Among the essays
included in the catalog is “‘I’m a Writer Too,’ The Texts of Walker Evans” by Anne
Bertrand. In it, without elaborating, Bertrand mentions Walker’s “joy” in
reading Proust, Joyce, Henry James and Nabokov. She gives no source, but adds: “[A]nd
while we know that he read Céline, writing, perhaps even more than literature,
was his second passion, his violon d’Ingres
. . . and his secret garden, so little did he speak about this subject
(about which no one asked him). Perhaps it was one of those intimate things that
this complex man never wanted to talk about.”
A brief search
disclosed a posthumously published essay by Evans, “Photography,” in the Winter 1978
issue of The Massachusetts Review. Evans notes that “photography seems to be the
most literary of the graphic arts. It will have--on occasion, and in effect--qualities
of eloquence, wit, grace, and economy; style, of course; structure and coherence;
paradox and play and oxymoron.” Like any good sample of poetry or prose, including
work by the four fiction writers cited above by Bertrand.
“If photography
tends to the literary, conversely certain writers are noticeably photographic
from time to time--for instance James, and Joyce, and particularly Nabokov.
Here is Nabokov: ‘. . . Vasili Ivanovich would look at the configurations of
some entirely insignificant objects--a smear on the platform, a cherry stone, a
cigarette butt--and would say to himself that never, never would he remember
these three little things here in that particular interrelation, this pattern,
which he could now see with such deathless precision . . .’ Nabokov might be
describing a photograph in a current exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. Master
writers often teach how to see; master painters sometimes teach us what to see.”
The quoted passage
is from “Cloud, Castle, Lake”, translated from the Russian by Nabokov and published
in The Atlantic in 1941.
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