Basedow's Photographs
About six months ago the National Museum of
Australia opened an exhibition entitled A Different Time: the expedition photographs of Herbert
Basedow 1903-1928, which was enthusiastically reviewed by Nicolas
Rothwell in The Australian ("An observer and preserver," August 7, 2008). I
was intrigued, especially as Basedow's major monograph, The Australian Aboriginal (Adelaide, F. W.
Preece and Sons, 1925) is one of those books that shows up on every list of
early anthropological studies, and yet is relatively hard to find on the
secondary market unless you are willing to part with a couple hundred dollars.
But there are about 200 copies scattered among world libraries, and so I
solicited a copy via inter-library loan while waiting for the exhibition's monograph to arrive from
Canberra.The National Museum has also
done a bang up job on their website in presenting many of the photographs
from the show and the catalog. Like the Musuem's earlier production for
Papunya
Painting: out of the desert, this online documentation for the
exhibition continues to place the efforts of Australian museums' outreach
programs in the top tier worldwide, for my money. (MAGNT's documentation for
recent NATSIAA awards and the programmatic efforts of the National Gallery are
other outstanding examples that I wish American institutions would take a hint
from.)So now, having read through
David Kaus's series of essays on Basedow's career, examined the photographs, and
browsed through The Australian Aboriginal's heft (400+ pages and 5kg),
I've come to the unenviable conclusion (if you can call it that) that Basedow is
a puzzle. In his travels, his training, and his interests, Basedow was
literally "all over the map" and coming to grips with the man and his
motivations has proven to be a
challenge.In A Different Time
Kaus provides ample biographical material and investigates Basedow's
contributions to a variety of scientific and commercial endeavors, most
particularly the exploration of the Australian interior for mineral wealth. In
the course of these activities he had sustained contact with the Aboriginal
people there, and was moved to pursuits humanitarian as well as scientific.
Following on this extended introduction to the Basedow's career and work, Kaus
provides a brief introduction to each of the several expeditions that Basedow
undertook between 1903 and 1928 and then allows the photographs to speak for
themselves. They document not just the lives of the native inhabitants, but
also, along the way, the introduction of the motor car to the central deserts,
bush architecture, and the topography of a largely unsullied
Outback.Basedow is widely known as an
early Chief Protector of Aborigines in the Northern Territory, yet it turns out
that he held this post for a mere four months. Much of A Different Time
is devoted to photographs that Basedow took during a series of medical relief
expeditions, and he was a registered medical practitioner--although his medical
training seems to have been comprised largely of craniometric measurements
conducted on the skulls of Tasmanian Aborigines held in German institutions.
(Basedow conducted this work after completing a Ph.D. in Geology. Kaus notes
that Basedow's resume listed training at five European centers in three and a
half years). This European education in turn was undertaken after Basedow threw
over a short-lived career in botany and zoology in South Australia for lack of
advancement. Polymath or dilettante? It seems hard to
tell.What does seem clear is that
Basedow was a man of enormous ambition, and equally enormous curiosity, and that
the melding of the two resulted in a series of accomplishments that belied his
short career. Basedow was only 51 years old when he died in 1933 during his
second stint as a Member of Parliament in South Australia. Whatever his
motivations, he was a man of enormous
accomplishments.The Australian
Aboriginal begins with a physiological overview of its subjects that is
extraordinary even by Victorian standards. Beginning with a general chapter on
"Racial Characteristics," he goes on to examine the physical characteristics in
astonishing detail, devoting an entire chapter to "The Mouth" and another to
"The Hair." The rest of the volume is organized along social themes: camp
life, warfare, religion, art, language. Kaus notes in A Different Time
that Basedow's research was often conducted solo, and that he was often limited
to mere observation, lacking as his did knowledge of the local language or
intimates within the society who could assist him. This in itself is not
surprising, again given the scope of Basedow's investigations, which took him
from the Lake Eyre Region to the Tiwi Islands and the shores of Port
Hedland.This combination of breadth of
endeavor and limited resources tends to make Basedow's observations a grab bag,
a miscellany without direction. His final chapter, for instance, on Aboriginal
language, bounces all over the continent, covers sign language and counting as
well as elementary verb formations. The chapter ends with a pair of unfortunate
paragraphs' speculation of the comparison of Aboriginal vocalization with those
of apes. There is no conclusion, no summation, just a stream of observations
that peters out like a river in the desert
sands.In the end, it is hard to read
The Australian Aboriginal or to browse through the photographs presented
by the National Museum without thinking of other great exploratory scientific
expeditions that a man of Basedow's ambition must have had ever present in his
mind: those of Spencer and Gillen. As
I browsed through first The Photographs of Baldwin Spencer (Miegunyah
Press, 2005) and then a second time through A Different Time I was struck
first of all by the difference in quality: time has not been as kind to
Basedow's materials, and the National Museum deserves credit for rescuing these
images and presenting them to us before further deterioration in the images
meant they would be lost forever. But secondly, I was struck by the difference
in the people who appear in them.I
know that much of what Spencer and Gillen photographed was staged, and that the
Arrernte, in particular, were skilled negotiators who traded value for their
performances. Basedow's photographs look much more like the work of a casual
interloper, and thus, even though some of them are quite clearly staged, posed,
and as artificial as many of Spencer's works, they seem somehow more candid.
Moreover, they record a people who look poorer, in every sense, than those that
Spencer caught on film. There is less spark in the faces of Basedow's subjects,
a weariness that is absent (edited out, perhaps) of the earlier photographs.
But the comparison suggests that the two decades that separated Spencer and
Basedow in their Central Australian odysseys had not been kind to the Indigenous
inhabitants, and the documenting of that change may be one of the great
contributions of A Different Time.
Posted: Sun - January 4, 2009 at 12:11 PM
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Readings, reviews, and reflections by an American observer of Australian Indigenous art, culture, politics, anthropology, music, and literature.
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Published On: Jan 28, 2009 09:15 PM
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