| Photographing Dying: Walter Schels and Beata Lakotta |
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| 09 Apr 2008 | |
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“Don’t they get it? I’m going to die! That’s all I think about, every second when I’m on my own”.
In Life Before Death , Walter Schels photographed hospice residents just before and after their death. The pictures are accompanied by interviews with the subjects by Beata Lakotta, science editor of Der Spiegel. The exhibit opened at the Wellcome Trust today.
There are parallels between the response to this exhibit and to the Body Worlds and Bodies exhibits of plastinated cadavers, although the controversies over consent are clearly absent here. The strong draw of both Life Before Death and the body exhibitions nonetheless demonstrate a fascination with what makes a body live, the limits of mechanistic explanations of what makes a person, and the question of whether and for whom it is appropriate to look upon, disassemble, or photograph the body of a person who has died. That there is a controversy reminds us of the unique relationship between each body and a person.
Schells and Lakotta will be speaking on May 10
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