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   Book Info

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Infinite Variety: The Life and Legend of Marchesa Casati  
Author: Scot D. Ryersson
ISBN: 0816645205
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
The Marchesa Luisa Casati (1881-1957) cultivated celebrity through morbid eccentricity in dress and lifestyle, becoming, before 1920, a darling of portraitists, photographers, designers and gossip columnists. With her androgynous figure, bizarre makeup and disorderly dyed hair, she was the "naked sorceress" to one observer, "the Medusa of the Grand Hotels" to another. She was mistress to many, including author and adventurer Gabriele D'Annunzio, who was her great love; she pursued him as obsessively as she pursued notoriety, her exhibitionist mania her only talent. Her extravagant oddity proved expensive and carried with it an inevitable obsolescence. The authors describe her unnaturally red hair, cadaverous pallor and scarlet lips as giving her in middle age "the unsettling appearance of a Kabuki performer." By the time she was 50, she had gone from immense wealth to bankruptcy and from tantalizing and demanding muse to a lurid Miss Havisham on the edge of a diminishing clique of admirers. At the end she was forced to constantly change her addresses in London, her fame in Italy and France having run out. To one English acquaintance, then, her attire resembled "the plumage of a shabby raven." The chapel at nearby Harrods handled her funeral. Ryersson and Yaccarino strain to astonish the reader, but the empty excess of Casati's life quickly palls. Despite the authors' efforts, the overwrought Marchesa remains a forgettable figure. 42 b&w illus. and 8 color plates not seen by PW. Author tour. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

The New York Times Book Review, Leslie Chess Feller
A meticulously researched biography, Infinite Variety is as much art history as chronicle of personal obsession.

From Kirkus Reviews
She strolled Venice's Piazza San Marco clad only in a fur cloak, escorted by pet cheetahs on jeweled leashes; she adorned herself with snakes, live and stuffed, and accessorized an evening costume with chicken blood. She was a Belle Epoque eccentric, big time. Luisa Casati was also extraordinarily wealthy in her own right, heir to a Milanese cotton fortune and wife of an Italian noble. Her marriage began to disintegrate after just a few years, when she began an affair and a lifelong friendship with Italian poet and writer Gabriele D`Annunzio. Here she began to re-create herself, evolving from a rather shy, conformist young woman to the flamboyant pale-faced redhead, her remarkable green eyes rimmed by kohl, who would be the subject of more than 130 portraits, many by famous artists. She decorated a villa in Rome, refurbished a Venetian palazzo (now the Peggy Guggenheim museum), and threw extravagant parties and costume balls, mingling socialites and her newfound artist friends. As illustrator/graphic designer Ryersson and film critic Yaccarino describe it, her behavior grew increasingly bizarre: life-size wax replicas of herself and others were seated as guests at dinner parties but she continued to intrigue serious artists like Man Ray, Jean Cocteau, and Augustus John, who was her lover briefly and a friend until she died. Eventually, her self-indulgent life style left her $25 million in debt; in 1932 her personal possessions were auctioned off. She resettled in England, sinking into poverty so acute that it was a choice between food for herself or for her dogs. (The dogs won.) Her life was the inspiration for a play starring Vivien Leigh and an Ingrid Bergman film. Casati died in 1957, her tombstone inscribed: ``Age can not wither nor custom stale her infinite variety.'' In essence, a predictably superficial superstar bio-Cher at the turn of the century, as it were. (42 b&w, 8 color illustrations) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Vanity Fair
"Fascinating . . . with or without her cheetahs, Casati’s circus of the self makes her a natural for the new millennium."

New York Times
"A meticulously researched biography, Infinite Variety is as much art history as chronicle of personal obsession."

Vogue
"A delicious edition of extremely rare and retro refinement, the biography of the mythical marquise . . . An indispensable book."

New Yorker
"Judicious historians of frivolity who capture the tone of a life that was obscenely profligate yet strangely pure."

ELLE
"A beautifully written biography . . . Prepare to be astonished."

Annette Tapert, author of The Power of Glamour
"Bravo to the authors for bringing to life one of the great exotics of this century!"

Sheridan Morley, London Drama Critic, International Herald Tribune
"Fabulous and mysterious, the Marchesa Casati was the 'dark lady' of her day. The gap on the shelf where her biography always should have been is now magnificently filled by Ryersson and Yaccarino with one of the most amazing stories of our time."

John Richardson, Picasso biographer
"It's high time for a biography of this mysterious muse. Scot D. Ryersson and Michael Orlando Yaccarino have done a wonderful job in researching her life for the first time and coming up with a book both informative and enormously entertaining."

Stephen Calloway, Curator, Victoria & Albert Museum
"Like a siren seated on the rocks of Capri, or a fabulously plumed bird of paradise shimmering in the grandest salon, the Marchesa Casati was the most extraordinary of the self-styled femmes fatales. Attracting admirers and lovers wherever she appeared, her exoticism beguiled writers, artists, and aristocrats throughout Europe. Now, at last we have a book which captures the legend; this engrossing study of the divine Luisa unfolds the fascinating story of her bizarre, baroque life in riveting detail."

Book Description
The updated biography of the most spectacular fashion and artistic muse of the twentieth century.




Infinite Variety: The Life and Legend of Marchesa Casati

FROM THE PUBLISHER

For the first three decades of the twentieth century, the Marchesa Casati astounded Europe. She was infamous for her evening strolls -- naked beneath her furs, parading cheetahs on diamond-studded leashes. Artists such as Man Ray and Augustus John painted, sculpted, and photographed her; writers, including Jean Cocteau, Ezra Pound, and Jack Kerouac, praised her strange beauty. Couturiers Fortuny, Poiret, and Erte dressed her. The extravagance ended in 1930 when Casati was more than twenty-five million dollars in debt, but her legacy continues to inspire. Designers John Galliano, Karl Lagerfeld, and Tom Ford have each paid homage to her eccentric style, and her life has been the subject of films and plays. Fully authorized, accurate, and updated, this is the fantastic story of the Marchesa Luisa Casati.

     



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