2010 ➤ Spider-woman Bourgeois created her art as meditations on sexuality

◼ LOUISE BOURGEOIS, THE FRENCH-BORN SCULPTOR, who lived in a 15-foot-wide town house on West 20th Street, Manhattan, died today at the age of 98 following a heart attack. She was largely unknown until 1982, aged 71, when she became the first woman to have a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. Time art critic Robert Hughes has called her “the mother of American feminist identity art” and declared that “[Louise’s] influence on young artists has been enormous”.

Raimon Ramis, sculpture, Louise Bourgeois

Louise Bourgeois in 1990, behind her marble sculpture Eye to Eye (1970). Photographed © by Raimon Ramis

On the occasion of her 1982 retrospective, Bourgeois published a photo essay in Artforum magazine that revealed the impact of childhood trauma on her art. “Everything I do,” she exclaimed, “was inspired by my early life.” Born in 1911, Bourgeois grew up in provincial France, and aged eleven, she witnessed her father’s betrayal of his wife and three children when he initiated a ten-year affair with their live-in English tutor. Bourgeois also attended to her mother, who had succumbed to the Spanish Flu after the First World War.

Louise Bourgeois, Brassai, 1937

Bourgeois photographed by Brassaï in Paris, 1937, where she studied under Fernand Léger. (Louise Bourgeois Archive)

This familial triangle of sexual infidelity and illness cast the young artist in the most inappropriate of roles — as voyeur, accomplice, and nurturer — the combination of which left her with life-long psychological scars, including insomnia. Bourgeois’s diaries, which she has kept assiduously since 1923, indicate the tensions between rage, fear of abandonment, and guilt that she has suffered since childhood. It is through her art, however, that she has been able to channel and release these tensions.

Many of her works are today instantly recognisable, especially the giant spiders created for the opening of Tate Modern in London in 2000. Only last month she shared the following thoughts with Jonathan Jones for The Guardian on the 10th anniversary of that commission…

From The Guardian, Tuesday May 4, 2010:
“ Bourgeois no longer gives interviews, so the fact she’s even speaking to me proves how much the first Turbine Hall commission meant to her. The twisted steel legs of her giant spider Maman, alongside a sequence of fabulous, hellish towers, gave the brand-new Tate Modern an instant visual signature, and made the then 89-year-old French-born New York artist a household name. Until then, Bourgeois had been revered by a small world of contemporary art fans; did this sudden popularity surprise her? “No,” she says modestly. “The space is so beautiful – anything placed inside it would cause a strong reaction.”

Louise Bourgeois, sculpture, Spider, Maman

Bourgeois’s sculptures: Maman in the turbine hall at Tate Modern in 2000, photographed by Ray Tang. Spider and Maman in the Large Courtyard of the Winter Palace, St Petersburg, 2001

As an artist, Bourgeois dwells on the strange and darkly remembered interiors of her childhood; the intensity of her meditations on sexuality and power easily filled the colossal space. Maman turned the surrealist obsession with the male psyche on its head, creating a haunting image of motherhood — a spider carrying her eggs.

Before this, Bourgeois says, “I made a series of small sculptures with mirrors and chairs. They were about looking and being looked at. To continue these concepts on a large scale was an opportunity I could not pass up.” What mattered to her most about this installation was the audience’s engagement with it. Her towers were designed to be ascended, paving the way for subsequent participatory installations. “The towers were meant to be an experience. If you did not experience all three towers in sequence, then you did not get the piece.”

Did Maman affect future work? She says not, beyond the opportunities afforded by scale. As she points out, her work is relatively immune to outside influences: “It has an internal logic all its own”.

➢ “Need for nurture in a frightening world” – The New York Times obituary
➢ “Known for her primitive, female forms” – The Guardian obituary
➢ “A tension between quintessentially male and female forms” – All you need to know about Louise Bourgeois at Artsy, the website with a mission to make all art accessible

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2010 ➤ Foxx celebrates his life as the Duchamp of electropop


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❚ “THERE’S A GREAT SURGE OF INTEREST in electronic music. I don’t know why that’s happened, but it’s fortunate for me because I did it a long time ago.” After three low-profile yet prolific decades as a graphic artist, photographer and teacher, the elder statesman of electropop John Foxx is curating Short Circuit, a festival of the best of British electronic music at London’s Roundhouse next week. The day-long event will see Foxx playing his original Moogs, an ARP Odyssey, an Elka String Machine and CR-78 drum machine in a 30th anniversary celebration of his debut solo album, Metamatic.

