The Picture of Dorian Gray—the picture acts as a “magic mirror” (as in the story of Snow White), absorbing Dorian Gray’s spiritual ugliness while he remains young and handsome. “In Godard’s
A Bout de Souffle Jean Seberg pretends to be happy and
insouciant, but, pinned to the wall, just behind her head, life-size photographs of herself looking sad and thoughtful give the game away,” writes Raymond Durgnat (
Films and Feelings). Thus pictures, rather like so-called “Freudian slips”—slips of the tongue—give a person away, betraying the actual reality hidden behind the mask, the disjunction between image and reality. It is also possible for pictures within movies to
attack characters in a similar fashion: in Hitchcock’s
Blackmail, for instance, a laughing clown points his finger at Anny Ondra as she, knife in hand, backs away from a corpse. While pictures can incite the imagination (as in The Who’s “Pictures of Lily,” or the J. Geils Band’s “Centerfold”), pictures can also
hide or conceal actuality: in Stanley Kubrick’s
A Clockwork Orange (1971), Alex attacks the cat lady with a large plastic sculpture of male genitalia, crushing her skull with it as the camera cuts away to the garish contemporary paintings on the walls. But pictures of the lost object of desire also serve up painful memories of loss, serving as a constant reminder of one’s current singular situation—the Reality Principle. A picture of one’s self can function merely to increase one’s own intense loneliness and isolation, as in George Jones’s romantic ballad, “A Picture of Me (Without You).”
“Who wrote the
Book of Love?” a famous song wants to know, and, of course, there is no answer. Books, archives of wisdom and repositories of cultural knowledge, cannot be read—it’s as if they were written in a foreign language. Proclaiming to make the world legible, books, paradoxically, are often indecipherable. “Tell me where the answer lies,” sings Neil Young in “Speakin’ Out.” “Is it in the notebook behind your eyes?” Books also supplement one’s memory—they are the place where things are written down, where lists are compiled, where experiential narratives are recorded, serving as reminders of what to do—or warning of behaviors to avoid. Thousands of words have been written about pictures, and books contain thousands of words; the lyrics to songs about books and pictures are frequently about both the failure of language and of the discrepancy between thought and action.
Books And Pictures A-Z:ABC –
The Look Of LoveThe Beatles –
Paperback WriterElvis Costello and the Attractions –
Everyday I Write The BookDeep Purple –
The Book of TaliesynEcho and the Bunnymen –
Pictures On My Wall/Read It In BooksFilter –
Take A PictureThe J. Geils Band –
CenterfoldHüsker Dü –
Books About UFOsThe Incredible String Band –
AntoineGeorge Jones –
A Picture of Me (Without You)The Kinks –
Picture BookLove –
My Little Red BookThe Monotones –
The Book of LoveNazareth –
Why Don’t You Read the BookAlan O’Day –
Undercover AngelThe Police –
Don’t Stand So Close to Me? and the Mysterians –
Ten O’ClockRod Stewart –
Every Picture Tells A StoryStatus Quo –
Pictures of Matchstick MenTalking Heads –
The Book I ReadU2 –
When I Look At the WorldSon Volt –
Out of the PictureThe Who –
Pictures of LilyXTC –
Books Are BurningNeil Young –
Southern ManThe Zombies –
Imagine The Swan