![]() ![]() In A Life in Pictures, Gray says that his sources for the four frontispieces of Lanark were four postcards sold in the shop of the British Museum (whose London Reading Room, Gray notes, is “The great circular chamber where Marx, Bernard Shaw and Lenin had educated themselves”). Coded with symbolic meaning, the four prints constitute Lanark’s most forceful allusions to modern history-and deliver Gray’s rejoinders to that history. Revisiting Lanark at twice the age I was when I originally read it, I can step back from my heart and better see how intricately Alasdair Gray had crafted the inhuman machinery into which Duncan Thaw and Lanark fall. As a celebration of his life and work, I am posting an essay written for an anthology on Gray’s artwork which never materialized, on the sources of the frontispieces for Lanark’s four books and the uses to which Gray put them. Gray’s death at the end of last year, after a long and successful career as an artist and writer, struck me hard. I read Lanark as a very young adult and, like many others, was marked by its naked emotion, honesty, and despair. ![]()
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