Into Oblivion: Documenting the Memory Loss from Alzheimer’s

3 minute read

On her first visit to the French hospital in 2007, photographer Maja Daniels noticed two elderly residents trying to get her attention through the port-hole-shaped windows of a hallway door. The door, she later discovered, was the entrance to a locked Alzheimer’s ward and the patients who lived there were to become the subjects of a three-year documentary-photography project that recently helped earn Daniels a spot in the 2012 Joop Swart Masterclass — a mentorship program organized by World Press Photo.

The final collection of photographs of the ward and its residents, titled Into Oblivion, is an effort to convey the daily life and struggles of the French Alzheimer’s patients, while also bringing up issues surrounding geriatric care. “I want to motivate people to think about current care policies and the effects it can have on somebody’s life,” Daniels said.

Because Alzheimer’s disease causes memory loss and confusion, Daniels could not get consent directly from the patients she photographed. Instead, she spent nearly two years clearing authorizations with the hospital and the families and legal guardians of the residents. Daniels also had to consider the ethics of documenting subjects who were not able to fully understand what she was doing. “I felt very uncomfortable at times,” she said. “I justified my presence by spending most of the time in the ward with the residents, just like any other volunteer.”

Daniels spent many hours just sitting with residents while she tried to find a dignified way to present them and their situation. The end result of these efforts is a collection of simply composed photographs that are both beautiful and heartbreaking.

Chipped and worn from years of escape attempts, the door through which Daniels originally encountered the ward is a central theme in her photographs. Residents are pictured peeking through its glass, rapping on its windowpanes or jiggling its white plastic handle.

“Sometimes a resident can remain by the door for hours trying to open it,” Daniels explained. “It becomes the center of attention by the residents who wonder why it is closed and why they are unable to open it.”

After completing the series, Daniels shared her pictures with the French ward’s staff and residents’ families. She noted that staff members were surprised by the photographs of the door. “They had never contemplated its symbolic value and had just seen it as a necessity,” said Daniels. “The images led to important discussions around notions such as care and selfhood.”

Maja Daniels is a London-based photographer. She was recently chosen to participate in the 2012 Joop Swart Masterclass in Amsterdam. See more of her work here.

A resident stands in front of the ward’s locked exit door. Passages are blocked and doors are locked to prevent residents from wandering off. Photographer Maja Daniels spent three years, beginning in 2008, documenting the ward and its residentsMAJA DANIELS
A resident’s room in the Alzheimer's ward. Many people suffering from Alzheimer’s disease live in institutions today. The number of individuals above the age of 60 is expected to double over the next 25 years. While more and more people are in need of care, fewer professionals choose to enter the geriatric sector MAJA DANIELS
A resident in the Alzheimer’s ward expressing confusion and anxiety. A person can live with Alzheimer’s disease for about 10 years while a constant degradation of memory and an increasing loss of contact to the outside world can be observed MAJA DANIELS
A resident stands in front of the locked ward door MAJA DANIELS
Walls in a resident's room of the Alzheimer's ward MAJA DANIELS
A resident stops in front of a wall in the Alzheimer’s ward. A common symptom for Alzheimer’s disease is sudden immobilization or fixationMAJA DANIELS
A resident lies in bed in the Alzheimer’s ward. Most residents in the ward have reached a state in which they have lost most of their communication skills and few even recognize family members MAJA DANIELS
A wandering resident reaches the ward’s locked exit door MAJA DANIELS
Jesus in a staircase window of the Alzheimer’s ward MAJA DANIELS
A resident in the common room of the Alzheimer’s ward MAJA DANIELS
Two residents stand in front of the ward’s locked exit doorMAJA DANIELS
A resident of the Alzheimer’s ward falls asleep during breakfast MAJA DANIELS
A resident stands in front of the ward’s locked exit door MAJA DANIELS
Soup and apple juice in the Alzheimer's ward MAJA DANIELS
A resident’s room in the Alzheimer’s ward MAJA DANIELS
A resident sits in the ward's common room. She is talking aloud to someone the photographer cannot see. The age-related disease is a mystery as very little is known about its causes. There is no cure for Alzheimer’s disease although medication has been proved to slow down the developing process of the symptoms MAJA DANIELS
Evidence of a difficult night at 7 a.m. in a room in the Alzheimer’s ward. Alzheimer’s disease can cause behaviour difficulties such as aggressiveness, eating disorders, increased anxiety or depressive tendencies MAJA DANIELS
A resident stands in front of the ward’s locked exit doorMAJA DANIELS

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