Read Confessions of an Art Addict Online
Authors: Peggy Guggenheim
For several years Clement Greenberg had said that when I came back to New York he would like to make a show called âHommage a Peggy', to include all my âwar babies', as I called the painters I had discovered during the war. It was to have been a huge exhibition launched with a champagne party. But I had to decline. Greenberg had become artistic adviser to French and Company, where it would have to have been held, but I did not like what they exhibited in their galleries, nor what most of my âwar babies' were now painting. In fact, I do not like art today. I think it has gone to hell, as a result of the financial attitude. People blame me for what is painted today because I had encouraged and helped this new movement to be born. I am not responsible. Eighteen years ago there was a pure pioneering spirit in America. A new art had to be bornâAbstract Expressionism. I fostered it. I do not regret it. It produced Pollock, or rather, Pollock produced it. This alone justifies my efforts. As to the others, I don't know what got into them.
Some people say that I got stuck. Maybe it is true. I think this century has seen many great movements, but the one which undoubtedly stands out way beyond all the others is the Cubist movement. The face of art has been transformed. It is natural that this should have come about, as a result of the industrial revolution. Art mirrors its age, therefore it had to change completely, as the world changed so vastly and so quickly. One cannot expect every decade to produce genius. The twentieth century has already produced enough. We should not expect any more. A field must lie fallow every now and then. Artists try too hard to be original. That is why we have all this painting that isn't painting any more. For the moment we should content ourselves with what the twentieth century has producedâPicasso, Matisse, Mondrian, Kandinsky, Klee, Léger, Braque, Gris, Ernst, Miró, Brancusi, Arp, Giacometti, Lipchitz, Calder, Pevsner, Moore and Pollock. Today is the age of collecting, not of creation. Let us at least preserve and present to the masses all the great treasures we have.
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Abstract Expressionism, 104, 173
Ahmed, 151
Alfieri, Bruno, 121â2, 132
Apollonio, Umbro, 119â20
Arensberg collection, 89, 170
Argon, Professor, 121
Arp, Jean, 51â2, 76â7, 105, 141
Arp, Sophie, 51â2, 76
Art of This Century,
94
Bacci, Edmondo, 136
Bacon, Francis, 158
Barker, Jack, 104
Barnes collection, 169â70
Barr, Alfred, 56, 91, 104, 108â9, 145,158
Barr, Marga, 121
Bauer, Rudolph, 52
Baziotes, William, 104, 105
Beckett, Samuel, 48â51, 57, 61
Beny, Roloff, 125
Berenson, Bernard, 34, 122â3
Bewley, Marius, 112
Blesh, Rudi,
Modern Art in U.S.A.,
145
Bowles, Paul, 137, 151
Brady, Robert, 169
Brancusi, 48, 71â3
Brauner, Victor, 58â9, 80
Breton, André, 57, 60, 79â80, 88â90,92,94
Breton, Jacqueline, 60
Broadwater, Boden, 113
Bucarelli, Dr Palma, 146â7
Cabbot, Elise, 125
Cahiers d'Art,
81, 120, 133
Calder, Alexander, 54, 111â12
Callas, Nicco, 91
Capote, Truman, 145
Cardiff, Maurice, 165
Carlebach, Mr, 92, 172
Carrain, Vittorio, 123, 132, 133,141, 160
Carrington, Leonora, 70â1, 81, 85â6,93, 166
Celeghin, 124
Chirico, de, 105
Clark, Sir Kenneth, 63
Clark, Lady, 63â4
Clifford, Henry, 170
Cocteau, Jean, 48â9, 143
Colp, Dr Eugene, 143
Congdon, Bill, 135, 138
Connolly, Jean, 107
Consagra, 130, 131
Corbusier, Le, 134, 155â6
Crippa, 138
Dali, Salvador, 88, 111
Davie, Allan, 142
Davis, Bill, 108, 109
Delaunay, 109
Doesberg, van, 64, 105, 114, 135
Doesberg, Nellie van, 63â5, 69â70,73, 76â7, 110, 114, 135
Dominguez, 59
Dova, 138
Drew, Jane, 155
Duchamp, Marcel, 47â8, 51â2, 54,63, 101â2, 104, 106â7
Dunn, James, 121
Eichmann, Ingeborg, 123
Einaudi, President, 120â1
Eliot, T. S., 63
Eluard, Paul, 60, 88
Ernst, Jimmy, 86â8, 91, 102â3
Ernst, Max, 70, 79â81, 85â95, 102â3, 106â7, 111, 113, 123, 141
Farcy, Monsieur, 77â8
Fleischman, Helen, 33, 41
Fleischman, Leon, 33
Flora, Francesco, 125
Ford, Charles Henri, 91
Frankfurter, Alfred, 140
Fry, Maxwell, 155
Fry, Varian, 80
Gallatin collection, 92, 170
Giacometti, 73â4, 105, 141
Giglio, Victor, 27
Gottlieb, Adolph, 105
Greenberg, Clement, 108, 145, 172
Guerin, Jean, 143
Guggenheim, Harry, 165, 167â8
Guggenheim Museum, 167â9
Guggenheim, Solomon, 52â3, 165
Guggenheim, Mrs Solomon, 62, 95
Haddow, Paxton, 154â5, 157
Hare, David, 105, 122
Hartman, Mrs, 24
Helion, Jean, 105, 133
Heller, Ben, 169, 171
Henderson, Wyn, 48, 50, 55, 61
Hirshfield, Morris, 105, 112
Hoffmann, Hans, 105
Holms, John, 41â4, 51
Hunter, Sam, 144, 145
Janis, Sydney, 112, 144
Jewell, Edward Alden, 103
Jolas, Maria, 50, 76, 77
Joyce, Giorgio, 77
Joyce, James, 50â1, 57
Kalo, Frida, 166â7
Kandinsky, 52â3, 110, 136
Keytes, George, 157
Kiesler, Frederik, 99â102, 114, 168,169
Kohn, Lucile, 30, 32
Kootz, Sam, 106
Krassner, Lee.
