Showing posts with label Sean O'Hagan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sean O'Hagan. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2024

A twisted tale of strange sisters: Hervé Guibert’s photographs of his reclusive great-aunts in 1970s Paris

 



A twisted tale of strange sisters: Hervé Guibert’s photographs of his reclusive great-aunts in 1970s Paris

The late French writer and artist convinced his eccentric relatives to star in a gothic photo novel which is finally being published in English following renewed interest in his work

Sean O’Hagan

Sunday 10 November 2024

In 1974, Hervé Guibert, a precocious 18-year-old fledgling artist, asked his great-aunts, Suzanne and Louise, if he could make a film about them. The pair lived a life of reclusive eccentricity in a Parisian hôtel particulier (grand urban house) in the 15th arrondissement alongside a pampered German shepherd guard dog called Whysky. Though Guibert was one of their very few regular visitors, they dismissed his suggestion outright. Undaunted, he wrote a play based on their life – it was never produced – and took hundreds of photographs of them, mostly from across the table at their regular lunches.

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Claire Keegan / 'Short stories are limited. I'm cornered into writing what I can'

 

Claire Keegan

Claire Keegan: 'Short stories are limited. I'm cornered into writing what I can'

As one of her short stories appears as a stand-alone book, the Irish writer Claire Keegan discusses her work with Sean O'Hagan

Sean O'Hagan
6 September 2010

It was Hemingway who perhaps came closest to defining the art and craft of the great short story. "If a writer knows about what he is writing about, he may omit things that he knows," he wrote. "The dignity of movement of an iceberg is due to only one-ninth of it being above the water."

Saturday, August 5, 2023

Françoise Hardy / ‘I sing about death in a symbolic, even positive way’



Francoise Hardy at Brands Hatch during the filming John Frankenheimer’s 1966 racing drama Grand Prix.
Francoise Hardy at Brands Hatch during the filming John Frankenheimer’s 1966 racing drama Grand Prix. Photograph: Victor Blackman



INTERVIEW

Françoise Hardy: ‘I sing about death in a symbolic, even positive way’



Françoise Hardy was the face of 1960s French pop, with the likes of Dylan and Jagger falling for her enigmatic allure. Now 74, the style icon talks about her new album and why she always sings from the heart

Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 29 April 2018

Françoise Hardy is reciting the first lines of Serge Gainsbourg’s song La Javanaise for my benefit. We are sitting at a small table in the middle of an otherwise empty room in a stylish Paris hotel. Eyes closed, her hand tracing a repeated arc in the air, she enunciates every word as if teaching a hapless pupil – “J’avoue j’en ai bavé, pas vous…” she intones softly, “Avant d’avoir eu vent de vous…”

Saturday, July 15, 2023

The Importance of Elsewhere / Philip Larkin’s Photographs by Richard Bradford – review

Philip Larkin



The Importance of Elsewhere: Philip Larkin’s Photographs by Richard Bradford – review


Philip Larkin’s astute pictures make a tantalising companion to his verse

Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 15 November 2015



I
n October 1947, Philip Larkin wrote to his friend Jim Sutton about a recent “act of madness” – he had spent £7 on a camera. The British-made Purma Special had cost him more than a week’s wages, but it was state of the art compared with his previous model, a box camera that had been given to him by his father in 1937, when Larkin was 15.

Monday, June 1, 2020

John McGahern / Farewell to rural Ireland's voice

John McGahern



John McGahern

Farewell to rural Ireland's voice


Sean O'Hagan recalls the day he met the celebrated Irish writer John McGahern, who died last week


Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 2 April 2006 00.52 BST


W
hen I met John McGahern for the first time last August, just before the publication of Memoir, his extraordinary excavation of a childhood blighted by a bullying father, he fleetingly mentioned his 'illness', and only then when the tape recorder was turned off. He seemed in good spirits, engaging and slightly mischievous as we relaxed, post-interview, in the Dog & Duck in Soho.

