'Bergmans Banaliteter' is published by Farozonen Förlag in an edition of 100 hand-numbered copies, with a risograph-printed inlay in a hot-foiled cover. The book is bound with an archival clip made from tempered steel. Each copy is packaged in a hot-foiled cardboard box, closed with a cotton string.
The Swedish director was widely considered one of the greatest and most influential filmmakers of all time. Despite significant international success, Ingmar Bergman's self-image was characterized by a sense of being misunderstood. The director, who claimed to have been rejected from birth, may have been his own harshest critic.
In Bergman's Banaliteter by A-FL, a heavily annotated original manuscript for a series of previously unpublished interviews, conducted by the critic and Bergman connoisseur Henrik Sjögren (1926-2020) during the autumn of 2001, is being processed. The text is completely omitted, and all that remains are Bergman's extensive deletions; frenetic lines dancing across the pages in red and green ink. Taken out of context, these resolute strokes transform into abstract formations that manifest Bergman's relentless self-censorship. On the 32nd page of the original manuscript, the director writes in a desperate note: "I feel like I'm practically always stating banalities about my productions. It's too miserable, Henrik!"
Bergman's Banaliteter
A-FL
Farozonen Förlag, 2024
63 pages, Softcover, 21.2 × 29.7 × 1.4 cm; English
numbered, Numbered with red fineliner on colophon page
Edition of 100
978-91-531-0535-0
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einBuch.haus
Berlin-based project space and publishing house, showcases international artists and designers through exhibitions that transform the concept of a book into three-dimensional space, while also publishing these exhibitions in book format to highlight the medium of artists' books.