See
Pollock, Lee
Kuh, Katherine, 142
Lasalle, Philip, 131
Le Fevre Foinet, René, 79
Léger, Fernand, 74â5
Leon, Paul, 50
Loeb, Harold, 33
Lorenzetti, Dr, 126, 132â3
Lowengard, Armand, 34
Luce, Mrs Clare Boothe, 137â8
Marchiori, Professor Giuseppe, 130
Marini, Marino, 130
Martin, Michael Combe, 126
Matisse, 170
Matta, 105, 136, 158
Mazia,Violette de, 169â70
McCarthy, Mary, 113
Miller, Dorothy, 109
Minotaur,
120
Miró, 110
Mondrian, Piet, 56â7, 94, 104, 110â11
Moore, Henry, 54â6
Morey, Dr, 146
Morley, Dr Grace McCann, 90, 108
Motherwell, Robert, 104
Museum of Modern Art, 63, 70, 85,87, 91, 108â9, 140â1
Mysore Art Museum, 153
O'Keefe, Georgia, 34
Pallucchini, Rudolfo, 118â22, 126, 139
Parmeggiani, Tancredi.
See
Tancredi
Parsons, Betty, 109, 114, 144
Passero, 160, 162
Paulon, Flavia, 129, 130
Pegeen, 138â9, 143
Pereira, I. Rice, 105
Perrocco, Dr, 126
Pevsner, Antoine, 54
Picasso, 110
Pignatelli, Princess, 157
Plastique,
51
Pollock, Jackson, 104â9, 114, 123, 132â3, 140, 144â5, 173
Pollock, Lee, 106, 109â10, 145, 171â2
Putzel, Howard, 69â70, 86, 92, 99â100, 102, 104â5
Ragghianti, Dr, 124â5
Raoul, 143â4, 151
Read, Sir Herbert, 47, 58, 61â4, 104,131,143â4
Rebay, Baroness, 53â4, 62, 165
Reis, Bernard, 88, 135, 143, 171
Reis, Mrs Bernard, 88, 158, 171
Reinhardt, Ad, 105
Richter, Hans, 105
Rivera, Diego, 106, 107
Rome, Modern Art Museum, 146
Roosevelt, Mrs Eleanor, 103â4
Rothko, Mark, 105
Roy, Jaminy, 153â4
Sadler, Sir Michael, 52
Sage, Kay.
See
Tanguy, Kay Sage
Saheb, Thakore, 153
Sandberg, Dr, 120, 134
San Francisco Museum, 90
Santomaso, 117â18, 120, 136, 139
Scarpa, 119
Shaw, Walter, 143
Soby, James, 103, 104
Sterne, Hedda, 105
Stieglitz, Alfred, 34
Stijl, de, movement, 64
Still, Clyfford, 105
Surrealist feud, 60, 88
Sweeney, James Johnson, 103â4, 107, 135, 144, 165, 167â9
Sylva, Vera da, 78
Tancredi (Parmeggiano), 135â6, 138
Tanguy, Kay Sage, 79, 88
Tanguy, Yves, 57
Tanning, Dorothea, 103
Tenzing Norkey, 157
Titanic,
26â7
Togerloo, van, 75
Tunnard, John, 56
Vail, Lawrence, 33â6, 39â41, 58, 72, 78, 80, 94, 102, 105, 143
Vedova, 117, 120, 136
Velde, Geer van, 49
Viani, 131
Waldman, Peggy, 47
Winston, Mrs Harry, 108
Wright, Frank Lloyd, 167â9
Yeats, Jack, 49
Zervos, Christian, 133
Zorzi, Count, 120â1, 138â9
PEGGY GUGGENHEIM
was born into affluence and a lavish lifestyle. Bored with her seemingly “pedestrian” life in New York, she headed for Europe in 1921, where she would sow the seeds for a future as one of modern art's most important and influential figures.
In the midst of Europe's avant-garde circles, she reveled in her love affairs with prominent artists and also became a serious collector. Her Guggenheim Jeune gallery in London brought figures such as Brancusi, Cocteau, Kandinsky, and Arp to the forefront of the art scene. Later, her New York gallery would launch the careers of Jackson Pollock and Robert Motherwell, among others.
In her own inimitable and bawdy style, Peggy Guggenheim gives us an insider's glimpse into the modern art world with intimate, often surprising portrayals of many of its most significant players. Candid, clever, and always entertaining, here is a memoir that captures a valuable chapter in the history of modern art, as well as the spirit of one of its greatest advocates.
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Foreword Copyright © 1979 by Gore Vidal. Reprinted by permission of William Morris Agency, Inc. On behalf of the Author.
C
ONFESSIONS OF AN ART ADDICT
. Copyright © 1960 Peggy Guggenheim.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Guggenheim, Peggy, 1898â1979
Confessions of an art addict / Peggy Guggenheim. â 1st Ecco ed.
      p. cm.
Autobiographical.
Updated ed. of: Out of this century. 1st ed. 1980.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-88001-576-4
EPub Edition April 2013 ISBN 9780062288363
1. Guggenheim, Peggy, 1898â1979. 2. Art patronsâUnited StatesâBiography. I. Guggenheim, Peggy, 1898-1979 Out of this century. II. Title.
N5220.G886A3 Â Â Â Â 1997
709'.2âdc21 Â Â Â Â 97-15461
9Â 8Â 7Â 6Â 5Â 4Â 3Â 2
FIRST ECCO EDITION
1997
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