No. 26: Portrait Tales
No. 26: Portrait Tales
translated from the French and with a preface by John Taylor
Published: 1 June 2023
‘As far back as Plotinus, who warned against that ugly custom of leaving an image of one’s appearance behind us, we have ceaselessly given ourselves over to the urge to parry death with the image.’ - Jean Frémon
Fables, memories, things he’s read, things he’s seen, transposed or made up, the stories gathered in this slim volume have the portrait, portraitists and the portraitees as common themes. Frémon takes the reader around the world, hopping through art history, as facts and personal memories are retold with imaginative flair for the telling detail: from an impossible portrait of Jesus in 50 AD, which somehow brings J.L. Godard into the picture, to the 14th c. Ottoman Empire, to China’s Qing Dynasty, the Italian Renaissance, French Rococo, and Louise Bourgeois’s mirrors, these historiettes expound the paradoxes, the necessity, and the dangers of seeking truthfulness in art. With gentle but unmistakable irony, they highlight the intricate connexion between art and power.
Preview the first chapter
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‘Jean Frémon is a wholly singular artist, a writer who lives in the radiant zone where poetry, philosophy and storytelling meet.’ – Paul Auster
Jean Frémon’s imaginary diary of Louise Bourgeois Now, Now, Louison (trans. Cole Swensen, 2019) was published to critical acclaim, and translated into several languages. Nativity (2020), with ink drawings by Bourgeois, represents a different facet in Frémon’s ample body of work, multiplied here in Portrait Tales.
Paperback with French reverse flaps and lilac endpapers
200 x 120mm, 120 pages
ISBN: 978-1-7397783-3-0
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