Visual Criticism in Digital Representation
After the discussion, it became clear that we were not trying to disguise the “original image”, but rather to use visual language to tell the story that “absence itself” is part of history.As D'Ignazio and Klein (2020) emphasized that feminist data practices must acknowledge the silences and absences in datasets and find creative ways to make them visible without reinforcing cognitive violence.
Rather than being viewed as “reductions” of the past, digital historical materials should be understood as “procedural artifacts”-i.e., data that are constantly being encoded, nested, and reproduced. procedural artifacts"-that is, historical products that are constantly encoded, nested, and reconfigured. “Authenticity” in the digital age no longer means restoring the original, but revealing the materiality and power dimensions of the archive (Fickers, 2021). We are not “filling in the picture” but “exposing the social significance of the absence of the image itself”. In other words, by choosing to use “mimetic” images, we are not in fact “faking”, but rather recognizing the absence of the archive and responding to it through visual language.