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Friday, 16 May 2008
Absinthe, ‘queen of poisons’

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This site from London’s Tate Museum, entitled ‘The Drink that Fuelled a Nation’s Art’, is dedicated to the famous French beverage, absinthe. It offers a fascinating essay on the relationship between French 19th- and 20th-century art and the ‘queen of poisons’. The article is by Jad Adams, author of ‘Hideous Absinthe: A History of the Devil in a Bottle’, and here he documents the artists, including Toulouse-Lautrec, Gauguin and Van Gogh, who drank absinthe or displayed it in their paintings.
While most of these artists remained relatively passive flâneurs and only occasional absinthe drinkers, some immersed themselves in the experience. An official report remarked that many late 19th-century Parisian writers and painters, in their quest for more original and exquisite ideas, gave themselves up to ‘the green’ with passion. Among the most prominent of these was Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, who illustrated the life of the music halls, the bars, the brothels and, in particular, the Moulin Rouge. The disabled aristocrat famously carried a hollow walking stick which contained a draught of absinthe, and was occasionally accompanied by a pet cormorant he had trained to drink it!
Poster advertisements of the period convey the initial product boost for absinthe and the later grim warnings before it was finally banned. Among the highlights of the essay are notes on Degas’ ‘L’Absinthe’, the iconic painting of the period and its hostile reception at Christie’s auction in 1892. The author’s conclusion about the recently legalised drink remains negative – see Aleister Crowley’s quote from ‘The Green Goddess’ (1918): “What is there in absinthe that makes it a separate cult? Even in ruin and in degradation it remains a thing apart: its victims wear a ghastly aureole all their own, and in their peculiar hell yet gloat with a sinister perversion of pride that they are not as other men.”
 
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