RARE BOOK GUIDE - THE RUNNERS, THE RIDERS & THE ODDS

27 October 2009

Laughing Torso / A Bohemian Word Cloud


I was going to do something on Nina Hamnett's 'Laughing Torso' which has a splendid cover which cannot be found on the web and I left my copy at home. Will scan in on return. Nina Hamnett (1890 – 1956) was a Welsh artist, writer and artist's model (that's her by Modigliani.) She became known as the Queen of Bohemia and wrote this memoir in 1932. Aleister Crowley unsuccessfully sued her and the publisher for libel over allegations of Black Magic made in the book and it became a best seller. The Great Beast's magickal activities are also dealt with in Betty May's more valuable Tiger Woman another great bohemian memoir (1929). Nice jacketed copies of 'Torso' can fetch £100 and the limited edition £150+. The 'torso' refers to a sculpture of her by Gaudier Brzeska. She was close to Modigliani and this reminiscence of him gives a flavour of the work, Nina is sitting alone in a Parisian cafe:
"Suddenly the door opened and in came a man with a roll of newspaper under his arm. He wore a black hat and corduroy suit. He had curly black hair and brown eyes and was very good looking. He came straight up to me and said, pointing to his chest, ‘Je suis Modigliani, Juif, Jew,’ unrolled his newspaper, and produced some drawings. He said, ‘Cinq francs.' They were very curious and interesting, long heads and pupil-less eyes. I thought them very beautiful. ...I gave him five francs and chose one of a head in pencil. He sat down and we tried to understand each other and I said that I knew Epstein and we got on very well, although I could not understand much of what he said. He used to drink a great deal of wine and absinthe when he could afford it. Picasso and the really good artists thought him very talented and bought his works but the majority of people in the Quarter thought of him only as a perfect nuisance and told me that I was wasting my money..."
The last sentence shows how wrong some people can be - those drawings are now worth 100,000 times the price that Nina paid... The book, as Robert Scholes says in his splendid 'Paradoxy of Modernism', offers us 'glimpses of the bohemian core of Modernism and ...perspectives on the roles open to women in that dark center of Modernist art.' He also looks at the lives of the spirited Kiki (of Montparnasse) and the elusive Beatrice Hastings who wrote under at least 16 pseudonyms.

In my research in GoogleBooks (these dudes are bringing in a renaissance of scholarship and learning) I came across a sort of snapshot summary of the text of 'Laughing Torso' which they call 'Common terms and phrases' but is otherwise known as a 'word cloud.' Edited down a little it gives an impressionistic summary of all things boho-- espadrilles are there and only the berets are missing:-
Absinthe accordion Aleister Crowley Arthur Rimbaud Augustus John Bal Musettes beautiful black hat bottles Brancusi cafe Calvados Camden Town champagne Chelsea Cocteau Countess Cubist danced delighted Diaghilev Dieppe dined dinner Dirty Dick's drank drawings dressed drink Eiffel Tower Erik Satie espadrilles Fitzroy Square Fitzroy Street Foujita francs Gare Montparnasse Gertrude Stein girl Golf Juan guitar Henri Rousseau Horace Cole Iris Tree James Joyce Jean Cocteau Latin Quarter Les Halles Les Six lunch Luxembourg Gardens Modigliani Montmartre Montparnasse myself Nancy Cunard Newhaven night Omega Workshops Osbert Sitwell Oscar Wilde painted painter Paris Paul Verlaine Prefecture of Police restaurant Roger Fry Rotonde Sickert Stravinsky studio Vermouth wife wine woman wonderful Wyndham Lewis young

4 comments:

Post Mortem Books said...

Nina Hamnett, I understand, was a lover of Augustus John at one time who, apparently, put his hand in his pocket to finance Nina's pregnancy terminations more than once. She was also associated with E.J.Moeran for a while and the Eynsford set which included Philip Heseltine (Peter Warlock) - as mad a hatter as the Great Beast. Copious amounts of neck oil seem to have been the common denominator...

Bookride said...

Thanks PM. Nina and Augustus John both came from Pembrokeshire which may have been a bond. When he met up with her on one occasion he declared with some degree of pride, “We are the sort of people our fathers warned us against!”. I have heard that phrase but never attributed it to AJ.

The word cloud reveals a certain interest in 'neck oil' consumption. Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder...

Thersites said...

Nina Hamnett relieved Anthony powell of his virginity and was a partial model for Gypsy Jones in A Dance to the Music of Time.

An extraordinary book on Peter Warlock is Capriol for Mother by his putative son Nigel Heseltine, who claims- among other things- that Warlock's wife was not in fact his mother and that the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren poisoned Warlock because Warlocj had made a jocular will leaving all his possessions to van Dieren.

James Bridle said...

So good to hear positive comments (over several posts) about Google Books from the trade. I work in books and ebook publishing, and on the web, and am frequently getting into fights about the future.

I'm not a total apologist for Google, but I think the Books programme is A Good Thing...

P.S. If you ever care to write about Jocelyn Brooke, I'll double my subscription. Or something.