108 Portraits
by Gus Van Sant.
First published in 1992.
Enormous, elaborately bound and somewhat heavy, on first inspection this book could be mistaken for a family's treasured photo album.
"In fact that is exactly what it is. It represents a collection of images of Gus Van Sant's extended family - the actors and actresses whom he has worked together with over the years."
Just a little over four thousand copies of this book were printed, one hundred and twenty of which were individually numbered and signed by the author. Either version of this book has become something of a rare find for collectors and is worth a not inconsiderable amount of money.
The faces in this book were originally Polaroids used to cast the movies I have made. Beginning with my film "Mala Noche," I took the pictures of the lead actors, so that when planning details of the shoot I could stare at the pictures and imagine the characters coming to life, and how they might visually relate to one another. As my films grew larger and when I started to get more money to make them, I used the Polaroids of the faces to do the initial casting. I think that the bulk of these pictures are of people that I had a meeting with about playing a part in either "Drugstore Cowboy" or "My Own Private Idaho." These were taken in casting sessions.
Indeed, there are familiar faces aplenty in this book. All of the cast members of My Own Private Idaho are present for example, including A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon director Bill Richert, Flea, Keanu Reeves and Michael Parker, the only individual to feature in the collection twice. Other subjects to be found here who have worked with River include Ione Skye and Bradley Gregg.
Each face tells a story, each pair of eyes becomes a matching set of windows into a different and completely unique soul. Some of Van Sant's subjects smile, some stand proudly, some are humble whilst others leave one guessing, their thoughts and feelings at the time their picture was taken remain well hidden. Turning the pages of the book, moving from face to face, one can't but help stop and spend some considerable time at Portrait 58 though. Portrait 58 was taken in the spring of 1990 near Gainesville, Florida, at the home of a young movie star. Long hair, soon to be shaved for a Vietnam movie, succeeds in partially covering the face of the subject but is unable to cover the expression that this face wears. For this is an expression that is simply too strong, too powerful to remain hidden. It is a look of cynicism, a look of distrust, an expression of quietly restrained hatred that is aimed squarely at the camera lens and it hits its target, dead center.
Hardly surprisingly, River's friends would often ask if they could take a photograph of him whenever he paid them a visit. River, as always, would quietly put the feelings and needs of others before his own, and agree. To his closest friends though he would sometimes confess that he had much empathy for the idea that the camera was somehow taking away, or rather, stealing, part of his very soul.
