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The Independent
Magazine 28/11 1998
Old School
ties
By Robin
Muir
For a year
Swedish photographer Ulf Lundin spied on a childhood friend and his family.
The result is a strangely affecting portrait, both of the subjects and
of Lundin's fascination with them.
Somewhere
towards the west of Sweden, near Gothenburg, a man whose identity we do
not know, has been spied on for nearly a year. He has been watched from
the roofs of his neighbours´ houses and from behind the bushes in
his own suburban garden; shots have been snatched of him through windows
and half-open doors; he has been followed on car journeys and shorter
trips by foot. He and his family have been scrutinised in depth.
But the recorder of these domestic vignettes need not conceal himself
too much, for like a paparazzo, many of the blurred, grainy colour shots
are taken from a considerable distance using long lenses. The attention
is something almost voyeuristic in its clarity: a shot taken at breakfast
time reveals that in Sweden Sugar Puffs are Kalas Puffar. With every click
of the shutter we discern a little more about this man; he is in his thirties
perhaps, sometimes bearded, he is married with two children, both boys,
and he lives in a terraced house. He smokes, drinks canned lager, appears
to hold down a steady job and he may also have a holiday home from the
balcony of which he likes to casting his fishing rod. He has weakness
for tan coats, possibly in sheepskin, with a fur collar.
There must be a point to espionage on such a scale because, as more than
one commentator has put it, with no disrespect intended, it is in short
a completely uneventful life. Except, of course, for the fact it has been
documented in over 100 rolls of 35mm film and is about to be displayed
on the walls of a London gallery.
The exhibition is the result of an extraordinary contract between Stockholm-based
photographer Ulf Lundin and an old school friend. In exchange for anonymity,
and on condition that he was not to be seen by the man and his family,
Lundin was given license, in effect, to spy on them for one year. "In
other words," he says, "they know that I'm there but they don't
know when."
The exercise tells us much more about the photographer than his subjects.
"I can create several different stories about them from the pictures
I have. I don't think you know the family even if you look at all of them.
A big part of their lives takes place somewhere else. You can't see what
they feel or think in the pictures. You can only make guesses." And
his friend, who agreed to answer a few questions for continued anonymity,
agrees: "Fifty percent of his view of my family is his own interpretation."
As the show's curator Kate Bush perceptively writes, "Lundin hints
at one of the strange truths of the medium: that the photographer, although
supposedly observing others in the world, is often more driven by the
need to find his or her own image refracted back through the prism of
the lens."
The pair met when Lundin was 11 or 12 and his friend a year or two older.
"He was by far the bolder," says Lundin, "It was always
him that took the first step and me that followed. He had sex before I
did and when I was thinking about buying a moped he had already sold his."
The life choices made by Lundin's friend reflect those that, under different
circumstances, Lundin could perhaps made himself: "He still lives
in the same town where we grew up and now he has a wife, two sons, a home
and a steady job. The security of his life appals and attracts me at the
same time", he says, adding, "we could live each other's lives.
He could be me and I could be him." For a time before this project,
Lundin wound up in poverty and his school friend appeared to be a man
with everything. "I had no money and no girlfriend, I didn't regret
the things I'd done but I started to ask myself the questions that most
people ask themselves: how did things get this way? What would have happened
if I had done this instead of that?"
The project became something of a game-for Lundin maybe a link to his
childhood. For his subject perhaps because, he says, "it was impossible
to forget it completely. Sometimes we did, and then we would see him.
I didn't say anything to him but I used to see his car and I would get
into mine and drive and drive trying to shake him off. We saw him about
10 times. Once on holiday I went out in the garden for a pee and he was
doing the same; I saw him in a shop and he didn't see me but I know I
saw him."
Such a systematic observation is commonly a function of a criminal investigation
or undertaken for espionage purposes, bur Lundin's survey is an oddly
affecting document borne out of wistfulness perhaps and admiration, and
the pursuit of a better understanding of life and how it might be lived
if things were different.
"It gave me a opportunity to play a game as a grown-up," says
Lundin. "But even if I had their permission it made me feel I was
doing something forbidden. Once when they had a party and all the neighbours
took part, some children came up and asked what I was doing. I told them
that I was spying on the family and taking pictures of them. They understood
immediately and asked if I needed help. Then one of the girls told me
that I had been spoken of at he party and one man had said that I was
a bit weird." He adds that "she didn't think I seemed weird
at all".
Several times he nearly stopped the project but was never tempted to make
himself deliberately known-even when one of the children came off his
bike, an incident to which he was the only witness. "I was aware
that I could come to a situation that I didn't want to come to. That never
happened. I didn't take pictures, for instance, through their bedroom
window partly because I wasn't interested in it," and partly, he
adds, "because it was too high... I saw the child falling of the
bicycle and my first thought was to photograph."
There were many reasons for calling it a day: "When you have been
standing in the snow outside their house for two hours and someone comes
out and your heart starts to beat, and they get the mail from the mailbox,
well, it's difficult to be positive."
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