I have to say I'm getting a little perturbed by the argument that goes "If you criticise it, you don't understand it. Go away and do a little research".
Let me make clear: I consider myself as open as I can be to all sorts of art. I am certainly responsive to transgressive art - where would we be without Bacon, Mapplethorpe, Helen Chadwick, the Chapman brothers, and yes, Andreas Serrano, to name but few. I'm racking my brains to think of the photographer who photographed a woman cancer-victim and it was enlarged & publicy posted - was it Serrano? I thought that photograph was tender and telling of the complex subject of death.
I certainly do not belong to the school of thought which says art is only about the "good", unchallenging things of life. Good art has always challenged, in some way, in my opinion.
That doesn't mean that anything and everything transgressive or challenging cannot be criticised.
Sorry, but the picture does not tell me any more about the human condition, or give me any insight into my own predudices or shortcomings. It speaks to me far more about the artist than anything, and is sensationalist rather than revealing of deeper truth. (The two can, of course, go together). Of course it is common for artists to be doing this, and there's nothing wrong with it. But I reserve my right to make my judgement on whether or not he speaks to me with his self-oriented art. (I do not buy that he's working for a wider good, or only in the most tenuous sense - a case of intent being overlaid after the event?)
In the passage quoted above Sparky, I think it's telling that the author wrote:
quote: "Joel-Peter Witkin tore his way out of the womb on Sept, 13, 1939"
So......no-body else came into the world this way?
I also wonder if this picture seems more revealing of the subject of death if you have never seen a dead body. I have, my father's, I was wih him when he died and his body stayed in the house for 24 hours, we all saw him and spent time with him, the youngest (age 3) included.
I don't need to confront this artist's demons. Dead bodies, certainly if it's a quiet death, are not in themselves in the slightest bit shocking.
As a final point - it is also important I feel to distiinguish between 'art' (as in painting) and 'photography'. You cannot in fact compare a Bacon or a Munch to a photograph. It is a different reality.
Cate