John Foxx, Short Circuit, Roundhouse, electropop

Foxx’s own verdict on Metamatic: “carcrash music tailored by Burtons”

Foxx’s lyrics and vocal style characterised the original band Ultravox! (1974–79), whose 1978 album Systems of Romance, co-produced by Conny Plank, not only introduced the R-word into the post-punk zeitgeist, but set the mould for British electronica.

After going solo, Foxx’s stark and visionary 1980 album Metamatic, rendered on a range of synths and “rhythm machines”, yielded two futuristic chart hits he summarised as “carcrash music tailored by Burtons”. Two new songs Burning Car and Miles Away charted later the same year. As a pathfinder who imagined himself to be “the Marcel Duchamp of electropop”, he has always enjoyed cult status among the emergent new wave of electronic musicians.

A decade ago Foxx embarked on a new lease of life and Short Circuit will reunite him with former Ultravox guitarist Robin Simon to perform songs from Systems of Romance.

➢ At BBC News online, Tim Masters writes:

❏ Foxx wants his festival of electronica to capture the spirit of a concert he attended in 1967. “It was like a glimpse of the future,” says Foxx, who hitchhiked down from his native Lancashire to attend the 14-hour Technicolor Dream at Alexandra Palace in London. “I watched Pink Floyd with Syd Barrett, Lennon was around, and Brian Jones, and I saw European art movies like Un chien andalou for the first time — so it was really a life-changing event.” With its art displays, video installations and deejay sets, Foxx promises Short Circuit will be “a sort of hallucinogenic musical afternoon”.

➢ Short Circuit 2010 is curated by John Foxx at
The Roundhouse on June 5

30th anniversary boxset

John Foxx,Metatronic, boxset, electropop Metatronic is a wonderful survey of one man’s post-glam responses to urban dislocation through modernist music that can be as jarring as it is also seductive. Released this month as double CD, plus DVD of relevant promo vids including the early hits Underpass and No-One Driving

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2010 ➤ Rich Kid Steve New (aka Stella Nova) dies at 50

❚ Ex-RICH KIDS GUITARS/VOCALIST MIDGE URE:

“Another one of the good ones gone. My thoughts are with Steve’s family and close friends”

❚ Ex-RICH KIDS DRUMMER RUSTY EGAN, TONIGHT:

“Steve New R.I.P. – Loved by so many. It was a real pleasure to play with you again in 2010. You are now 12 miles high but always in our hearts”

❚ PHOTOGRAPHER STEVE CURRID:

“Steve was always one of the coolest kids in my school… was somehow allowed to bring his cherished acoustic guitar into school in St John’s Wood, and would walk from lesson to lesson strumming along. In later years we had lots of fun together”

Rich Kids, Steve New, 1978, Steve Currid, pink trousers

➢➢ READ ON: Why the Rich Kids were the “missing link” between 70s and 80s – “So what was the missing link during the post-punk vacuum? The tell-tale signs are all over the early photos of Rich Kids and especially in their very Mod-flavoured 1978 debut on Top of the Pops that epitomised power pop …”

➢➢ VIEW ♫ ♫ Rich Kids debut on Top of the Pops, 1978: Glen Matlock, Midge Ure, Steve New and Rusty Egan

Rich Kids, Top Of The Pops, Glen Matlock, Midge Ure, Steve New , Rusty Egan

➢➢ VIEW ♫ ♫ Ghosts of Princes in Towers, 1978: Rich Kids on Revolver, introduced by legendary 60s satirist, Peter Cook (Steve New pictured below)

Rich Kids, Ghosts of Princes in Towers, Revolver, Peter Cook

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2010 ➤ Just the birthday present Steve Strange really wanted this week of all weeks

Steve Strange’s verdict on Marc Warren, the actor who
recreated his role as gatekeeper of the 1980s Blitz club on TV: “Perhaps he was a bit too harsh.”

© by Shapersofthe80s

❚ ONE PRESENT WAS GOING straight into the smallest room in the house. At Steve Strange’s 51st birthday party last night at the Green Carnation in Soho, Rosemary Turner, co-host with Alejandro Gocast of the monthly club-night called The Face, presented him with a poster of his favourite pinup of the moment, the actor Marc Warren giving his rottweiler portrayal of Strange in last Sunday’s TV drama, Worried About the Boy.

Steve Strange © by Shapersofthe80sAll highly amusing, except that the TV drama had cruelly rendered Strange as some kind of tyrant on the door to the 1980 Blitz club which had a legendarily ruthless admissions policy long before red ropes became de rigueur. You were only admitted if you sported an OTT “look”. Even so, by common consent, Warren’s performance was a bit of a harsh portrait. What did you think Steve? “A bit too harsh,” Steve reckoned, biting his lip and holding back the tears.

