4,5*
Martha Gellhorn on Ernest Hemingway: “No woman should ever marry a man who hated his mother . . . [He had a] mistrust and fear of women. Which he suffered from always, and made women suffer; and which shows in his writing.”
Piscando o olho ao famoso título de Graham Greene, “The End of the Affair”, Catherine Lacey compôs um livro ilustrado sobre as relações pessoais entre artistas de várias áreas ao longo do século XX.
The eccentric painter Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita took dance lessons with Isadora [Duncan] in exchange for champagne. He was said to have fallen in love with both her and her brother Raymond, but Isadora was in a somber period of her life, having just lost both her children in a car accident. Isadora, too, would die in a horrible accident. At a summer party in 1925, Isadora and F. Scott Fitzgerald flirted overtly, Isadora going so far as to tell him he could come visit her later that night. Zelda watched silently from across the room before flinging herself down a stone stairway, stunning the crowd into silence and bloodying her knees.
Seja por motivos passionais, profissionais ou de amizade, “The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence” comprova a teoria dos seis graus de separação, ou, colocando-o de forma mais simples, está tudo ligado.
Colette’s novel ‘The Pure and the Impure’ included a mistress-and-slave relationship based on that of Renée [Vivien] and Natalie [Barney]. Natalie was a prolific writer, producing five books of poetry, three books of epigrams, three memoirs, a novel, and two collections of essays. She also had so many lovers that Alice B. Toklas once quipped she must have been picking them up in department store lavatories. Rebellious from a young age, Natalie settled in Paris in her mid-twenties and began hosting weekly salons, bringing together everyone from Isadora Duncan to Jean Cocteau. She is credited with repopularizing Sappho among this creative elite. She was briefly engaged to writer Lord Alfred Douglas and had an ongoing affair with Dolly, notorious niece of Oscar Wilde—who himself had an affair with Lord Alfred. In 1916, Natalie met painter Romaine Brooks.
Nesta coluna de mexericos erudita, é evidente o eixo EUA-França na primeira metade do século XX, altura em quase todas as celebridades deste livro se cruzaram no apartamento de Gertrud Stein e Alice B Toklas em Paris.
Outra figura agregadora é também a da mecenas Peggy Guggenheim, cujo marido Max Ernest é um dos grandes elos nesta corrente de associações. Estranhamente, não se fala aqui da pintora e escritora Leonora Carrington, que fugiu para Paris aos 20 anos com Ernest, na altura casado e com 46 anos, a qual viria depois a viver no México, onde conheceu Frida Kahlo, que é outra das arestas destes polígonos amorosos.
While Peggy Guggenheim and Max Ernst were married and living in Paris, she organized an art show of thirty-one female artists, including Dorothea Tanning. She later joked that she should have capped it at thirty: Dorothea and Max began an affair that eventually ended the marriage. Though Dorothea’s work was shown at many of the world’s major museums in the world during her lifetime, she was never exhibited at the Guggenheim.
Muitas destas ligações entre pintores, escritores e gente do cinema e da música são sobejamente conhecidas, mas talvez não em toda a sua extensão, atestando uma ideia que ainda perdura nos dias de hoje, a de que os famosos andam todos uns com os outros.
Duas histórias reais de amor/ódio com alguns dos meus autores preferidos:
Tennessee Williams first met Tallulah [Bankhead] backstage before a play, where she was putting on makeup while completely naked. He’d written a part for her, but she dismissed his new play as “degenerate filth.” She later performed in a production of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’, but Tennessee criticized her work in an open letter to the New York Times, calling it “the worst performance ever of Blanche DuBois.” (...)Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, and Gore Vidal all met as young literary competitors in New York. The group, which Tennessee called “the spiteful sisterhood,” traveled to Europe together just after World War II. Truman claimed his French editor, Albert Camus, was in his hotel room every night. Truman met Gore Vidal at a party in Anaïs Nin’s New York apartment.
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Jean-Paul Sartre asked Simone de Beauvoir to marry him when they were in their early twenties, but she preferred their open relationship. It lasted half a century. Simone’s novel ‘She Came to Stay’ was dedicated to Olga Kosakiewicz, her student who also formed a triad relationship with her and Jean-Paul. Olga’s sister Wanda also had a separate relationship with Jean-Paul, and once pulled a gun on Simone. Several of Jean-Paul’s exes suffered psychotic episodes and suicide attempts. Michelle Vian, who ended up divorcing Boris [Vian] to be with Jean-Paul, stayed with him for the rest of his life, but also tried to kill herself.