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Peggy and Pevsner: sex and sensibility

Peggy Guggenheim: The Shock of the Modern

October 1, 2015 11:56
An irreverent original: Pevsner at the microphone

ByMonica Bohm-Duchen, Monica Bohm-Duchen

2 min read

Peggy Guggenheim: The Shock of the Modern
By Francine Prose
Yale University Press, £16.99

Pevsner: The BBC Years
By Stephen Games
Ashgate, £85

One of the less familiar delights of a trip to Venice is a visit to the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, home to Peggy Guggenheim's magnificent collection of early 20th-century art. However, her significance as a pioneering supporter of many of the major names of modern art (Yves Tanguy and Jackson Pollock, to name but two) tends to be overshadowed by her colourful personality and often scandalous love life, thanks in large part to her own - disconcertingly frank - autobiography, first published in 1946, as well as to subsequent accounts of her life.

Although this new biography purports to present a more rounded overview of her achievements (with a brief but valuable assessment of the importance of both her gender and her Jewishness), it, too, ultimately falls into the same trap.