Louise Bourgeois - interview excerpt
Monday, December 29th, 2008
Bill Beckley: You were born in France, but you have lived a long time in the United States. What is the difference between the aesthetics of the two countries?
Louis Bourgeois: I’ll tell you a story about my mother. When I was a little girl, growing up in France, my mother worked sewing tapestries. Some of the tapestries were exported to America. The only problem was that many of the images on the tapestries were of naked people. My mother’s job was to cut out the, what do you call it?
BB: The genitals?
LB: Yes, the genitals of the men and women, and replace these parts with pictures of flowers so they could be sold to Americans. My mother saved all of the pictures of the genitals over the years, and one day she sewed them all together as a quilt and then she gave the quilt to me. That’s the difference between French and American aesthetics.
(An interview titled, “Sunday Afternoons: A Conversation and a Remark on Beauty” from the book Uncontrollable Beauty)





