Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • [Trevor Paglen: Limit Telephotography]

  • There's a hotel here that's super awesome

  • that has been sale for forever, but...

  • It's like a real old-style, like, "hotel" hotel.

  • --[MAN] Is it a haunted one?

  • [PAGLEN] Is it haunted? It might be, huh?

  • --[MAN] That might be why...

  • [PAGLEN] I have fantasized about trying to buy some land here

  • and build a big ol' studio.

  • But I think in real life, it would suck pretty bad.

  • [LAUGHS]

  • To the west is a classified air base that's sometimes called the Tonopah Test Range.

  • It's historically been a base for classified, but operational, aircraft.

  • In other words, airplanes that exist, that are out there in the world, flying missions.

  • They're not test platforms--they're not experimental--

  • but are still secret.

  • In the 1980s, when the stealth--the F-117--was still secret,

  • they would fly out of here, and fly only at night.

  • To go and photograph an air base is not only to photograph something,

  • but it is to insist on one's right to photograph.

  • You're kind of flexing that right, in a way.

  • And I think that that's really important,

  • because if you don't, kind of, flex rights, they go away.

  • There's two optical systems here.

  • First of all is the telescope itself,

  • and then there's another series of lenses that I have between the telescope and the camera,

  • which is to magnify the image circle that's coming out of the telescope--

  • to open it up, give me a little bit more magnification.

  • So I'm using a combination of mirrors and lenses

  • to create a pretty long effective focal length.

  • In this case, it's about 3,500 millimeters,

  • but it's very slow.

  • Yeah, this isn't going to happen in this wind. [LAUGHS]

  • When you're shooting at these distances, any slight vibration becomes really unmanageable.

  • You're seeing convection waves and atmospheric turbulence and dust,

  • so everything just feels very mushy and impossible to deal with at the moment. [LAUGHS]

  • --[MAN] What's the right kind of "mush" out here?

  • [PAGLEN] For me, the right kind of mush is a crisper kind of mush. [LAUGHS]

  • One body of work that I've done for many years

  • is photographing places at what are very often extreme distances,

  • from 30, 40, 50 miles away.

  • And at some point, what I realized

  • is that you can use more and more powerful equipment to see further and further,

  • but as you do that, there's an inverse relationship between the distance that you're looking

  • and the amount of clarity--or whatever you want to call it--that you get.

  • And, to me, that became a very interesting relationship to explore:

  • Photographing something that is at an extreme distance

  • and, at the same time, photographing the limitations of one's own vision.

  • There's all kinds of, you know, secret air bases and electronic warfare ranges,

  • and things like that, that take place in central Nevada, deep in the desert.

  • But, nobody lives out there.

  • So, in order to bring people to and from work,

  • the Air Force operates a charter airline service--

  • a fleet of white airplanes with a red stripe down the middle of them,

  • that go to and from Las Vegas many, many times a day.

  • A little video that I made...

  • it's a little bit of a tribute to the Lumiere brothers' famous film

  • about the people, kind of, coming out of the factory.

  • And I just thought, "What are the people coming out of the factory now?"

  • Maybe it's the person who's coming out of the unmarked airplane

  • on their way home from working at a secret military base all day.

  • So when a reconnaissance satellite flies over the world,

  • there are certain places in the world where it has to download all the pictures

  • and all the information that it collected, and this is one of those sites.

  • It's within a restricted military range called the White Sands Range in New Mexico.

  • In a lot of the titles, I'll try to be very, very precise,

  • almost like clinical kind of titles,

  • about what we're looking at, and where we are.

  • But, I'm kind of trying to insist on, like,

  • the veracity of a particular image is belied by the image itself.

  • Usually, it's impossible to tell what it is that you're looking at,

  • or when you can even tell that you're looking at anything in the first place.

  • It's not clear to me that images really mean anything other than the meanings that we attribute to them.

  • That kind of contradiction is something that I've been interested in

  • for a very, very long time.

[Trevor Paglen: Limit Telephotography]

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it