SOPHIE CALLE: THE ADDRESS BOOK
CALLE, SOPHIE
Having found a lost address book on the street in Paris, artist Sophie Calle copied the pages before returning it anonymously to its owner. She then began contacting the peoplein essence, following him through the map of his family, friends, lovers, and acquaintances.
Sophie Calles written accounts of these encountersjuxtaposed with her photographsoriginally appeared as serial in the French newspaper Libération over the course of one month in 1983. Now, The Address Book, a key and controversial work in Calles oeuvre, is being published for the first time in its entirety in English as a beautiful trade edition artists book, designed in collaboration with the artist.
As The Address Book entries accumulate, so do the vivid impressions of its owner, Pierre D., while suggesting ever more complicated stories as information is gifted, parsed, and withheld. A multitude of detailsfrom the seemingly banal to the potentially revelatoryare collaged into a fragile and strangely intimate portrait of Pierre D.; while Calle, over the course of her pursuit, also turns the interrogation on herself, her own fears, assumptions, and obsessions.
Part conceptual art, part character study, part confession, part essay, Sophie Calles The Address Book is, above all, a prism through which desire and the elusory, persona and identity, the private and the public, knowledge and the unknown are refracted in luminous and provocative ways.