GABRIEL OROZCO

GABRIEL OROZCO, Sleeping Dog (Perro durmiendo), 1990

Afterimage by Daniel Mebarek:

I’ve loved this photograph for years. The tender way in which dog is portrayed sleeping over these rocks. The dog looks so gentle, almost like a floating figure. There’s a harsh beauty in the photograph, a tension between the delicate creature and the hardness of the vertical rocks.

This photograph speaks really well about the figure of the street dog, which is an integral part of the urban landscape in Latin American. The street dog is something that is common to cities across the continent, including in my hometown, La Paz. I think for example of Alex Soth’s beautiful book Dog Days Bogotá (2007), where the street dog is kind of like an omnipresent figure and a symbol of different aspects of the Latin American metropolis: informality, precarity and violence. Like Orozco, Soth portrays this figure with a lot of tenderness and dignity.

Throughout the history of photography, the street dog has also come to stand as a metaphor for the photographer. The idea that the photographer wanders the streets very much like an errant dog. Photographers have very much seen themselves reflected in this figure. I am reminded for instance of the book cover of Josef Koudelka’s Exiles (1988). You have this very famous photograph of a black dog on a snowy field that looks like a demon. I think it’s very telling that he chose this image to speak of his own exile, of his years of rootlessness, drifting across different countries. There is also the strikingly similar photograph Stray Dog (1971) by Daido Moriyama, which depicts a dog with a similar pose and menacing allure. Moriyama also shows himself as this stray dog, as an outsider or a renegade living within a rather strict Japanese society.

There are other well-known photo series that come to mind such as Dogs Chasing My Car in the Desert (1996 – 1998) by John Divola, which I also find really beautiful. Dogs can be threatening but they also symbolize freedom. They are above all instinctive creatures. Why are dogs so urged to chase cars? Why are photographers so urged take a specific photo?

So, there's this interesting history about how photographers have captured street dogs. I also recently discovered Francis Alÿs’ Sleepers (1999 – 2001). The series combines photographs of street dogs and homeless dwellers taken from the ground-level in a rather tender way. There is even something noble about the way these two figures are portrayed here. And we’re back again to the question that was sparked by Orozco’s photograph when I saw it all those years ago: how can artists portray something in a dignified manner? Scholar Dork Zabunyan has argued that we all have a “right to a dignified image”. It’s an issue that ceaselessly fuels my own practice.