Edwige Belmore
Edwige, also known as Edwige Belmore and Edwige Braun-Belmore and la reine du punk a Paris (February 26, 1957 - September 22, 2015) was a French model, singer, artist and actress. She was considered a blonde icon of 1980s No Wave New York/France connection after she appeared on the cover of Façade magazine (No. 4) kissing Andy Warhol on the cheek. The magazine cover text read: “The Queen of Punk and the Pope of Pop”.[1][2][3] Edwige founded (with Claude Arto) the post-punk synth pop musical group Mathématiques modernes with which she sang and released four albums. She was for a time the doorman/bouncer/promoter of the club Le Palace. In New York she promoted nights at Area, Danceteria, Tunnel and The Palladium Niteclub. She was photographed by famous photographers of the day like Helmut Newton, Maripol, Jean-Baptiste Mondino and Pierre et Gilles who photographed her as Sainte Gertrude the Great. She walked the runway for Jean-Paul Gaultier and Thierry Mugler. Throughout the 80s, Edwige went back and forth from the Lower East Side of New York and Paris where she sang at Les Bains-Douches.[4] BiographyEdwige Bessuand was born in February 26, 1957[5] in Paris, and was taken into state care after being abandoned.[6] As a teenager, she lived in the Kremlin-Bicêtre. Her adoptive parents separated and kicked her out of the house when she was 17.[6][1][7] Edwige went to live with Maud Molyneux and Paquita Paquin, on the rue Vavin in Montparnasse, where she gradually turned into a punk rocker, shaving her hair and dyeing it platinum blond when it grew back.[8][9] She spent her nights at Le Sept with Molyneux and Paquin,[10] at Le Bains Douches where she sometimes performed on stage[11] or at La Main Bleue with Paquita and Eva Ionesco.[12] In 1979, Edwige founded (with Claude Arto) the post-punk synth pop musical group Mathématiques modernes with which she sang and released four albums.[13] She was for a time the doorman/bouncer/promoter of the club Le Palace.[14][15][2] Her meeting with Paloma Picasso introduced her to the world of Andy Warhol and the jet-set. She became friends with Yves Saint Laurent and Loulou de la Falaise.[1] She went to New York for the first time at the end of 1977 and attended the Mudd Club and Studio 54.[15] She returned regularly to New York over the following years, living on Ludlow Street in the Lower East Side, where she developed a heroin habit.[7][6] Edwige modeled for Jean-Paul Gaultier and Thierry Mugler.[16][17] She was photographed in 1990 by Pierre and Gilles for a work entitled Sainte Gertrude la Grande. "The strong temperament of our model and her boyish appearance went well with the reputation for rigor and austerity of this intellectual and mystical figure that was Gertrude the Great" explains the photographers.[18] During her career, she was photographed several times by Pierre and Gilles, both for the press and for advertising.[7] Long before, she was also the subject of photographs by Helmut Newton[17] for a rarely published photo,[7] Maripol a few years later, and Jean-Baptiste Mondino.[citation needed] In 1987 she went to an ashram in India for several years to learn and teach yoga. From there she moved to Miami, where she lived at the Vagabond Hotel.[19] In 2012, Edwige appeared in a documentary by Jérôme de Missolz, Des jeunes gens mödernes. In the film, a group of young artists, fascinated by the punk style, meet a music critic from the period.[20] At the estimated age of 58, Edwige died of untreated chronic hepatitis on September 22, 2015 at a hospital in Florida.[16][15][21] Discography with Mathématiques Modernes
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