Paul Ickovic

Website of the photographer Paul Ickovic.

Neither a lofty degree of intelligence nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. 
Love, love, love, that is the soul of genius.

-- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Welcome to a world of photographs, drawings and writings by the artist Paul Ickovic.

Amherst

 

Paul Ickovic, photographer & friend

Essay by Naila Moreira, written in 2017

The first time I met Paul Ickovic, whom I came to know as Pablo, he interrupted me as I sat working at an outdoor table of a cafe in Northampton, Massachusetts. He said he was impressed how fast I could type while staring off into space instead of at my screen.

Feeling safe in that public place, I smiled and looked him over. A lanky, disheveled gentleman in a patched tweet jacket, he had the studied elegance of a down-at-heel European aristocrat.

He offered me a line of poetry he said he’d written and never used. “A gift,” he said. “To use as you see fit.” I took the slip of paper he handed me.

Here I sit, alone, in the theater of fate, built by my own thoughts and my own hands

“Thank you,” I said. “But I never use other people’s words.”

“But it’s a gift,” he said. “You should use it.” Quickly distracted, he pointed behind me. “Just look at that wall,” he said. I lifted my gaze to see a latticework of vines scrawled like a living Jackson Pollock across concrete. Green near the bottom, the vines gradually broadened upward to intertwine with dead stems punctuated by curled commas of browned leaves.

“Beauty all around us,” he went on. “We just have to look.”

His brief statements that first afternoon called my mind to what we too often lack in our lives: perception through self-perception, a re-imagining of the seen world. Around my café table I began noticing the balconies of metal and wood linked by fire escapes, patterns of vertical and horizontal lines. I noticed the brick row houses, the gold number on each door, the gold knockers and letter slots, the wrought-iron fences, disorderly flower boxes.

“It’s like contemporary art,” I said, of the vine-covered wall behind me.

“But no painter could do that,” he said. “No painter could do that.”

Designed to impress me, his comments that afternoon did exactly what he planned: they made a friend and an admirer out of me. That meeting began my introduction to the whirlwind, art-shaped mind that is Pablo Ickovic. I say introduction because he’s a person one may never fully be able to know. He once asked me to write a poem about how I perceived him:

Driving, scattered, a Tinguely machine
Throwing itself apart:
No evident core, only fireworks
And angles. The suit hangs disheveled
On a phantom frame. The heart is not here
But flying on some distant wind,
A pigeon, bowled over by hurricane force
Between the river and the bridge.

He hated it. He objected, I think, to “No evident core.” But I didn’t intend to suggest he had no inner self – only that the self under his skin is escapist and elusive, less a chameleon than a traveler, flighty and quick, not easily held to earth. He’s a vagrant by constitution, a rolling stone. “Catch me if you can,” he once said. He’s always jetting off to some new place: Argentina, New York, Florida, Slovenia, sending back a trail of post cards and emails that track his unlikely trajectories.

But no matter how far he wanders, like a carrier pigeon he always seems to return to those he befriends. He’s a lover by nature, an old-fashioned romantic. He’s fond of saying his only real subject is love. His website quotes Mozart: “Neither a lofty degree of intelligence nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love, that is the soul of genius.”

In spite of this claim, Pablo’s work seldom explores the simplicities of traditional romantic love. He has an uncanny ability to see people, to grasp their character within minutes of meeting them. I think that, above all, is what makes him a great photographer.

He’s bullheadedly taciturn about the meaning of his photos. Once, I invited him alongside two other photographers to speak about his work at the local library. In his whole presentation he said almost nothing. After commenting that he preferred the photos to speak for themselves, he simply flipped through the slides one after the other, slowly, without saying a word. He bewitched the audience nevertheless. To a person they afterwards said they loved it.

His photographs catch contemporary people moving through a world marked by the old – old architecture, statues, landscapes, history. The people show up like flowers against a large past that dwarfs their part in it. Like much of the great art of the 20th century, Pablo’s photos depict the alienation and boredom of contemporary urban life, a life that seems to churn over and above the individual without ever truly including him or her.

