Want cheap Books? Compare Book prices before you buy!   
Best Book Price - Cheap UK Books                       
 Enter your new search here:
     
Help FAQ Links
  Books     DVDs     CDs     Games    

Out of This Century: The Autobiography of Peggy Guggenheim

By: Peggy Guggenheim
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Andre Deutsch Ltd
ISBN: 0233001387
ISBN-13: 9780233001388
Released: 01 Jul 2005
RRP: £10.99
Average Rating:


Comparing Prices...

Customer Reviews

Addiction indeed - and not only to Art! - By: Ralph Blumenau, 09 Jan 2006
What a self-indulgent, rackety & restless life this woman has led, & she makes no bones about it! As a young woman she was part of a bohemian setin Paris, promiscuous, often drunk, dancing the night through, almost like a caricature of a flapper. She was quite neurotic, often had hysterical weeping fits, & her relationships were usually stormy & quarrelsome, punctuated by long sulks when she wouldn't speak to her husbands. The first of these, Laurence Vail, was as neurotic as she was & very violent, as often as notin public places. But she was obviously not easy to live with either, & tactful restraintin behaviour or utterance was never one of her qualities, even with men on whom she was dependent. (The book, too, is "frank" & completely lackingin reticence.)

Her immense wealth enabled her to travel constantly all across Europe (we always learnin which motor-car), & much of this book is an account of every journey she made. What she chooses to record seems quite undiscriminating, often jejune & sometimes positively verges on the Pooterish, not least because of its uninspired style.

She knew nothing about art or music until John Holms, her partner after her first divorce, began to teach her about it, & one always suspects that it was artists rather than art that really attracted her. She admits that even whenin 1938 she decided to open an art galleryin London, at the time "I couldn't distinguish one thingin art from another" & acted on the advice of Marcel Duchamp who "taught me the difference between Abstract & Surrealist art"! (p.161). And "in spite of the fact that I was opening a modern art galleryin London, I much preferred old masters" (p.163). These of course were no longer sexually available, while living artists were. She slept with an amazing number of them (as well as with, for example, Samuel Beckett & the kinky Roland Penrose), so there must have been some powerful allure about her into her forties & beyond, which does not come acrossin the book.

She soon began to collect not only artists but also their works, making it a principle to buy at least one work of art from every show she gave (p.166), butin the whole book there is no genuine appraisal of any work of art - only an account of her perpetual acquisitiveness. However, one has to admit that her investments were excellentin commercial terms. She bought & gave the first showings to a number of modern artists whose work would become immensely more valuablein time, & she especially prides herself on having made Jackson Pollock famous.

She was livingin occupied & thenin Vichy France during the early years of the German occupation, getting out not long before the United States entered the war; but she never sets down any reflections on the war as such, not then nor after Pearl Harbour, commenting only on how bureaucratic matters (visas, currency transfers, restrictions on the movementsin the United States of her second husband, Max Ernst, as "an enemy alien") affected her own activities. While France wasin torment, she can write, "During the summer [of 1940] I got rather bored & started having my hair dyed a different color every few weeks to amuse myself. First it was chestnut ... but then I got the wild idea of having it bleached bright orange... As a result of all the time I spentin the beauty parlor, I conceived a sort of weakness for the little hairdresser who worked so hard on my beauty. From re-reading D.H.Lawrence I also got a romantic idea that I should have a man who belonged to a lower class" (p.221/2) & we are led to assume that she had a fling with him. "Soon this got boring, & I needed a change". (p.222). She was as promiscuousin her forties as she had beenin her twenties.

The bulk of this book - 324 out of 385 pages - was first publishedin 1946 when she was 48 years old. One part of the rest she published firstin 1960 when she was 62 & the other partin 1977 when she was nearly eighty. Those parts show herin a much more sober light, when she has become the grande dame of Venice. By that time she has no taste for what was then the avant garde: "I do not like art today. I think it has gone to hell, as the result of the financial attitude. People blame me for what is painted today because I had encouraged & helped this new movement to be born. In the early 1940s there was a pure pioneering spiritin America. A new art had to be born - Abstract Expressionism. I fostered it. I do not regret it. It produced Pollock or rather Pollock produced it. This alone justifies my effort. As to the others, I don't know what got into them. Some people say that I got stuck. Maybe it is true.... Today is the age of collecting, not of creating." H'm!

So at the end we have a rare moment of reflection. For the rest, this is basically a shallow, tedious & excessively long book written by a spoilt, wealthy & rather silly woman; & it would not have been worth persevering with if the incidents she records did not throw some light on the weird personalities & behaviour of some very famous peoplein the artistic world, most of whom were psychologically as mixed-up & temperamental as she was. One feels there must have been more to her than that, & perhaps the recent biographies written about her by Anton Gill or Mary Dearborn reveal another side of her; but after having read her own book, I have no interestin reading any more about her.

Book Categories

Browse through the categories below:
Antiquarian, Rare & Collectable
Art, Architecture & Photography
Audio CDs
Audio Cassettes
Biography
Business, Finance & Law
Calendars, Diaries, Annuals & More
Children's Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Fiction
Food & Drink
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Family & Lifestyle
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Humour
Languages
Mind, Body & Spirit
Music, Stage & Screen
Poetry, Drama & Criticism
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science & Nature
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Scientific, Technical & Medical
Society, Politics & Philosophy
Sports, Hobbies & Games
Study Books
Travel & Holiday
Young Adult
Copyright ©2003-2008 BestBookPrice.co.uk. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of BestBookPrice.co.uk is prohibited.
No warranty either express or implied is made about the accuracy of the information on this site