You are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

auralsects ago

There's a weird pasta reference in this work featured on FAPEs website by Niki de Saint Phalle (1930-2002)

She was from one of the oldest families in France and her banker father raped her (2 siblings committed suicide later) and she worked with bodily fluids like Abramovic. There are other works like that one: cartoonish travelogues about being seduced and eating pasta (with Chianti - - note the 1983 letter is addressed to Clarice, associated with Hannibal Lecter). Many others are intertwining serpents i.e. kundalini/Kabbalah.

She married a novelist reliant in his works on secret society plot lines and who wrote a supposedly satirical autobiography called My Life in CIA based on rumors from his time in the Paris expat community. She founded a museum for her other husband in Basel.

A funny coincidence is she did a mural on a pizza oven at a restaurant whose owner has recently left to start a children's charity called http://iloveyousosomuch.com named for this wall painting quote of her daughter https://www.sandiegoville.com/2018/09/after-nearly-20-years-in-business.html

Which is basically the same as the one on Liz Lamberts Austin TX coffee shop (the Marfa hotelier absorbed by Standard Hotels) by her lesbian singer gf https://austin.eater.com/2014/3/4/6269805/i-love-you-so-much-explained

Maybe they make the kids say that phrase during torture >_>

@letsdothis3

YogSoggoth ago

In 1996, she began building Gila, a large dragon-shaped children's playhouse for a San Diego private residence. This project was her first use of digital techniques to enlarge drawings into full-scale construction. Who's house was that, and is it still there? The Golem thing was obviously the first weird children's sculpture. The film Daddy sounds a bit odd, but I am not sure if that would be an easy to find thing, being French and all.