The best selfies taken before smartphones
But it's not just that the selfie is old. Selfie culture is old. Self-portraits are one of the oldest forms of painting, and artists have been indulging in Photoshop-like effects for hundreds of years—bringing lazy eyes back to life or "forgetting" to include undesirable features like boils and scars. And while we think of them as recent innovations, we can find common selfie tropes such as the mirror shot, the fake candid, and the b-boy stance scattered throughout the history of self-recorded human images.
Today's selfie phenomenon is louder, crasser, and more in-your-face, but the base intentions are the same: fine art[2], vanity, the urge to leave one's mark on the world, and the desire to document ourselves doing cool stuff[3].
So let's take a look at some classic examples though the years, before the digital camera changed the game.
It's a great choice if you want to get both yourself and a broad view of your surroundings into a shot. And, y'know... show off how awesome your life is. Ol' Georgie had a pretty awesome life, obviously.
Buzz Aldrin (1960s) NASA's space projects are famous for their breathtaking photos. But when you're alone in space, or the only other person who could capture an incredible moment is sleeping, even astronauts have to be their own paparazzi. But what makes Buzz different than the others is that he seemed to prefer selfies, occasionally taking them even when Neil and Michael were available. While the center image in this triptych shows Buzz reflected in Neil's visor, and the right image is clearly from an EVA[14], the left image was taken from inside the capsule, where he was not alone. That's taking the selfie to a whole 'nutha level. Elvis Costello (1978) [Copyright Rhino Records/Radar Records 1978] This one could go many different ways, but let's be clear: This is not technically a selfie. This album cover was staged and shot in a studio, and though it's not far off from Mr. Kubrick's candid selfie in composition, its intent could be very different. The album, after all, is called This Year's Model, and Elvis does look quite a bit like a fashion photographer. But whatever the concept behind the shoot, the result looks exactly like a self-portrait. Add to that the fact that it's the album cover for his own record, and we think it's fair to call it a selfie in effect, if not execution. Perhaps this was the beginning of the ironic selfie? The Selfies of the Future Today, it can feel like the selfie has plateaued. Its ubiquity and stigma of vanity have led to a sense of selfie fatigue. Once the mainstream media gets ahold of a concept, after all, it's obviously dead. But as this list ably demonstrates, the selfie has proven supremely adaptable to the times—it would be foolish to think we've seen the peak of self-portrait innovation. Even now, concepts like Snapchat[15] are revolutionizing the way we interact with pictures of ourselves. Who knows what tomorrow's cameras will let us do with our own image?References
- ^ Word of the Year for 2013 (blog.oxforddictionaries.com)
- ^ fine art (rssfeeds.usatoday.com)
- ^ document ourselves doing cool stuff (twitter.com)
- ^ duck face invasion (knowyourmeme.com)
- ^ Photographer, artist, writer, and balloonist (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ a step further (articles.latimes.com)
- ^ occasional self-portraits (upload.wikimedia.org)
- ^ b-boy (userserve-ak.last.fm)
- ^ Run D.M.C. (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ extremely (31.media.tumblr.com)
- ^ fond (www.retronaut.com)
- ^ selfies (i.imgur.com)
- ^ circular fisheye lens (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ EVA (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ Snapchat (en.wikipedia.org)