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Amc²: A Compilation of History’s Lost Cultures

3 minute read

There is a persistent tendency to impose–or make every effort at least–some semblance of order on this messy world. For millennia we have been classifying things: animals, vegetables and minerals; races, classes and genders; first world, second world and the rest of the lot. In the 1870s, Melvil Dewey created his decimal classifications that librarians have used since to tell us precisely where nearly everything fits in the pantheon of human knowledge.

Perhaps it’s fitting, with the Dewey Decimal System retreating from style amid the expansion of the Internet, that we should have a cultural collection that utterly defies classification. The Archive of Modern Conflict, an independent British publisher, has created Amc², its journal “published on an occasional basis in a limited edition.”

The goal of the first issue of Amc² is to coalesce “different groups of work that illuminate lost corners of our cultural life.” On the first reading (and, admittedly, the second and the third), it’s not immediately apparent what merited inclusion, or for that matter, what warranted exclusion from the collection. In this series of photographs, which comprise less than five percent of the issue, you’ll find prints of an ancient belfry in Northern Ireland, a hydrangea bush photographed in 1842, Canadian girls undergoing physiotherapy in the 1940s, members of the Royal Horse Artillery clowning around in the 1960s, a smoking Pablo Picasso wearing an oddly-shaped beret, candies from the 1930s and a London store front photographed last year.

The issue also contains photographs of early French pornography, hand-tinted Indian prints on silver gelatin from the turn of (last) century, masked wrestlers, a Rock Hudson paper doll collection with nearly two dozen interchangeable outfits and enough nudity to make even this author blush. The stated intention is that, “as the subject areas expand, they intertwine to reveal unexpected stories about the nature of our world.” Perhaps the collection’s greatest beauty is that even after those lost cultural corners have been stabbed with light, you’re still not sure what they reveal about the nature of our world. It will likely be something different for every reader, which is one of the great splendors of art.

The collection ends with an albumen print identified as The Brig by 19th century French photographer Gustav LeGray. Seen from the shore, a tiny, two-masted ship sails out of the bright sunlight into a looming, clouded darkness on the edge of the frame. The full title of the photograph is Brig in the Moonlight, a revelation that immediately causes the viewer to question his own perception, that this scene, with its impossibly bright illumination, took place at night. The editors succeeded mightily in their closing image. If nothing else, they forced us to realize that even the strangest images can contain great beauty and are often wildly different from how they originally appear.

Archive of Modern Conflict is an independent publisher based in London.

Nate Rawlings is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @naterawlings.

The Archive of Modern Conflict is published independently in limited editions. According to the publisher, the first issue Amc² "collects material dating from prehistory to the present day. As the subject areas expand, they intertwine to reveal unexpected stories about the nature of our world. The inaugural issue of Amc2 journal brings together different groups of work that illuminate lost corners of our cultural life. Photography is, as ever, the keystone of the collection". Above: Amc² book jacket and sleeve. ©Archive of Modern Conflict
A spread from Amc²: (left) Hand-tinted photo postcards, Belgium, 1920s. (right) The heaviest British subject, silver gelatin print, UK, 1903.©Archive of Modern Conflict
Silver gelatin print with hand-tinting and overpainting, India, c1930©Archive of Modern Conflict
Silver gelatin print with hand-tinting and overpainting, India, c1900©Archive of Modern Conflict
Images from an archive of the Royal Horse Artillery, silver gelatin print, UK, 1960'sRoyal Horse Artillery—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Image from an archive of the Royal Horse Artillery, silver gelatin print, UK, 1960'sRoyal Horse Artillery—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Image from an archive of the Royal Horse Artillery, silver gelatin print, UK, 1960'sRoyal Horse Artillery—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Image from an archive of the Royal Horse Artillery, silver gelatin print, UK, 1960'sRoyal Horse Artillery—©Archive of Modern Conflict
University of Toronto Physiotherapy Course, silver gelatin print, Canada, 1944Ronny Jaques —Natinoal Film Board of Canada—©Archive of Modern Conflict
University of Toronto Physiotherapy Course, silver gelatin print, Canada, 1944Ronny Jaques —Natinoal Film Board of Canada—©Archive of Modern Conflict
A Bush of Hydrangea in Flower, salt print from a calotype negative, UK, c1842Willim Henry Fox Talbot—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Pablo Picasso, silver gelatin print, France 1955Raymond Fabre—Studio Visages, Perpignan—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Painted and scored photograph on Kodak colour paper, UK, 1970'sGraham Sutherland—©Archive of Modern Conflict
Cloicthech Ruis Cre: Belfry of Roscrea, County of Tipperary, Woodburytype©Archive of Modern Conflict
Cloicthech Ruis Cre: Belfry of Roscrea, County of Tipperary, Woodburytype©Archive of Modern Conflict
The Brig, albumen print, France, 1856Gustav Le Gray—©Archive of Modern Conflict

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