
Gerald Laing 1936-2011
printed by Editions Domberger, Stuttgart; published by the artist (with his blindstamp)
The film is in a documentary style and recounts the destruction of a young woman whose ambition is to become a movie actress. The still photograph from the film from which my image is derived, is from the section describing her descent into prostitution. The glazing bars of the window behind her head form a cross and the whole image has an almost religious iconic status which I am sure was intended by Godard and was certainly my intention. In the film, her name is Nana, which is both the title of Emil Zola's great novel on the same subject and the name of his protagonist (though Zola's Nana fares far better than Godard's). I wanted to monumentalise and immortalise a fragile and ephemeral newspaper image of a film and an actress which I felt captured an urban mythology of the times. " – G L
Anna Karina gazes ahead with a blank or doleful expression, remote from the viewer. The billboard scale makes her powerfully present, as on the cinema screen, but the scale also serves to withhold the promise of intimacy.
[from the exhibition catalogue of 'Gerald Laing - Myth & Muse: the cult of celebrity', The Fine Art Society, 2024]
Provenance
The artist's estate, catalogue raisonné no. P53 (Ingram and Halliwell 047)Exhibitions
Literature
Rupert Halliwell & Lyndsey Ingram, Gerald Laing: Prints and Multiples, A Catalogue Raisonné (London, 2006)