River must have known, he must have been aware of just what a finite resource it was that he was sharing and giving away so often. Only with hindsight, only when it was too late, did the rest of the world realize this too.
"As I look closely at the pictures, I am reminded about the power a single person carries around with them. Everyone is different, and yet they all look somehow the same. They all embody huge potentials for success or failure, for nervousness or calm, for sainthood or devilty, and have individually had their proportionate share of both. They remind me of the moment the picture was taken, and how that moment is linked to their past, their present and their future. The day that I happened to catch them was just one little piece of time that is connected to all the other pieces of time that make up their lives. And sometimes I think I can see this in the picture itself. Somehow the camera is able to capture it. I don't know how, but it does. I swear to God. "
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这本书的装帧设计实在是太吸引人了,那种厚重的纸张质感,配合着精美的封面插画,让人爱不释手。翻开扉页,首先映入眼帘的是一套非常讲究的字体排版,每一个字符都仿佛经过了精心雕琢,阅读起来是一种纯粹的视觉享受。我特别喜欢它在章节过渡处的留白处理,那种恰到好处的呼吸感,让我的思绪可以从前一个故事中抽离出来,为下一个即将展开的叙事做好准备。整体来看,这本册子的制作工艺绝对是精品级别的,从侧面看,书脊的粘合得一丝不苟,即便是经常翻阅,也丝毫没有松垮的迹象。书腰的设计也颇具巧思,用一种低调的墨色突出了核心的主题,既保持了艺术感,又不会喧宾夺主。可以说,光是捧着它,就能感受到一种沉甸甸的、对阅读体验的尊重。这种对细节的极致追求,让这本书不仅仅是一个内容的载体,更像是一件值得收藏的艺术品摆在了我的书架上,每次拿起它,都有种仪式感油然而生。
评分从文学性的角度来看,这本书的贡献在于它成功地拓宽了某种表达的边界。作者似乎在尝试融合几种截然不同的文体风格,时而像是哲学论述的严谨,时而又带有一丝散文诗的浪漫主义色彩,偶尔甚至能捕捉到某种戏剧独白的张力。这种跨界的融合,使得整本书呈现出一种非常独特且难以被简单归类的气质。它挑战了读者对于“什么是好书”的既有认知,要求我们用更开放的心态去接纳那些不守规矩的创新。我特别留意了它在处理特定意象时的重复使用,例如某种光影变化或是特定声音的描摹,这些意象经过多次的反复出现和侧重点的微调,最终形成了一种强大的象征意义系统,构建起了这本书独有的符号宇宙。这绝对是一部需要反复品读、值得被纳入文学研究视野的作品,其复杂性和深度远超初次阅读所能完全把握的范畴。
评分读完这本书,我感到了一种强烈的共鸣,这种共鸣不是因为书中的情节与我自己的经历完全一致,而是因为作者触及到了某种人类普遍存在的情感内核,那种对身份的迷惘、对时间的无奈、对美好事物消逝的轻微哀伤。这本书提供了一种近乎冥想式的阅读体验,它迫使你放慢脚步,去关注那些通常被我们忽略的“存在感”问题。我发现,在阅读过程中,我开始不自觉地反思自己生活的某些方面,比如我与周围环境的关系,我如何看待自己的“过去”和“未来”。它没有提供任何直接的答案或解决方案,但它提供了一种绝佳的场域,让你在安全的环境下进行一次深入的自我对话。这种深刻的、精神层面的触动,是很多快餐式读物无法给予的,它像是一次精神上的“深呼吸”,让人感到充实且宁静。
评分我花了整整一个下午沉浸在这本书的语言氛围里,它的叙事风格简直像是一股清流,不同于当下流行的小说那样追求快节奏的冲击力,这本书更像是一位老友在炉火边,娓娓道来那些看似平淡实则蕴含深意的往事。作者的笔触极其细腻,尤其擅长捕捉那些日常生活中转瞬即逝的情绪波动,比如清晨阳光穿过窗帘缝隙时的那种犹豫感,或是雨后泥土散发出的那种复杂气味,都被他描摹得惟妙惟肖。阅读过程中,我多次停下来,反复咀嚼那些被精心锤炼过的句子,有些句子仿佛带着一种古老的智慧,需要静下心来才能真正领悟其深层含义。我发现,作者在构建人物心理活动时,采用了一种非常内敛的手法,他从不直接告诉你角色在想什么,而是通过他们无意识的动作、眼神的游移,让你自己去拼凑和理解那份复杂的情感纠葛。这种“留白”的写作技巧,极大地激发了读者的参与感,让我在阅读的同时,也在不断地进行着自我投射和深度思考。
评分这本书的结构安排,我个人觉得非常巧妙,它不像传统的线形叙事那样容易让人感到枯燥乏味。它更像是一个错综复杂的迷宫,每一页的展开都可能将你引向一个意想不到的角落,但最终,所有的路径又都奇迹般地汇聚到了一个共同的核心主题之下。我尤其欣赏作者在处理时间线上的手法,他时常在叙述的高潮处,突然插入一段看似无关紧要的往昔片段,这种时空上的跳跃,非但没有造成阅读上的混乱,反而增强了故事的厚度和张力,让人感觉时间仿佛是流动的、可塑的。每一次的章节转换,都像是一次镜头角度的切换,让你从一个全新的视角重新审视刚刚发生的一切,这种叙事上的“反套路”让我阅读的每一步都充满了惊喜和期待。我甚至开始猜测作者的意图,是不是想通过这种非线性结构,来模拟人类记忆和意识的运作模式,非常引人入胜。
评分它真的是108 Portraits...
评分它真的是108 Portraits...
评分它真的是108 Portraits...
评分它真的是108 Portraits...
评分它真的是108 Portraits...
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