As we parted, he invited me to come and visit him at home in County Leitrim, which I said I would, but, because of work and family commitments, never made the time to. I was saddened and filled with regret when I heard the news on Radio 4 last Thursday: 'John McGahern, the Irish novelist, has died, aged 71.'
I would have liked to have got to know him better, but I am grateful, too, that I got to meet him. He was entertaining company, engaging and opinionated, and with a glint in his eye when he told certain stories of home - the kind of stories that, in their gleeful, gossipy detail, spoke volumes about the ongoing cut and thrust of rural Irish life, even in times of relentless change.
He reminded me in some ways of our neighbours at home, farmers mainly, who often step down off an idling tractor to pass the time of day with my father, one muddy boot resting on the gate, as the talk turns inevitably to cattle and land, who has died and who is ill.
This, too, was John McGahern's literary stock in trade, the rendering of small lives lived out against the odds in a country that, when he began writing fiction, seemed unable to shake off the dead weight of its repressive, priest-ridden past. In 1965, his second novel, The Dark, was famously banned in Ireland for being pornographic, and he lost his teaching job on the instructions of the Archbishop of Dublin, the joyless John Charles McQuaid. One gets a measure of what kind of man McGahern was by his reaction to the ban, which was neither to protest it, or accept it, but to simply ignore it. 'I didn't think it was worth protesting about,' he told me. 'It would have given the censorship board too much honour. For me, all that mattered was whether the book was well written or not.'
McGahern wrote steadily and with quiet dedication for a few hours every day and often, he confessed, discarded months of endeavour when it led him nowhere. 'You write and write and create a world,' he said, 'or it can all just as easily disappear.'
In all six of his novels, McGahern created what he memorably described as 'that inner formality of calm that all writing, no matter what it is attempting, must possess'.
In 1990, his fifth novel, Amongst Women, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and was generally regarded as his masterpiece, at least until the startling arrival of his sixth and final work of fiction, 2002's That They May Face the Rising Sun. Set amid a small rural community in Ireland, the homes of which are spread out around a lake, it is an experimental and impressionistic evocation of everyday life in which, as he put it, 'Nothing happens. And, everything happens.'
He called it his 'anti-novel' and seemed genuinely surprised that it had ended up on the Northern Ireland GCSE syllabus, as well as becoming his bestselling book in America. Success, like his short-lived infamy, never fazed him. The work, long laboured over and refined to a kind of stark, descriptive poetry, was everything.
'In a way, you have to follow your own life,' he said, towards the end of our meeting. 'That's what I wanted to do from the start. Everything begins with one person and one place. It's like John Donne's line: "For love, all love of other sights controls, And makes one little room an everywhere." That's really what I try to do in my writing.' And that is what he did, beautifully, and without compare.



Tessa Hadley's top 10 short stories
The 100 best novels / No 97 / Amongst Women by John McGahern (1990)
John McGahern / A brief survey of the short story
John McGahern / A family touched with madness
John McGahern / Farewell to rural Ireland's voice
Cows and cadences / John McGahern by Robert McCrum
A Psychoanalytic Deconstruction of Perspective in John McGahern's 'The Dark'
John McGahern / "Along the edges": along the edges of meaning
John McGahern / "Along the edges": along the edges of meaning
Reading John McGahern's "Love of the world" a fistful of images
“Bathed in an incredible sweetness of light” / A Reading of John McGahern’s “The Wine Breath”


Sunday, May 31, 2020

John McGahern / A family touched with madness





John McGahern

A family touched with madness



He's been denounced from the pulpit and seen his work banned as pornographic, says Sean O'Hagan. Now Ireland's greatest fiction writer, John McGahern, has published a moving memoir

Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 28 August 2005 11.33 BST


John Donne did not write 'Let us make one little room, and everywhere', as stated below. He wrote: 'For love, all love of other sights controls, And makes one little room an everywhere.'


'One thing you find out while writing a memoir,' says John McGahern, 'is what an uncertain place the mind is.' I am sitting in the half-dark of a Soho bar listening to Ireland's greatest living writer of fiction describe some of the unexpected difficulties he underwent while writing his first factual book. His soft voice and carefully wrought sentences echo the cadences and craft of his prose so much so that it is as easy to be mesmerised by his spoken words as his written ones.

Thursday, August 23, 2018

Gypsies by Josef Koudelka / Review





Koudelka Gypsies by Josef Koudelka and Will Guy – review

Josef Koudelka's photographs of Gypsies in the 1960s and 70s show nomadic life at its most romantic

Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 16 October 2011



B
etween 1962 and 1971, Josef Koudelka travelled throughout his native Czechoslovakia and beyond to rural Romania, Hungary, France and Spain. His main subject was the Romany Gypsies ("Cikáni" in Koudelka's native tongue). Drawn to their nomadic lifestyle and dramatic faces, as well as their rituals and customs, Koudelka set off every summer, carrying a rucksack and a sleeping bag, sleeping in the open air, and living frugally as he journeyed deeper into his subject matter. The Gypsies called him the "romantico clandestino".

First published in 1975, five years after Koudelka left Prague following the Russian invasion, Gypsies has since become a classic of documentary photography. This new edition is a revised and enlarged version of the prototype made by Koudelka and graphic designer Milan Kopriva, which was intended for publication in Prague in 1970. It remains an extraordinary testament to Koudelka's keen eye and darkly romantic imagination. When I interviewed him in 2008, he mused: "You know, people say, 'Oh, Josef, he is the eternal outsider', but on the contrary, I try always to be an insider, both as a photographer and as a man. I am part of everything that is around me." This beautifully printed new edition attests to the truth of that statement.

THE GUARDIAN



FICCIONES

DE OTROS MUNDOS

DRAGON

RIMBAUD

DANTE



Monday, August 20, 2018

Aretha Franklin / a life of heartbreak, heroism and hope




Aretha Franklin: a life of heartbreak, heroism and hope

The queen of soul’s fraught personal life informed songs that will endure in the hearts of people all over the world

Sean O'Hagan
Sunday 19 August 2018







 'I didn't want to sing at first': Aretha Franklin in her own words – video

I
n January 1967, Aretha Franklin, 24 years old and newly signed to Atlantic Records, left Detroit, her home city, for the small town of Muscle Shoals in Alabama. She had gone there to record at the remote Fame Studio at her producer Jerry Wexler’s insistence. “These cats are really greasy,” he told her. “You’re going to love it.”