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Fiore was one of the most remarkable people I have ever met. She was an imposing personality - nearly six feet tall, with strong arms, a shock of white hair and the most extraordinary eyes. They looked at you with such penetration, it was hard not to believe that she couldn’t see inside the very landscape of your soul. But they were also full of sadness and supplication.
Fiore was born in 1920 - one of the two in every ten thousand babies born every year with ‘gender indeterminacy’. She was, she told everyone quite frankly, a haemaphrodite - the union of Hermes and Aphrodite. Her birth sign was Gemini, the heavenly Twins. ‘I can see both sides,’ she used to say, ‘because I am both sides.’ It was both her tragedy and her gift. Many of her sculptures and paintings depict double images, reflections, siamese twins.
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Friends worry that the documentary might focus too much on her gender identity problem, and too little on her artistic achievement. When I first came to Peralta, Fiore was in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, and my friend Jan Marsh was writing her biography - ‘Art and Androgyny’. Getting the balance right was Jan’s central problem, and she probably erred too much on the side of caution. It is right to avoid prurient curiousity, but Fiore’s unique sexuality was so much a part of herself and her art that it has to be fully addressed. It will be interesting to see how Richard Whymark has tackled it.
One of her greatest creations was the hamlet of Peralta itself, which was a ruin on the hillside until she found it in the 1960s, traced all the original owners of the houses and little farms, then rebuilt and restored it. She wanted Peralta to be a place where writers and artists could meet, live and work. Not just for tourists. Unfortunately she didn't realise that most of them can't afford the kind of creative space that Peralta offers. Richard Whymark made a short film of Peralta when he was here, which I will include below.
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