By Marie-Louise Gumuchian
LONDON (Reuters) โ British singer-songwriter Boy George explores celebritiesโ relationship with stardom in a new art collection launching on Friday.
George has depicted music stars David Bowie, Madonna and Prince alongside a self-portrait from his Culture Club days for โFameโ, a limited edition collection with British art retailer Castle Fine Art.
The colourful portraits called โYamamotoโ, โMadame Xโ and โPurple Reignโ respectively depict his idol Bowie in his โTokyo Popโ suit, Madonna as her alter-ego and name of her 2019 album and Prince in a purple coat in reference to his 1984 album โPurple Rainโ.
The works hang alongside Georgeโs older paintings, including other celebrity portraits featuring intricate beading, studs, sequins and safety pins.
โItโs really a reflection of me and how I see the world, my sense of humour, things that I love, my heroes, people that influence me, people that have been important to my life,โ he told Reuters.
โWe all have our own relationship with fame โฆ I would say my relationship with fame has changed dramatically in the last 10 years because my thinking about things has changed so dramatically.โ
The Culture Club frontman, whose real name is George OโDowd, shot to fame in the early 1980s with his distinctive voice and androgynous look as the band topped charts with songs like โDo You Really Want to Hurt Me?โ and โKarma Chameleonโ.
George, 63, described his artistic process as a โsimplistic approach โฆ like getting ready (to go out)โ.
โYou start with a plain face โฆ and as you add things, it turns into something. It gets a sadness or โฆ attitude,โ he said.
โItโs the essence Iโm looking for. Iโm not really trying to create something that looks exactly like somebody from a photograph.โ
(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Alison Williams)
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