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Before the selfie came into being there was Karl
LONG before they were called selfies, Karl Baden snapped a simple black and white photo of himself. Then he repeated it, every day, for the next three decades.
Baden’s “Every Day” project officially turned 30 yesterday and he has no intention of stopping. The stark contemplation on mortality and aging has prompted some to dub the Boston College professor the unwitting “father of the selfie.”
The 64-year-old Cambridge resident grumbles at comparisons to the pouty faced, self-congratulatory portraits that fill Instagram and Facebook. But he recognizes the ubiquity of the “selfie” has helped raise the profile of the project, which has been exhibited in art galleries in Boston, New York and elsewhere over the years.
“If it wasn’t for the selfie craze, I’d probably be slogging along in anonymity as usual,” Baden joked. “Which is sort of what I had expected.”
What makes the project work is that it reflects a number of universal themes, from death to man’s obsession with immortalizing himself, said Howard Yezerski, a Boston gallery owner who has exhibited the project.
“It’s both personal and universal at the same time. He’s recording a life, or at least one aspect of it that we can all relate to because we’re all in same boat. We’re all going to die.”
Robert Mann, a New York gallery owner that exhibited Baden’s work on its 10th anniversary, says he’s impressed with how Baden has stuck to his process. “Watching Karl age (gracefully) in front of the camera has been an honor,” he said.
Baden quietly launched his project on February 23, 1987, the day after Andy Warhol died and nearly two decades before Facebook emerged. He tries to remain faithful to that first image, posing with the same neutral facial expression and using the same 35mm camera, tripod, backdrop and lighting.
“The act itself is like brushing your teeth,” he said. “I’ll just take the picture and get on with the rest of my day. It’s not a holy ritual or anything.”
Baden has taken other pains to maintain the same aesthetic. He has consciously not grown a beard or mustache, and his hair remains simply styled.
“I have to turn all these variables into constants so that I’m not distracting from the aging process,” Baden explained.
Besides mortality, Baden says the project touches on the notions of obsession, incremental change and perfection.
“As much as I try to make every picture the same, I fail every day,” he said. “There’s always something that’s a little different, aside from the aging.”
Approaching 11,000 photos, the changes in Baden’s appearance over time don’t appear dramatic. But in 2001, Baden underwent chemotherapy to treat prostate cancer and became noticeably thinner.
The cancer is in remission and Baden quickly bounced back. The only lasting change from that time, he says, has been his eyebrows; they never quite grew back.
And there’s been just one day over the past 30 years where Baden admits he forgot to take a photo: October 15, 1991. “It was a dumb moment of forgetfulness.”
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