Perhaps Nabokov prefigured Attracted to Light in his fictional four-volume set called The Butterflies and Moths of the Russian Empire in Father’s Butterflies: “The illustrations are still more perfect—the downy, velvety texture, the blurry translucence of various families of moths are rendered so delicately you would be afraid to run your finger across the paper....”
A sumptuously oversized and exquisitely produced book, Attracted to Light showcases the Starns’ extensive conceptual portrait series of the nocturnal moths’ mysterious journey and the seeming gravitational force that light has over them, “captured” in photographs and filmic video footage.
“Light necessitates darkness, the shadow created by anything physical. But black is not only the lack of light—it is also the complete absorption of light. The void and reservoir of what we want, what we need; light is power, it is knowledge. When we look into the deep, velvety black eyes of moths we see both emptiness and (the absorption of) light. No one understands why moths are attracted to light. It's neither to mate nor to eat: many moths don’t eat at all; some don't even have mouths. Like butterflies, moths are almost as light as air, but they’re the poor stupid cousins. Choosing to live their lives at night, flying from nowhere towards the end of their lives—fragile, dusty wings in tatters. A moth will bounce across a ceiling, orbit a lamp, fly into a flame, or self-immolate like a Buddhist monk.”
—Doug and Mike Starn
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Anbieter: Jeff Hirsch Books, ABAA, Wadsworth, IL, USA
First Edition. First edition. Hardcover. 118 pages. One of 3000 copies. Features an essay by Victor Pelevin translated by Andrew Bromfield. An interesting collection of photographs of moths that includes 90 images with several gatefolds. A near fine copy in photo-illustrated boards with some light bumping to the bottom right corners. No dust jacket as issued. Signed by both Mike and Doug Starn on the title page. Signed. Artikel-Nr. 203476
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