Status Updates From The Art of the Affair: An I...
The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence by
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Paula Mota
is 90% done
Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe lived together in Brooklyn in their 20s. Robert told his conservative parents he had married Patti in a strawberry field in California so they would accept the living situation. When the pair met Andy Warhol, he dismissed them as “horrible” and “dirty.” Robert looked up to Andy,but Patti didn’t understand the appeal. “I felt little for the can and didn’t like the soup,” she said.
— Jan 23, 2025 03:34AM
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Paula Mota
is 80% done
Tennessee [Williams] called Truman [Capote] “a sweetly vicious old lady,” and “a derivative writer whose tiny feet have attempted to lift the ten-league boots of Carson McCullers and succeeded only in tripping him up absurdly.” When Truman got a dog, Tennessee quipped, “now there’s more than one bitch in residence.” Truman wasn’t always kind to Tennessee, either.
— Jan 22, 2025 05:41AM
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Paula Mota
is 60% done
Scott Fitzgerald met Zelda while he was working on his first novel, 'This Side of Paradise', and quickly rewrote the romantic interest to resemble her, even adding verbatim extracts of her journal.(...) Though he made his career writing about their marriage and Zelda’s mental issues, Scott persuaded her to cut autobiographical details from her own novel, 'Save Me the Waltz', and to never write anything else.
— Jan 21, 2025 02:48AM
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Paula Mota
is 15% done
During a summer vacation in Brittany, Colette, forty-seven and married to Henry de Jouvenel, began an affair with her sixteen-year-old stepson, Bertrand de Jouvenel, a writer himself. She had already published Chéri, a novel about an affair between an older woman and a young man. Colette later confessed all to Henry, who was having an affair of his own with a Romanian princess. The marriage did not survive.
— Jan 19, 2025 04:04AM
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Paula Mota
is 10% done
One artist’s muse had an art and muse of her own, or was married to a composer who fell in love with a writer who was married to another writer, until those writers divorced, each marrying surrealist painters, then putting it all in a novel. This was far more than a history of love—it was a carnage of affairs, the inspiration behind countless works of art.
— Jan 18, 2025 12:56AM
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Genna G
is on page 51 of 96
So far, very surface level information on these creatives, but it's leading me to want to learn more about them, especially the women. My "to read" list is getting longer!
— Apr 10, 2023 09:15AM
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