Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, musician, artist and provocateur, dies at 70
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 26, 2024


Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, musician, artist and provocateur, dies at 70
Genesis P-Orridge at her New York apartment, Oct. 18, 2018. P-Orridge, the provocative British musician, writer and visual artist who pushed the limits of gender and the self, often using her own skin as her medium, died from leukemia at her home in New York on Saturday, March 14, 2020. She was 70. Gioncarlo Valentine/The New York Times.

by John Leland



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, the provocative British musician, writer and visual artist who pushed the limits of gender and the self, often using her own skin as her medium, has dropped her body.

At least, that is how she might have described the transition. Even in death, she would not have wanted to be held to drab social norms.

Genesis’ daughters Genesse and Caresse P-Orridge announced her death in a statement shared on Facebook by the artist’s manager, Ryan Martin. They said Genesis died at her home in New York on Saturday from leukemia. She was 70.

Genesis led the influential British rock bands Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, dabbled as a dominatrix in New York, ran a soup kitchen in Kathmandu, hid out from Scotland Yard, organized a cultlike fan club that asked initiates to send in their bodily fluids, and undertook a long-running surgical project to merge identities with her wife, Jacqueline Mary Breyer, in a single nongendered being they called a “pandrogyne.”

It was a full life. “We’ve not squandered it,” Genesis said last year, using the plural pronoun to convey that she spoke for this dual identity. “We’ve utilized it to the maximum we could.”

She was born Neil Andrew Megson on Feb. 22, 1950, in Manchester, England, the second of two children of Ronald and Muriel Megson, who both worked briefly as semiprofessional actors.

Sickly as an adolescent, she had what she described as a tortured passage through England’s elite public school system, never comfortable with her body and gender. When, as a teenager, she discovered the surrealist drawings of Max Ernst, which mashed together heads of one species with bodies of another, it gave her an early taste of the liberation she would pursue for the next five decades.

“I’d grown up thinking that the world was what I saw, and then I realized it wasn’t — it could be anything at all,” she told The New York Times in 2018.

It was the dawn of the psychedelic 1960s, and she saw that she could create herself in a new form, as an alter ego she called Genesis P-Orridge, who became a canvas for a wide range of experiments: artistic, pharmaceutical, surgical and spiritual.

After art school she formed a confrontational performance group called COUM Transmissions, which shocked the British art world with a 1976 exhibition called “Prostitution” at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts. It included pornography, strippers and used tampons, and led one member of Parliament to call the group “wreckers of civilization.”

The core members of COUM morphed into Throbbing Gristle, an often abrasive experimental band that coined the term “industrial music” to describe its repetitive, amelodic soundscapes.

As with COUM, performances might involve nudity, self-mutilation, dead animals and Holocaust imagery; the band’s best-known single, “Zyklon B Zombie,” referred to the poison gas used in Nazi death camps. (At the time, Genesis lived with the band’s guitarist, Cosey Fanni Tutti, who later described her as domineering and abusive, an accusation Genesis denied.)

Thus began a career that moved from street theater and small rock clubs to established art galleries and museums.

Tim Mohr, who was helping Genesis write her autobiography, described her as “a Zelig-like character” who “connects to the Beats, was friends with William Burroughs and Brion Gysin, then in the midst of the hippies with Timothy Leary.”

“But she didn’t see herself squarely in any of those groups,” Mohr said in an interview. “Basically she was obsessed with not repeating things. So big changes were not daunting. She accepts that changes will cause periods of difficulty.”

Genesis kept evolving. After achieving cult notoriety in Throbbing Gristle, she found a broader rock audience in the 1980s with the occultist psychedelic band Psychic TV. The group’s followers formed a cultlike network called Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth, with members instructed to wear paramilitary uniforms and explore realms of magic and the occult. But in 1991, with the band and the fan club becoming too draining, Genesis relocated to Kathmandu with her first wife, Paula, and their daughters, Genesse and Caresse.

Another page turned: In her absence, the authorities raided Genesis’ home in Brighton, on the English coast, and confiscated materials that were splashed on the news as evidence of a supposed satanic cult. Though no charges were filed, the family went into voluntary exile, ultimately landing in California and the orbit of Leary, the LSD pioneer, who became a friend and influence.

There, as Genesis’ first marriage unwound, she found another unlikely identity, as a single father of two girls, attending PTA meetings in a silver miniskirt and thigh-high boots. “They were good meetings,” she said.

On a trip to New York, she met Jacqueline Breyer, a dominatrix and nurse. Their love was so consuming that they wanted to fuse into a single entity, freed from the binary divisions of gender. After Genesis was severely injured in a fire in the California home of music mogul Rick Rubin in April 1995, the couple moved to New York for her recovery.

They shared clothes and makeup. After Genesis won a lawsuit for the injuries sustained in the fire, they had money and time to push their “pandrogyne” project further. They got matching breast implants. Lady Jaye, as she was known, got a chin implant and had surgery on her nose.

“We’d go to our plastic surgeon and say, what else can we do now to look more alike?” Genesis said.

Then, in 2007, Lady Jaye died of an acute heart arrhythmia. Her death left Genesis alone, one half of an art project that no longer had a second half.

All along, Genesis was writing, painting, creating collages and sculptures that explored gender and sexuality. Once declared a destroyer of civilization, she found her work embraced by the fine art world, including the Tate Britain in London and the Rubin Museum of Art in New York.

Her quest, she felt, remained the same: to pull things apart and put them back together, questioning why they were a certain way. Holding it all together was her most inspired creation, the changing canvas that was herself.

“Some people take their lives and turn them into the equivalent of a work of art,” she said. “So we invented Genesis, but Gen forgot Neil, really. Does that person still exist somewhere, or did Genesis gobble him up?

“We don’t know the answer. But thank you, Neil.”










Today's News

March 15, 2020

Exhibition features some of Lucas Cranach's most beguiling paintings and illustrations

Fossil of 43-million-year-old penguin skin found in Argentina

The talented Mr. Philbrick

California man pleads guilty in $6 million art fraud case

Louvre Abu Dhabi closed in virus shutdown

Looted Zimbabwe national bird statues returned to first home

Culture Minister leads calls to save Welsh medieval scientific manuscript

At the library, last call for beauty and books

Galerie Guido W. Baudach opens an exhibition of works by Philipp Modersohn

Israel halts leisure, culture activities to stem virus

Tate Britain exhibition celebrates the brief but astonishing career of Aubrey Beardsley

Georgia Museum of Art receives large gift of "cutting-edge" contemporary art

Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, musician, artist and provocateur, dies at 70

Spring fine art auctions to grab spotlight at Heritage Auctions

Steven Nelson announced as new Dean of the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts

Rare early stories by Frank Frazetta will headline Weiss Auctions' March 26 sale

Laia Abril wins Foam Paul Huf Award 2020

Broadway is closed, but London's theaters carry on

Auction featuring the collections of the late FBI agent Bill Rosenbaum will be held March 21st

Anicka Yi to undertake 2020 Hyundai Commission for the Turbine Hall

Juno Terrace in Palazzo Vecchio and Verrocchio's Putto reunited following restoration

Amazing Fantasy #15, unique Play Station console lift Heritage Auctions sale beyond $10.75 million

When the Big Apple's culture meccas shut down, they made lemonade

Rare fully functional Apple-1 Computer sold for USD $458,711 at auction

She went blind. Then she danced.

Some Ways On How to Boost Your Home Value

Why Is CBD Oil So Expensive?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful