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Affinities

On Art and Fascination

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A meditation on the power and pleasures of the image, from paintings to photographs to migraine auras, by one of Britain's finest literary minds.
In Affinities, Brian Dillon, who Joyce Carol Oates has said writes “fascinating prose . . . on virtually any subject,” explores images and artists he is drawn to and analyzes the attraction. What does it mean to claim affinity with a picture? What do feelings of affinity imply about the experience of art and of the world? Affinities is a critical and personal study of a sensation that is not exactly taste, desire, or solidarity, but has aspects of all three. Approaching this subject via discrete examples, Dillon examines works by artists such as Dora Maar and Andy Warhol, Rinko Kawauchi and Susan Hiller, as well as scientific or vernacular images of sea creatures and migraine auras. Written as a series of linked essays, Affinities completes a trilogy, with Essayism and Suppose a Sentence, about the intimate and abstract pleasures of reading and looking.
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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2023
      Essays on images and the slippery feelings they evoke. In this follow-up to Essayism and Suppose a Sentence, Dillon delivers a series of short, belletristic pieces largely concerned with photography, but he has no broad thesis on the discipline � la Susan Sontag; nor is this exactly criticism of individual photographers and filmmakers, � la Geoff Dyer. Rather, as the book's title suggests, Dillon is looking to capture moods and resonances that artists collectively generate, "a type of criticism without criticism." He appreciates Dada collagist Hannah H�ch for how images in one of her books "collide and rhyme across double-page spreads." He seeks to expand the understanding of Diane Arbus as more than a chronicler of "the city's freaks" and instead as a more nuanced artist exploring New York's larger atmosphere. William Eggleston, writes Dillon, was a pioneer not just in terms of color art photography, but also in his ability to collapse social strata in his work. The TV adaptation of Brideshead Revisited captures "blazing innocence and exhausted experience," while the cut-up images of John Stezaker suggest "that our fascination with [photographs] is at once visual and tactile, almost grisly." The essays on the individual artists are too short and subjective to serve as primers on their work, and the multiple pieces on affinity don't cohere enough into a definition. However, the book is more than the sum of its parts, and Dillon conjures an uncanny mood, as the individual observations combine to create a sense of how eerie and disorienting images can be. That feeling is underscored by melancholy personal essays about his migraine auras, his mother's death, and a troubled aunt who obsessively photographed her property for fear of its violation. In such moments, he reveals photography as not just an art form, but also a failed attempt to clarify reality and resolve our anxieties. An engrossing, subjective, intentionally meandering trek through the meaning of images.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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