Images of Conviction shows, through 11 cases, how the photographic
image is constructed to become evidence.
From the scientific methods developed by Alphonse Bertillon, a
criminologist who worked for the Préfecture de Police de Paris in the
late 19th century, to the first aerial images of the front taken by the
army during World War I, to the shots allowing the victims of Stalin's
Great Purge to be identified--for over 150 years photography has served
as proof, testifying to crime and thus seeming to deliver truths.
In the 11 cases presented here, each one situated within its historical
and political context, the question of the status of images is acutely
posed. Whether it be the famous shots of the Shroud of Turin, the images
of the Nuremberg trial, the skull of Josef Mengele or photos taken with
cell phones recording the damage of drone strikes in Afghanistan and
Israel, forensic images are now part of any police or political
investigation.