



Dream of Life: An Intimate Portrait of Patti Smith
Dream of Life: A Meditation on Aging and Mortality
Patti Smith: Dream of Life is a film that’s been 12 years in the making, a work that reveals an intimate, impressionistic portrait of a woman who is still blazing her own trail through late middle age, a woman who has seen and suffered great loss and who is perhaps the only major surviving connection from New York City’s Beat generation, to the 1970s Manhattan art scene, to the birth of punk, to the present.
For the most part, the film has been described as a paean to life, resoundingly joyous and elegiac, warm and vibrantly present, a collage of moods and moments from one immensely talented woman’s richly lived time on earth. Patti Smith arrived in the big city 40 years ago and made her first residence in a room at The Chelsea Hotel, which in those days was also home to William S. Burroughs, Jefferson Airplane, Leonard Cohen, Janis Joplin, Sam Shepard, Arthur Miller, Robbert Mapplethorpe and some of the Warhol crowd. Patti soon became the muse, friend and partner of Robert Mapplethorpe, became a poet and then a performance poet and then an underground rock musician and then a rock star. She left the stage and the city to settle down in Michigan as a wife and mother. Then, following the 1994 death of her husband, the musician Fred “Sonic” Smith, she returned to New York City, to music, to poetry and to political activism.
Dream of Life is a beautiful and occasionally haunting artistic creation, a meditation on aging and mortality, an intimate study of an unusual kind of fame and the portrait of a genuinely remarkable person. The film as received with great acclaim at The Sundance Film Festival last year, as well as in Berlin and all over the film-festival world.
The videos presented below include the official trailer of Patti Smith: Dream of Life, Hope (another selection from Dream of Life); a short documentary about Smith’s invited exhibition at The Cartier Foundation in Paris; an interview with Smith at the Chelston Retreat in Sussex, England; and her performance with the avant-garde musician Philip Glass at The Memorial for Allen Ginsburg.
Following the videos, biographic notes and a gallery of photographs about The Chelsea Hotel are presented.
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Patti Smith: Dream of Life
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Patti Smith: Hope (from Dream of Life)
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Patti Smith: Exhibition at the Cartier Foundation (Paris)
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Patti Smith: Chelston Retreat Interview (Sussex, England)
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Patti Smith and Philip Glass: A Memorial for Allen Ginsburg

Biographic Notes: A Portrait of One Woman’s Richly Lived Time on Earth
Patti Smith: The Early Years
Patti Smith was born in Chicago in 1948 and grew up in Woodbury, New Jersey. After graduating from high school, Patti did a brief stint as a factory worker, which convinced her to move to New York City to pursue a life in the arts. Soon after her arrival, she connected with the young photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, whom she met while working at a book store. This was a close friendship that she maintained until his death in 1989. In 1969 she went to Paris with her sister and started doing performance art. When Smith returned to New York City, she lived in The Chelsea Hotel with Mapplethorpe, and they began frequenting the then fashionable Max’s Kansas City and CBGB nightclubs.
She helped put New York’s punk-rock landmark CBGB on the map, at a time when New York’s East Village was becoming a burgeoning center of experimental artistic creativity. She organized The Patti Smith Group and in 1975 released her debut album, Horses, to critical acclaim. Produced by John Cale, the album was described as an original mixture of exhortatory rock & roll, Smith’s poetry, vocal mannerisms inspired by Mick Jagger and Jim Morrison, and the band’s energetically rudimentary playing. In 1976, Aerosmith producer Jack Douglas oversaw the Patti Smith Group’s second album, Radio Ethiopia, and the result was a more bombastic guitar-heavy record, tempered by the title cut, the height of Smith’s improvised free rock.
After an almost nine-year hiatus, Smith returned to recording with the 1988 album Dream of Life, the work of a more mellow, but still rebellious songwriter. Smith’s comeback album was co-produced by her husband, Fred “Sonic” Smith, with songs that included her call-to-arms, People Have the Power.
Grief and Mourning
In 1994, her husband died of a heart attack at the age of 45. Just a month later, her younger brother (and former road manager) Todd, also died of a heart attack. Her longtime friend and companion Robert Mapplethorpe had already died of AIDS in 1989. Determined to carry on as a tribute to the encouragement that her husband and brother had shown her before their passings, Smith performed a string of opening dates with Bob Dylan in late 1995 and issued the intensely personal Gone Again in 1996. The album offered a potent mix of songs about mourning and rebirth, reflecting Smith’s belief that the beauty of life survives death.
But another eight years would pass by before her second artistic comeback, marked by a trio of acclaimed albums released in quick succession, which found her fighting her way out of a period of intense personal grief stemming from the loss of several of the most important people in her life. The documentary Patti Smith: Dream of Life premiered at last year’s Sundance Film Festival and is currently opening in theaters nationwide and in Europe.
Audio: Bob Dylan/Farewell
New York City’s Elegant Dowger: The Chelsea Hotel: Dream of Life
Technorati: Patti Smith, Dream of Life, Patti Smith: Dream of Life, Robert Mapplethorpe, Bob Dylan, The Chelsea Hotel, The East Village, documentary, film, movie, motion picture, Sundance Film Festival, New York City, NYC, Paris, France, England, CBGB, People Have the Power, art, gay, GLBT, celebrities, personalities, photos, photographs, photography, photo-gallery, gallery, slideshow, music, songs, entertainment, video, music video, WordPress video, culture, cultural ideas, cultural life, cultural, social, social ideas, social life, society, news, world
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