Portraits of writers

Portraits have been keeping me up at night. You could say I’m obsessed. The thing I want to say is that taking a portrait is easy, so easy, but to take a great portrait – and I mean great – may be one of the most challenging things to do in photography. What is a great portrait? I’ve no idea; there are no rules; I figure it just is. But I don’t want to belabor all of this. So for fun I thought I’d combine two of my favorite things, Literature, or writers rather, and portraits…

First, Joyce by Abbott. The other day I read (I forget where) the perfect description of Joyce, calling him, the Einstein of Literature. Perfect b/c Joyce, like Einstein was a genius: a brilliant, creative mind. When you read Ulysses, you are shared the thoughts of someone who’s ability to think and use language is well beyond normal. And then when you read Finnegan’s Wake, you experience that same thing but you watch it run away from you and normal comprehension. Then you see this portrait, and you see how fragile that genius must have been. Joyce looks like he knows something we all don’t, and that thing he knows is sad…maddening even.


photo: James Joyce by Bernice Abbott, 1926.

Then two from H.C. Bresson. These speak for themselves. The Matisse (not a writer, I know, still…) portrait I think is absolutely wonderful, but, overall what strikes me as interesting about these Bresson portraits is that he was working with a sensibility that is standard convention in todays celebrity portraiture. That is: the fostering of a concept of the person. Yes, the figures Bresson was working with were famous, but it seems to me that Bresson worked to further the ethos of this public persona through his images. The painter with his birds. Camus the, uh, renegade intellectual looking, well, renegadish. Maybe what I’m seeing is obvious, but it strikes me as something I wish to applaud Bresson for: he understood the power of simplification…stereotypes if you will.


photo: Henri Matisse, Vence, France, 1944 by H.C. Bresson.


photo: Albert Camus by H.C. Bresson, 1947.

And of course AvedonBeckett I suspect was probably one of the hardest people ever to photograph. His hyper-awareness of the situation and all levels of what was happening would probably inhibit him from any sort of action, paralyze him even. You could imagine he was a calculating man, in a good way, in a smart as hell way. Where, on the other hand, you have Pound, who would probably be easier to photograph, to say to least. Though, the fragility of his state of being might break my heart, watching him out on the fringe, precarious.


photo: Samuel Beckett, writer, Paris, April 13, 1979. ©Richard Avedon.


photo: Ezra Pound, Poet, Rutherford, New Jersey, at the home of William Carlos Williams, June 30, 1958. ©Richard Avedon.

And finally, Pynchon. The recluse. This I assume is from a old high school yearbook…?


photo: Thomas Pynchon, source unknown.

Comments
6 Responses to “Portraits of writers”
  1. tRuth says:

    H. C. Bresson has always been one of my favorite photographers.

    Renegadish. Yes, that is perfect.

  2. Terraplane says:

    I haven’t been the same since reading Gravity’s Rainbow, and to think that book was produced by the buck toothed person in that Glen Cove High School photo is almost shocking.

    HCB’s Camu is amazing, as is Avedon’s Beckett. The Pound portrait from 1958 is as fresh as anything done today. Really a great selection.

  3. eloy says:

    this is nice

  4. Emily says:

    So, I was looking for a portrait of Jame Joyce today and the internet sent me to your site. I like this post. Hope you are doing well!

  5. santiago vera says:

    buscando cualquier cosa acerca de JAJ apareció este link…que buenas fotos de Pound -amigo de JAJ-, y todas las otras también…que fuerza espiritual, artística y vital que emana de estos grandes (y pequeños) hombres, good luck

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