Still, friends rallied round and champagne corks popped. In the roped-off VIP escape pod veteran clubbers could have put names to a few veteran popsters such as Steve Norman and Martin Kemp of Spandau Ballet, with partners Shelley, Shirlie and their family formation pose teams in tow. There too were Andy Bell of Erasure (new album out next month, with a Vince Clarke remix of the title track, Non-Stop, if you’re sharp), Studio 54 star Windy Tiger who is currently urging us to support Unison over public-sector cuts, trend-shaping photographer Gitte Meldgaard and Paul (Scoop) Simper “from Number One magazine”. The sudden summer weather meant that in the street outside, leading the smokers contingent was fashionista Stephen Linard, on temporary leave from his new roost in Australia.

A new generation of clubbers peered over the rope and moved along, possibly wondering who the heck all the old-timers were. Rose has established a winning formula of mixing the generations at her club-nights, not to mention sprinkling a generous dose of double-barrelled names into the mix. Some of those scarcely out of their acne are being dubbed the Neo Romantics, sporting extreme colourful looks, provocative names and an instinctive eye for a camera.

Strange’s birthday party photographed © by Shapersofthe80s – CLICK TO ENLARGE

➢➢ More birthday pix at Strange’s Facebook page

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2010 ➤ ‘A triumph’ – Boy George’s verdict before transmission of his Worried biopic, but then . . .

 Steve Strange ,George O’Dowd, Marc Warren, Douglas Booth, Blitz Kids

The fictionalised Steve Strange and George O’Dowd: Marc Warren and Douglas Booth eyeball each other outside the Blitz club in the TV biopic Worried About the Boy, 2010 © BBC

➢➢ Boy George interviewed on the BBC TV Blog, May 13,
ahead of last night’s transmission of Worried About the Boy, the story of his teenage nightclubbing years:

❚ “DOUGLAS BOOTH IS AMAZING. Somehow he has the stink of me! He just gets it. There’s something about him that reminds me of me when I was 17. So it’s a triumph. I was really impressed with his acting – and Freddie Fox too, I thought was really good at Marilyn. In fact I’m having a viewing of the film tonight and Marilyn’s coming over with my friends to watch it. The real Marilyn. I said to him, you won’t like it! But you’ll be pleased with our relationship in it. Because you know, he hates everything.

Worried About the Boy, Mathew Horne, Jon Moss

Jon meet Jon: Mathew Horne and Jon Moss

“My relationship with Jon is quite reasonable in this film. Like when we split up in the end, I was thinking I don’t remember it being all that reasonable in real life! It was more frenzied than that.

“Mathew talked a bit like Jon. I know he met Jon before he did it, and they had tea together. He’s really got the way Jon talks. Although Jon was quite posh, he used to play-act at being a bit of a lad. Mathew must have studied it because he really did get it. Mathew’s great.”

But then: ‘Soulless’ – George’s verdict changes after transmission

Boy George, Twitter, Worried About the Boy

George’s tweet, May 16, after the broadcast

OOPS! THERE’S RUSTLING IN THE DOVECOTES OVER
THE PRESS COVERAGE OF ‘WORRIED’…

George’s tweets, May 18

➢➢ Boy George slams his BBC biopic – News agencies spread the word
➢➢ Overnight figures show 2.5 million viewers watched ‘Worried’ – Yahoo TV forums go on stirring the debate

THEN THE REVIEWERS WEIGH IN . . .

➢➢ Rachel Cooke in the New Statesman, May 20 – “Intentional or not, the film was funny, which rather undermined the seriousness with which we were clearly supposed to regard George’s contribution to pop culture”
➢➢ Howard Male on theartsdesk – “Manages to circumvent so many of the clichés common to the rock biopic”
➢➢ In the Mumsnet Telly Addicts forum, Tulpe says – “We definitely need more drama on TV rather than all these dance/singing/reality shows
➢➢ Princess Julia, Robert Elms and Gary Kemp review ‘Worried’ on Richard Bacon’s show, BBC 5Live, May 17
➢➢ Ceri Radford in The Daily Telegraph, May 17 – “Stunning, sensitive and surprisingly moving”
➢➢ VIEW verdicts on ‘Worried’ from BBC2’s The Review Show, May 14:

Julia Peyton Jones, Director of the Serpentine Gallery –
“very moving actually”
Peter York, former style editor of Harpers & Queen –
“an incredibly homo-sexy drama”

➢➢ Alexis Petridis on Radio 4’s Front Row, May 12 – “All surface and no depth”

➢➢ THE ORIGINAL BLITZ KIDS PASS VERDICT ON ‘WORRIED ABOUT THE BOY’

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