
In the wake of Roman Polanski’s arrest last week in Switzerland—where he remains in jail waiting for extradition proceedings so he can be taken to the US to face sentencing on his 1977 unlawful-sexual-intercourse-with-a-minor conviction—the Washington Times has published a list of 5 monstres sacrés—sacred monsters—artists who have misbehaved in on a grand scale. Here’s their list, in which Naipaul takes second place after Caravaggio.
1. Caravaggio — The Italian known for his intensely emotional paintings was notorious for getting into violent fights. He left Milan after wounding a police officer and then had to flee Rome when he killed a man in a brawl, remaining a fugitive for the rest of his life.
2. V.S. Naipaul — What was more shocking: the revelation in Patrick French’s recent biography of the Nobel Prize-winning novelist that he felt he had killed his wife with his cruelty? (She discovered he visited prostitutes on reading an interview with him, and he regularly abandoned her to travel with his mistress.) Or that Mr. Naipaul openly admitted his bad behavior in the authorized biography?
3. Louis-Ferdinand Celine — Debate still rages — just this summer in the letters section of the Times Literary Supplement — over the legacy of the influential avant-garde French novelist, who also was a fascist, convicted Nazi collaborator and author of anti-Semitic pamphlets.
4. Lord Byron — Lady Caroline Lamb, one of the Romantic poet’s many romantic victims, famously described him as “mad, bad, and dangerous to know.” His marriage ended in scandal amidst rumors of violence and adultery — including with his half-sister, whose child many believe was his.
5. Richard Wagner — Wagner’s lush but disquieting “Tristan und Isolde” changed the course of classical music. Some believe his nationalistic, anti-Semitic views influenced Adolf Hitler and changed the course of history.
For the original article go to http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/02/top-5-sacred-monsters/
[...] Repeating Islands notes that on the heels of Roman Polanski's arrest, V.S. Naipaul has made the Washington Times‘ list of 5 “sacred monsters—artists who have misbehaved in on a grand scale.” Cancel this reply [...]
By: Global Voices Online » Trinidad & Tobago: Monstre Sacre on October 2, 2009
at 2:37 pm