Womankind – August 2019

(Grace) #1
51

still together. He is a DJ. He has a
child who’s 26 now - he was very lit-
tle when I met his father, just three
at the time. Sometimes he’d sleep
under the record players!
In my late 40s, I became ill and
couldn’t work as much, just Thurs-
day and Saturday nights. I started to
use my time to walk around the city,
looking at all the artwork turning up
on the walls, street artists putting up
paste-ups and stencils, and I started
photographing it. And then I worked
with a publisher, turning these pho-
tos into six books on street art. Pho-
tography came at a good time for me;
it was after the 2008 recession when
nobody wanted to employ a DJ and
gigs were hard to find. I stayed afloat
by selling books and giving lectures.
At about the same time, I was asked
to work with another DJ at the Yellow
Lounge, a club in Hamburg - DJing
with classical music. I did this club
with another DJ for seven years,
working with classical musicians who
were keen to do more unorthodox
avant-garde stuff.
My father died 20 years ago, at


  1. He was ill for the last six years of
    his life. When he was 70, he had a
    hemorrhage and was left partly para-
    lysed. It became very difficult for him
    to write. I was in Italy when I heard
    the news that he’d had a stroke and
    it took me about 24 hours to be at
    his bedside. He’d been waiting for
    me, and he died not long after. He
    was an artist, a journalist, a fiction
    writer, but he was also a good man.
    My mother is 83 now. Actually,
    we just came home from Rome yes-
    terday. My God, she is wearing me
    out! She doesn’t see very well and
    walks with a cane, but we walked 15
    kilometres in Rome. When we ar-
    rived at the hotel, she said, “When
    are we going to eat something? First
    I need a cocktail.” I hope I’m exactly
    like her when I’m her age.


51 Portraits LETTERS FROM COPENHAGEN

still together. He is a DJ. He has a
child who’s 26 now - he was very lit-
tle when I met his father, just three
at the time. Sometimes he’d sleep
under the record players!
In my late 40s, I became ill and
couldn’t work as much, just Thurs-
day and Saturday nights. I started to
use my time to walk around the city,
looking at all the artwork turning up
on the walls, street artists putting up
paste-ups and stencils, and I started
photographing it. And then I worked
with a publisher, turning these pho-
tos into six books on street art. Pho-
tography came at a good time for me;
it was after the 2008 recession when
nobody wanted to employ a DJ and
gigs were hard to find. I stayed afloat
by selling books and giving lectures.
At about the same time, I was asked
to work with another DJ at the Yellow
Lounge, a club in Hamburg - DJing
with classical music. I did this club
with another DJ for seven years,
working with classical musicians who
were keen to do more unorthodox
avant-garde stuff.
My father died 20 years ago, at



  1. He was ill for the last six years of
    his life. When he was 70, he had a
    hemorrhage and was left partly para-
    lysed. It became very difficult for him
    to write. I was in Italy when I heard
    the news that he’d had a stroke and
    it took me about 24 hours to be at
    his bedside. He’d been waiting for
    me, and he died not long after. He
    was an artist, a journalist, a fiction
    writer, but he was also a good man.
    My mother is 83 now. Actually,
    we just came home from Rome yes-
    terday. My God, she is wearing me
    out! She doesn’t see very well and
    walks with a cane, but we walked 15
    kilometres in Rome. When we ar-
    rived at the hotel, she said, “When
    are we going to eat something? First
    I need a cocktail.” I hope I’m exactly
    like her when I’m her age.


Portraits LETTERS FROM COPENHAGEN
Free download pdf