InReview InReview

SA QLD
Support independent journalism

Festivals

Peggy Guggenheim – Art Addict

Festivals

Comments
Comments Print article

One would like to think that radical aesthetic movements will find a way to be seen and heard regardless of their place and time, but no doubt a wealthy heiress devoted to the cause helps to ensure success.

Peggy Guggenheim inherited her fortune at 21, when she began collecting Modernist art. She devoted her life to the cultivation of the movement and supported an impressive list of major artists such as Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Max Ernst (whom she later married). She is a major figure of the 20th century, a great visionary and patron, and a saucy subject for a documentary.

Peggy Guggenheim – Art Addict follows audio interviews from 1978-79, just before Guggenheim died at 81. Lisa Immordino Vreeland discovered the tapes in Guggenheim’s house, years after her death, and this is what she did with them.

The documentary is basically a voiceover of Guggenheim speaking candidly and unapologetically about affairs with key artists of the time: Samuel Beckett, Marcel Duchamp and so many others – so many others.

Penny-Guggenheim-2

She claimed Constantin Brancusi was extremely upset to watch her leave the morning after their encounter but she wasn’t sure if it was because he’d fallen in love with her or because he’d given her his sculpture Bird in Space for such a cheap price.

With the mention of each lover, the works of these great artists, alongside the work of other artists she championed, flash on the screen so that there is a montage of Modernism projected. It’s an incredibly visual experience.

There is also footage of Guggenheim looking the ultimate socialite, conservative-Bohemian and stinking rich, yet it’s a shy woman we see, someone socially ill at ease, the very antithesis of what you’d expect from the strong voice laughing and narrating her sexual exploits.

The film is part story-telling / part art tableau and it’s endlessly entertaining.

Vreeland established herself as a talented documentarian with Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel, a film about the legendary fashion editor of Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar, so there is a theme of the aesthetic visionary in her work. How wonderful she chose Peggy Guggenheim as a follow-up to her own grandmother-in-law. What an essential figure in art history and what an engaging eccentric to enjoy.

Peggy Guggenheim – Art Addict screens again on Thursday, October 22, at the Mercury Cinema as part of the 2015 Adelaide Film Festival.

More Adelaide Film Festival coverage

Reviews

Sherpa
Desert Migration
Office

Highly Strung
Our Little Sister 
Secrets and revenge drive The Dressmaker

Stories

Amanda Duthie’s Film Festival picks
When Romeo met Romeo: Remembering the Man
Michelle’s Story of resilience
Star-studded line-up for Adelaide Film Festival

 

 

 

Make a comment View comment guidelines

Support local arts journalism

Your support will help us continue the important work of InReview in publishing free professional journalism that celebrates, interrogates and amplifies arts and culture in South Australia.

Donate Here

Comments

Show comments Hide comments
Will my comment be published? Read the guidelines.

. You are free to republish the text and graphics contained in this article online and in print, on the condition that you follow our republishing guidelines.

You must attribute the author and note prominently that the article was originally published by InReview.  You must also inlude a link to InReview. Please note that images are not generally included in this creative commons licence as in most cases we are not the copyright owner. However, if the image has an InReview photographer credit or is marked as “supplied”, you are free to republish it with the appropriate credits.

We recommend you set the canonical link of this content to https://inreview.com.au/inreview/festivals/2015/10/19/peggy-guggenheim-art-addict/ to insure that your SEO is not penalised.

Copied to Clipboard

More Festivals stories

Loading next article