Hervé Guibert: Suzanne and Louise
Hervé Guibert: Suzanne and Louise
paperback
Published:
2 January, 2025
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781738901333 |
| ISBN10 | 1738901335 |
| Number Of Pages | 144 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Magic Hour Press |
| Format | paperback |
Media Reviews
[A] pas de deux of acquiescence and microaggressions. * Artnews *
The steady, serious gaze Guibert trains upon his aunts [brings a] quality of profound attention to neglected lives that is its own form of love [and highlights] the extremes of hidden beauty that he finds there. -- Leslie Camhi * 4columns *
Among the small canon of acclaimed photo novels such as 'Love on the Left Bank by Ed van der Elsken' and 'The Sweet Flypaper of Life' by Roy DeCarava and Langston Hughes, 'Suzanne and Louise' is a singularly strange and compelling object. -- Sean O'Hagan * The Guardian *
[A] lesser-known masterpiece by an author famous for his revelatory fiction and sumptuous photographs. -- Andrew Durbin * Frieze *
This is an extraordinary book, of critical importance both to newcomers to Guibert and to longtime fans. It’s a fascinating, uncanny portrait not just of Guibert’s great-aunts, but also of the miraculous role art can play in transmuting its subjects, through curiosity and attentiveness, into significant, nearly historical-feeling figures. It may be brief, but I feel certain that it will never leave me. -- Maggie Nelson
All of Hervé Guibert’s work, whether image or text, has a strange taboo luminousness—the glow of vistas we’re not supposed to see or name—tableaux at once classically severe and lushly coiling. In Suzanne and Louise, one of Guibert’s most important performances, the queer heat of Suddenly, Last Summer takes on the solemnity of a missal, or a Parisian passion-play remake of Grey Gardens, or Gide on speed. Hervé’s aunts unveil their hair and their feet, their abstemious privacy, their cool-toned beauty of gesture and visage. Christine Pichini, in her exemplary, elegant translation, unearths luminous English equivalents for the no-nonsense refinement of Guibert’s French. -- Wayne Koestenbaum