Showing posts with label topor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label topor. Show all posts

January 2, 2011

I am in an other world

This post now resides on my other site 50 Watts:

December 26, 2010

December 19, 2010

December 12, 2010

December 5, 2010

August 31, 2009

Denizens of the Fantastic Planet

This post now resides on my other site 50 Watts:

October 12, 2008

June 28, 2008

Obscene Post One (Roland Topor and more)

Warning: This post contains explicit content.

Images from A Journey Round My Skull were featured on two great blogs recently: Monster Brains (Aeron Alfrey pulls monster images from all over) and naughty French site Au Carrefour etrange (Losfeld likes anonymous 50s pornographic novels). Losfeld also runs French Book Covers, which I plan to reference here often.

I dedicate this not-exactly-typical-for-me, NC-17 rated post to them.


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Hart Crane, postcard from Paris to Samuel Loveman (1929):

"Dinners, soirees, poets, erratic millionaires, painters, translations, lobsters, absinthe, music, promenades, oysters, sherry, aspirin, pictures, sapphic heiresses, editors, books, sailors. And how!"


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Above, front cover, Je T'Aime: A Pillow Book by Roland Topor (in English)
Below, detail


I'm now collecting books by Roland Topor; this was the first one to arrive. Quite a wild object.

Above, Back cover
Below, the book itself, under the jacket



Above, detail, perhaps the new logo for this site. Book fetishism indeed.
Below, the man responsible, Roland Topor



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Above, Three by Victor Brauner:

1. Illustration for a book by Gellu Naum, 1937 (a design for "Adrianopole")
2. Illustration for a book by Ilarie Voronca.
3. Eventail du Poete


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George Grosz, an illustration for a book by "Edgar Firn,"
a pseudonym for the writer Karl Döhmann.


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Russian Book Cover


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Exquisite Corpse from MoMA


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Random Devils

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Ronnie Burke, from Ira Cohen's Celestial Graffiti


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Three illustrations by Krylov Timorev for a book entitled Fables


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Raymond Pettibon: A Reader consists of excerpts from a wide range of sources with Pettibon's images throughout. It's an excellent anthology of often strange texts. For instance:

Catullus, first century B.C.

My love & I are yours to command
Aurelius--
with the following 'modest' reservation:
if ever at any time you've held
a chaste good in your mind,
unmarred by whatever desires,
modestly keep this boy of mine in like state.
I do not refer
to the menace of common contacts,
to those set on their business
coming & going in the streets,
it is you
& your punitive penis
I fear--
a threat to all sorts & conditions of youth.
Wag this maleficent instrument
where, when & as much as you may
on whatever occasions occur
outside your domestic circle,
only withhold one item from its attentions....
I present this modest request. But should
a congenital turpitude
take you & prick you into
besetting Catallus's love with pitfalls of seduction
look for the luckless fate of the common adulterer:
he who
with ankles clamped
and door open
feels the horse-radish
(suitably cut for withdrawal)
splitting him,
or the mullet's fins.


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Genesis P-Orridge, misc. symbol for a project

Excerpt from "A Children's Story," Genesis P-Orridge, 1995

"Every one of us has within us a dark and heinous shadow child. A child who was certain that these could not be their parents. A child who plotted lengthy executions and paramilitary torture, torch-lit under the covers at night. A child who fired wasps out of guns at photographs of foul and naked bodies..."

Text and image from Painful but Fabulous: The Lives & Art of Genesis P-Orridge


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"This book was originally published in 1775 by the artists Nicolas-François and Geneviève Regnault under the title Les Ecarts de la nature ou recueil des principales monstruosités (The Deviations of Nature or a Collection of the Main Monstrosities). For the first time in print, the artists, well aware of the susceptibilities of their readers, exploited the aesthetic beauty of monsters. The prospectus quoted the French poet Boileau: “no monster exists that cannot be made pleasing through art.” Info here. Sorry for the crappy scans, which come from Undercover Surrealism by Dawn Ades.

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Illustrations by Andre Masson for books by:

1. Louis Aragon (though anonymous at the time, I think), Le Con d'Irene (I'm not translating that for you, but Creation Books did publish a translation).
2. Robert Desnos
3. George Limbour


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Finally, an insane William Burroughs title, The Book of Breeething, with illustrations by Robert F. Gale, 1975. Much of it is told in symbols (more accurately, "penis hieroglyphics"). Once, long ago, I think I actually followed the story.


June 1, 2008

Richard Aeschlimann, Le Regard Géologue


I picked up this oddity at a used bookstore a few years ago.

Le Regard Géologue (1973, L'Age d'Homme) includes drawings from 1969 to 1972 by the Swiss artist Richard Aeschlimann. L'Age d'Homme seems like a damn fine publisher (with many books by Aeschlimann), though I haven't yet found a good place to purchase their books without being killed on international shipping.

I know Roland Topor is a fan of Aeschlimann (but I don't know much about either of them). Look at Topor's own artwork to The Tenant and you can see the similarity in their artwork. [The Tenant, a 1964 novel, was recently reprinted by Millipede Press with an intro by short-story master Thomas Ligotti. Millipede seems to have fine taste so I will check out this book and their other publications. At their site I learned that the image that haunted me as a kid is by the artist Don Brautigam.]

Here are some samples from Le Regard Geologue.

I keep meaning to post about the great Polish writer and artist Witkacy:


This one is Gorey-esque but disturbing in its own way:


Many of the images feature naked body parts (usually separated from the body!):



Self-portrait from the book's back cover: