Photography Magazine

Icon Of the Week: Countess De Castiglione

By Briennewalsh @BrienneWalsh
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Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

There’s a lot of things to be said about the Countess de Castiglione, but I’m tired, and in a terrible mood, so if you want to know more about her, you can read this article in the New York Times.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Instead of giving you facts—because honestly, fact checking, just like grammar, is noisome—I’m going to write this biography after only cursorily reading her Wikipedia page. Which means that I made most of this shit up. Imagine me listening to “Ice” by Kelly Rowland, featuring Lil Wayne for absolutely no reason besides the fact that I am actually listening to it right now, as you’re reading this.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

The Countess de Castiglione was born in Florence sometime around 1837. Actually, I just Googled it. She was born exactly in 1837. Here’s to my fucking memory.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Her parents were minor nobility. The entirety of her youth, they were like flitting around and wearing colored silk, and looking for the appropriate match for her. Her father was probably fucking a few nursemaids, or whatever. He’s Italian, right? Her mother was probably heavily into nuns and religion.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

When she turned 17, they married her to the Count of Castiglione, who fortunately did not have his penis blown off during the war (that was a reference to the Barefoot Contessa starring Ava Gardner, fyi), but seemed like he might have been a complete and utter bore. 

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

He was 12 years her senior. He gave her a son Giorgione. When Giorgione came out of her vagina, the Countess said, “Let’s put a sailor’s outfit on him, and treat him like a pet monkey.”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

And so, it came to pass, as it had been written in Scripture. 

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

The Countess of Castiglione was, according to history, extraordinarily beautiful, but according to the photographs that remain, which number in the many hundreds, she was only ‘aight.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

At some point in her youth, the Countess started up with Napoleon III.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

When they fucked, she kneeled on a chair, and neighed like a donkey.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

“Show me your ankle, Ginie (her real name was Virginia),” the Emperor squealed.

“I can’t feel a thing!” the Countess hooted, ecstatically.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

“Naughty!”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

“Even naughtier!”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

“Very, very bad girl!”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

It was rumored that the Countess had eyes that changed from piss yellow to pearl gray at the sight of a jewel.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Ginie made great friends with the Emperor’s official court photographer, Pierre-Louis Pierson, who ended up taking hundreds of pictures of him during their lifetimes. I’ll leave it up to you to figure out where that previous sentence stopped making sense.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

In the photographs, Ginie dressed herself up in her many costumes, and used Giorgione, her pet monkey, as a prop.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

She posed as the courtesan in your silk bedchamber, as Anne Boleyn, as Lady MacBeth, as a corpse.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Infamously, as the Queen of Hearts.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

This one is obviously Cleopatra.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

This one I’m pretty sure is Jo March.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

This one, allegedly, she called “Vengeance,” and sent to her husband when he threatened to take Giorgione away from her.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Watch out! (Love those sandals.)

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

These pictures, some of them she tinted.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Others, she sent to friends.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

And yet others she kept for herself.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

She aged.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

And as she aged, she lost her mind a bit.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

The Emperor dumped her. The court made her into a fool.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

Still, she exerted influence over politics. It is rumored that she had a hand in the formation of the Italian state.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

And in convincing Otto Von Bismarck not to invade Italy.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

What can I say, she gave a great BJ.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

She died when she was 140, but not until she gave birth to a litter of cats.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

To you, Comtesse, for being called a narcissist for no fault of your own, except that you weren’t born in the era of Facebook.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

For the many wonderful pictures of you that remain.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

For your various states of repose.

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

For being a Surrealist before the Surrealists, for being a personal brander before Twitter. 

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

”She would appear at gatherings like a goddess descended from the clouds,” a contemporary noted, and she would ”allow people to admire her as if she were a shrine.”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

The Princess Metternich oohed about her: ”Wonderful hair, the waist of a nymph, and a complexion the color of pink marble! In a word, Venus descended from Olympus!” But, the princess added, ”after a few moments she began to get on your nerves.”

Icon Of the Week: Countess de Castiglione

For you, Countess, Comtessa. 113 years after your death, my darling, you’re my Icon of the Week.


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