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The Sorcerer's Apprentice: Picasso, Provence, and Douglas Cooper

by John Richardson


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  • In the heady days after the Second World War, Douglas Cooper emerged as the world's preeminent collector of Cubist art. This arch queen was more than a mere financier of great artists. He was a patron in the full sense of the word, writing about, befriending, and conspiring with Picasso, Braque, Gris, Leger, and many other modernist luminaries.

    John Richardson was a young, ambitious writer when he first met Cooper at a book party for Paul Bowles' The Sheltering Sky. Sparks flew, but not as one might imagine. Richardson describes his mentor-to-be as a mean, selfish, petulant, and overweight man, blinded in one eye by a near-fatal automobile accident. " Alcohol overcame my initial revulsion," he writes. "A kiss from me, I fantasized, would transform this toad into a prince, or at least a Rubens Bacchus. But Douglas turned out to be as rubbery as a Dalí biomorph. No wonder he was mad at the world."

    The 12-year relationship that developed between the two men was complex and far surpassed any bourgeois attempts to recreate the institution of marriage. Cooper and Richardson were paramours, father and son, master and disciple, comrades in art, and finally rivals. Their relationship was fascinating not least because of the great names and great antics that shaped their lives. To name only a few of the celebrated artists, writers, and politicians who filter through Richardson's memoir: Francis Bacon (who early on tells Richardson that Cooper is a "treacherous woman"), Lucian Freud, Jacques Lacan, Jean Cocteau, Truman Capote, Peggy Guggenheim, Ernest Hemingway (caught in an embarrassing pose at a bullfight), Alberto Giacometti, even the Queen of England herself. Many of them were members of what Richardson calls "la haute pédérastie." Some of these people Richardson meets on his own; Cooper provides an introduction to others, like Picasso. The artist and some of his mistresses -- Jacqueline Roque, Rosita Hugué, Paule de Lazerne, Dora Maar -- move through Cooper and Richardson's life and the home they build in an old chateau in Provence, which they name Castille.

    Richardson, the author of A Life of Picasso (two volumes so far), is a good witness to both these men's lives. They are a complementary couple -- between Douglas' cold bitchiness and Picasso's own macho insecurities they are not the easiest men to love. Although Cooper's brilliance and generosity is sometimes overshadowed by his cunning and competitiveness, there is a fondness to the way Richardson recalls their time at Castille.

    The Sorcerer's Apprentice is an engrossing read and has the qualities of a great page turner. Richardson's memoir has been compared to the writing of Evelyn Waugh, and rightly so. There is a confidence and ease to its conversational tone that is hard to turn away from. Reading parts of it are like watching a train wreck unfold.

    -- Lawrence Chua


     
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