Monday, January 9, 2012

Must Have for Star Wars Fans


Dark LensCédric Delsaux

2011 - Éditions Xavier Barral





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This is the classiest Star Wars gift I've ever laid my hands on (which is not to say I've seen them all). Or in other grand pronouncements, this is the best coffee table book I've seen for the 2011 gift season. 


The book takes two wholly competent subject matter - urban desolation and Star Wars - and beautifully combines the two in a gorgeous coffee table gift book. Very well done. Highly recommended.


Amazon descriptionJabba the Hut lurks in the shadows of a decrepit, abandoned warehouse, his toady eyes glowing; Boba Fett looms up from the fluorescent glare of an indoor car park, poised to kill; Yoda peers out inquiringly from the window ledge of some otherwise untenanted institutional building; Han Solo's cryogenically frozen form on a slab stands, installed bizarrely in an anonymous concrete plaza. Of the many scenarios to which Star Wars fans have dispatched the films' protagonists over the years, none--not even Seth McFarlane's Family Guy homages--are as unlikely as Cédric Delsaux's. In Dark Lens, Delsaux transports Darth Vader and the whole gamut of Star Wars iconography to a post-apocalyptic, urban-suburban landscape of endless parking lots, high rises and wasteland interzones, vacant of ordinary human life. Delsaux's "mythology of banality" (as he describes it) produces images that are not just funny or preposterous, but also weirdly compelling; in their photographic plausibility they successfully incorporate Star Wars into an everyday reality that we can all recognize, but in ways that make both worlds seem strangely real and absurdly false. Delsaux's Dark Lens will captivate both film and photobook fans alike with its fantastically bizarre recasting of Star Wars on planet Earth after the apocalypse. 

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