses of photography.

Access

What does access mean for an archive? The most obvious contemporary viewing platform is the Internet and the latest thinking is that this is how the majority of us will access information in the future. Our familiar world of photographs and other paper documents is rapidly giving way to the eDocument. This will no doubt give rise to questions regarding authenticity and origin. It will also pose challenges to those in custody of the originals about how contextually the new versions are understood.

This research will also address how people without Internet facilities see the work.

In summary then there have been many studies of city life made by photographers; one thinks of Atget's Paris, Roger Maynes's London and Nayoa Hatakeyamas's Tokyo, for example, but these highlight an individual view rather than a community's.

I will look to revisit aspects of McLuhan's theme of social constructionism as described in his 1951 work "The Mechanical Bride", the core idea of which is that truth is something people construct in the process of living in a world that is constructing them. In a way I am asking what images of real life mean to us and why do we keep returning to them time after time? I want to argue that they reinforce a kind of mass interpersonal relationship, or as touched on in my MA, a form of Stieglitz's theory of Equivalence suggesting a link between the physical and the representational.

It is clear that the practice of photographic documentation and archiving has changed with each technological breakthrough. What has not changed is the ongoing need to understand the world and those around us.

Clive Egginton
07974 398238
info@archive-sheffield.org

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[1] Archives for the 21st Century, ISBN978-0-10-177442-0, 2009, p6

[2] Funding for local authority archive services varies from £56,000 to £2.35m(£0.21to£4.69percapita) per annum (Source: Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, Archive Statistics 2006-07 Actuals).

Of the archive services completing The National Archives’ self-assessment exercise in 2008, 71.5 percent of the top scoring quartile reported over 15 staff to CIPFA in 2007-08. None of the lowest-scoring quartile reported over 15 staff. Seven percent of the top-scoring quartile reported having fewer than five staff.

[3] (Tacchi et al, 2003).

[4] Coleman A.D, Light Readings: A Photography Critic's Writings, 1968-1978, University of New Mexico Press.