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| CONVERSATION: A BOOK OF BOOKS | |
December 30, 2002 |
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Paul Solman talks to photographer Abelardo Morell about his latest book, a collection of his photographs of books entitled A Book of Books.
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For years, he's used large-scale pinhole contraptions of his own devising, camera obscuras, to photograph the seemingly mundane. Morell, who also teaches at the Massachusetts College of Art, has risen to prominence with three published books and a one-man show that toured the country. His work has been purchased by major museums throughout the world. Now, a striking new collection of images -- A Book of Books -- is getting rave reviews for its images of books, many from the Boston Public Library, where we interviewed him recently. We began by asking Abe Morell how the book obsession began.
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| Finding beauty in books | ||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: In the last decade, Morell has shot a vast variety of volumes: from the laughably large, Audubon's Birds of America, to the stunningly small, a hymnal by Rudyard Kipling from a blank book dappled in daylight, to the starry juxtaposition of "two books of astronomy" from a peeping monk (by Raphael) to this autobiographical close-up of Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms.
PAUL SOLMAN: Morell gives thanks to Hemingway. And the dictionary. ABELARDO MORELL: I really wanted to make a book feel very big. And it just knocked me out when I saw it because it felt like all the stories of the world you know are right there.
But the stories that books tell Abe Morell are not just those within the binding. Damaged Book with Dirt tells a different sort of tale, as does Detail of Book Damaged by Water from the Boston Public Library.
PAUL SOLMAN: But to Morell, in the destruction was a kind of beauty. ABELARDO MORELL: The idea that water may still be kind of frozen in the patterns of this book. It's a book almost taken to its very limit. |
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| Finding and saving old books | ||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: Morell also became immersed in the look of letters, from this aquatic alphabet photographed in 1998, to an old book of proverbs for the blind from 1841.
NICHOLSON BAKER: Crackpots like me say that that's, that -- that's
the valuable thing about books, their oldness is part of their beauty.
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| Discovering and sharing surprises | ||||||||||||||||||||
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ABELARDO MORELL: Every other page has a sample, a miniature sample of the thing that they were learning to sew or knit. So in the next page can be a little sock, a pair of pants, it's wonderful. PAUL SOLOMAN: Is that what art is about, finding surprises? ABELARDO MORELL: Totally. I made several pictures of this book and this one where the arm becomes this narrow thin line, it felt kind of grotesque but I thought it spoke to the idea of this book being locked up in there for many years, as if it were a prisoner and maybe had lost an arm. I mean this is a kind of -- I mean at least in my case -- how imagination leads to making photographs. PAUL SOLMAN: Sometimes, the role of Morrell's imagination is more direct, as in his Alice-in-Wonderland series with cutouts of the original John Tenniel illustrations. One night, Morrell dreamed of this image.
PAUL SOLMAN: Or, it's the shadow she casts, as an 18-inch high cutout. |
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| Meaning and power of books | ||||||||||||||||||||
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ABELARDO MORELL: There's all kinds of weird stuff that once you start reading books, you know it's like the apple, you know. Books have this double edge. And I think this shadow sort of is about that. This -- the crooked path of knowledge. PAUL SOLMAN: Nicholson Baker puts it differently. NICHOLSON BAKER: A book from the outside is just a block of nothing. It's just a big heavy thing. The only reason that they have this strange power is that we know that there's a long linear experience in there. There are all those words and it would take a long time to read all those words. He's saying I'm showing you why these things are interesting to look at. PAUL SOLMAN: Like this dictionary that reminded Baker of the one at home when he was a kid.
PAUL SOLMAN: Architecture also inspired this final image, one of Morell's most recent.
ABELARDO MORELL: Not at all. I think that most people will acknowledge subconsciously that this is 9-11. But I, I think it's also two books. And that's the way I like to work. Equal parts, discovery and maybe something that's common that we all share. PAUL SOLMAN: Both discovery... and something we all share: A fitting epitaph for Abe Morrell's new A Book of Books. |
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