His images capture motivation, secret thought, boredom, reflection, inner lives. Conflict, error, lust, fear, restraint, pride – he’s able to spot the uglier facets of the faces he catches by surprise and expose them at the unexpected moments they burst forth, making them paradoxically attractive in being so human.

But it’s always an individual he loves, even in exposure. As an artist, as a friend, Pablo reminds us what we’ve lost, but also of who we could be: adventurers, artists, travelers, perceivers – alone, in the theater of fate, built by our own thoughts and our own hands.

 
Corner of Paul Ickovic's studio in Amherst, Massachussetts. Photo by Naila Moreira which depicts several large photographs by Ickovic resting against a wall, most notably a dramatic portrait of Patricia Griffith in 3/4 view.

A corner of Paul Ickovic’s studio, Amherst, MA

Paul reading Naila Moreira’s poem Grey
From Gorgeous Infidelities, a book of photographs and poetry by Paul Ickovic and Naila Moreira

This essay and recording are reproduced by gracious permission of Naila Moreira.
The original post on her blog can be found here. Her website: nailamoreira.com and Instagram page.

Historia de un Amor

I sit alone in the theater of fate searching for comedy and drama at the same time. Chaplin is the quintessential hero. He makes you feel pathos and laughter simultaneously. I want the viewer to discover. I want to surprise them with my Felliniesque reality. With every turn of the page they should complete the story through their own mythology. The more ambiguous the better. I see life as theater and its people walking on the stage we call reality… You weave them into the rectangle and hope for the best. It's a matter of being at the critical distance and capturing the accident, as Cartier Bresson called the decisive moment.

… How many times people have told me “get a job, Art is not a job, it’s a hobby.” I disagree vehemently. To judge it as an extravagance is like saying that Moby Dick is a book about whales.

Read More

Ljubljana

Why did the New York photographer, whose works adorn the walls of many important world galleries and the homes of Hollywood stars, find a new home in Ljubljana?

Paul Ickovic in his not-yet-renovated apartment on Križevniška Street in Ljubljana

Even if I wanted to, I couldn't have started writing this article at the beginning, because I didn't enter the story unexpectedly until somewhere near the end. Or, if you like, at the beginning of a new chapter. The American photographer Paul Ickovic became my neighbor in the middle of last year, in the autumn of his life (he was born on March 16, 1944, which means that on the day this issue of Mladina is published, he celebrates his 74th birthday!). Even the closest one, that is, I see his front door as soon as I open mine. And it was because of the door that we met. One day I heard a shout from the hallway: "Help!" Someone was calling for help in English and knocking on the door.

Read More

Press for En Transit at the BnF

 
 
London, 2005

London, 2005

 

A gift from the BNF reveals to the general public the talent of Paul Ickovic, a photographer born in England in 1944. Marked by the successive moves of his family, he continued his explorations of the world as an airplane pilot, his first profession. Wherever he travelled, he looked at life as a theater, reality as a scene where characters wander, and he has been lovingly watching since the age of 20 for the "decisive moment" dear to Henri Cartier-Bresson (exhibited in the gallery next door). Here are images taken since the 60's. From the United States to Nepal, from Czechoslovakia to Colombia, Ickovic encloses in his frame, with an incredible art of composition, the daily life of his contemporaries. He photographs quietly and only in black and white: chambermaids in a corridor; an abandoned pram on a sidewalk; a choreography of passers-by; games of reflections in a window... As with all the great street photographers of the twentieth century, it does not matter where the scene takes place, because it is not so much the subject that counts as the coincidence between the event, often harmless, and the eye, which will compose to make an image - a sensation in sum. Like the work of Cartier-Bresson, there is something in Ickovic's stolen moments that resembles a painting. All these strange perceptions of the city and its inhabitants, these micro-journeys between reality and illusion take us elsewhere in a space-time that the eye of the ordinary onlooker does not see. -F.C. |
"In transit: photographs by Paul Ickovic" I Until August 22 I From Tue. to Sat. ioh-igh, Sun I3h-l8h | Donors' gallery, BNF François- Mitterrand, quai François- Mauriac, 13th I Free entry. PAUL ICKOVIC I BNF, PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPHY ~ from Télérama, Paris

BnF press release

 

Copyright Paul Ickovic Trust