Published 2006 by Bulfinch Press, Hachette Book Group USA
ABOUT OUR BOOK:
Exquisite Corpse is a hypothesis, built from a wealth of visual and factual material. Unlike others who have preceded us, we make no definitive claim to solve the murder of Elizabeth Short, otherwise known as the Black Dahlia murder of 1947. We do suggest that clues about this crime may have been hiding, for decades, in plain sight.
Exquisite Corpse presents the theory that Elizabeth Short's murder may have been informed by surrealist art, and that the killer was familiar with surrealist art and ideas. It also proposes that art created after the murder may have made veiled references to it.
Our book generally supports Steve Hodel's best-selling book Black Dahlia Avenger, which proposes that George Hodel, the author's father, was the killer. We take exception to some of Steve Hodel's claims in Black Dahlia Avenger, however. For instance, his attribution to his father of many other murders is provocative but highly questionable, in our view. In addition, neither of us believes that the unidentified women pictured in his father's photo album are Elizabeth Short.
Foremost, our book asserts that this gruesome but precisely executed murder may have been a deranged attempt to imitate motifs in surrealist art. That said, we do not believe that Man Ray, Marcel Duchamp, or any other surrealist artist was directly responsible for the murder, or that the killer himself was an artist.
Surrealism was a fascinating and wide-ranging art movement, filled with wonderful and strange imagery. The Black Dahlia's possible connection to it is a small chapter in surrealism's history, another testament to this art's irrepressible and revolutionary allure.
ONLINE CONTENT:
Downloadable recordings of Mark Nelson's
StoryCorps conversations with George Hodel's
grandson Joshua Hodel Spafford
Part 1 (Large file: 38.3mb)
Part 2 (Large file: 40.7mb)
Part 3 (Large file: 41.8mb)
Part 4 (Large file: 37.6mb)
Part 5 (Large file: 41.3mb)
This downloadable PDF documents presents an
argument for the importance of a recently discovered document
George Hodel / Cement Sack
This downloadable PDF documents the
relationship between Man Ray and George Hodel
Man Ray / George Hodel
This downloadable PDF documents
George Hodel's Surgical Experience
George Hodel / Surgical Experience
This downloadable PDF documents
Hodel discussing his own surrealist photography
George Hodel / District Attorney Transcript p. 95
PRESS:
National Public Radio The "Three Books" Series: "Three Grisly Tales of Love and Death in Tinseltown," by Paula Uruburu; Online: October 21, 2010
NPR
Art In America "Surrealism to Die For," by Peter Plagens; Online: April, 2009; Print edition: April 2009, pp. 47-50
Vanity Fair "California Dreamgirl," by Sheila Weller; Online: December, 2007, pp. 1-2; Print edition: December 2007, pp. 359-361
Vanity Fair
MCAD Magazine (Magazine of the Minneapolis College of Art and Design) "A Sharp Eye" by Kim Zimmerman; Print edition: March 2007, pp. 12-13
Art & Australia "Ingrid Periz on Exquisite Corpse," (Short Book Review); Print edition: Volume 44, No. 3, Autumn 2007, p. 44
Artforum "A Bright Guilty World: Daylight Ghosts and Sunshine Noir," by J. Hoberman, Online: February, 2007, p. 5; Print edition: February 2007, p. 315
Artforum
The Village Voice "Top Shelf: Our 25 Favorite Books of 2006," Online: 22 December, 2006; Print edition: 27 December, 2006 - 2 January, 2007, p. 46
The Village Voice
Modern Painters "An Excellent Cadaver," by Ed Park,
November 2006, pp. 48-50
The Dizzies (Ed Park Blog)
The New Republic "Deathworks," by David Thomson,
Online: 15 September 2006; Print edition: 25 September 2006,
pp. 37-41
The Independent "Film Studies: Who killed the Black Dahlia?,"
by David Thomson, 10 September 2006
The Independent
Los Angeles magazine "Living with the Black Dahlia:
The Murder that Changed Los Angeles," by RJ Smith,
September 2006, p. 242
ARTnews magazine "Body of Evidence," by Sarah P. Hanson,
September 2006, p. 44
EVENTS:
None currently scheduled
PAST EVENTS:
Barnes & Noble Booksellers Park Slope
267 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11215
Thursday, 19 October, 2006 (7:30 pm)
POSTS:
Introducing "Exquisite Corpse"
We are pleased to announce the publication of
Exquisite Corpse: Surrealism and the Black Dahlia Murder. This blog, http://exquisitecorpsebook.blogspot.com, and its corresponding website, www.exquisitecorpsebook.com, officially represent our book.
We look forward to hearing from you. Please feel to post any constructive comments publicly, or to write to us privately at exquisitecorpsebook@gmail.com. We will do our best to respond in a timely manner.
Mark Nelson and Sarah Hudson Bayliss
Labels: Black Dahlia, Black Dahlia Avenger, Elizabeth Short, Exquisite Corpse, George Hodel, Mark Nelson, Sarah Hudson Bayliss, Steve Hodel
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home