Being Here: The Life of Paula Modersohn-Becker
By (Author) Marie Darrieussecq
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
3rd July 2017
Australia
General
Non Fiction
759.3
Winner of 2020 Medal for Excellence in Translation, Australian Academy of the Humanities 2020 (Australia)
Paperback
368
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Born in Germany in 1876, Paula Modersohn-Becker was the first female artist to paint herself not only naked but pregnant. Being Here is a moving account of the life of this ground-breaking Expressionist painter by the acclaimed French writer Marie Darrieussecq. Darrieussecq thrillingly describes Paula's discovery of her style and choice of subjects - women, babies, domestic life. She tells the story of her fraught marriage, her ambivalence about combining her passion for her career as an artist with motherhood. And she recounts her tragic death at thirty-one, days after giving birth.
'Marie Darrieussecq reads the testament of Modersohn-Becker-the letters, the diaries, and above all the paintings-with a burning intelligence and a fierce hold on what it meant and means to be a woman and an artist.' J. M. Coetzee 'A luminous tale about the courage of the lone female artist.' Joan London 'There are few writers who may have changed my perception of the world, but Darrieussecq is one of them.' The Times 'The internationally celebrated author who illuminates those parts of life other writers cannot or do not want to reach.' Independent
Marie Darrieussecq is a French writer born in Bayonne in 1969. Her first novel, Pig Tales, was published in 1996 and subsequently translated into thirty-five languages. She has written some fifteen books for adults, including novels, short fiction, a play, and nonfiction works. In 2013 she was awarded both the Prix Medicis and the Prix des Prix for her novel Men. Being Here, her biography of Paula Modersohn-Becker, was released in 2017. She is a regular contributor to contemporary art magazines in France and Britain and also writes for Liberation and Charlie Hebdo. She lives in Paris.