Ghost Image is made up of sixty-three short essays—meditations,
memories, fantasies, and stories bordering on prose poems—and not a
single image. Hervé Guibert’s brief, literary rumination on
photography was written in response to Roland Barthes’s Camera
Lucida, but its deeply personal contents go far beyond that canonical
text. Some essays talk of Guibert’s parents and friends, some
describe old family photographs and films, and spinning through them
all are reflections on remembrance, narcissism, seduction, deception,
death, and the phantom images that have been missed. Both a memoir and
an exploration of the artistic process, Ghost Image not only reveals
Guibert’s particular experience as a gay artist captivated by the
transience and physicality of his media and his life, but also his
thoughts on the more technical aspects of his vocation. In one essay,
Guibert searches through a cardboard box of family portraits for
clues—answers, or even questions—about the lives of his parents
and more distant relatives. Rifling through vacation snapshots and the
autographed images of long-forgotten film stars, Guibert muses, “I
don’t even recognize the faces, except occasionally that of an aunt
or great-aunt, or the thin, fair face of my mother as a young girl.”
In other essays, he explains how he composes his photographs, and
how—in writing—he seeks to escape and correct the inherent limits
of his technique, to preserve those images lost to his technical
failings as a photographer. With strains of Jean Genet and recurring
themes that speak to the work of contemporary artists across a range
of media, Guibert’s Ghost Image is a beautifully written,
melancholic ode to existence and art forms both fleeting and
powerful—a unique memoir at the nexus of family, memory, desire, and
photography.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226132488
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter