The graffiti, believed to have been painted by the street art provocateur Banksy,
is a mashup featuring Queen Elizabeth II with a jagged blue-and-red
lightning bolt streaked across her face that instantly recalls David
Bowie’s 1973 album, Aladdin Sane.
With the British monarch having received saturation coverage thanks to her Diamond Jubilee
celebrations for the past few days, the presumed Banksy work gives rise
(fittingly enough) to a question that’s been hiding in plain sight for
nearly a decade: where in the world is David Bowie?o the bitter consternation of legions of his fans who consider Bowie’s disappearing act a kind of dereliction of duty, an unforgivable absence, he hasn’t stepped into the limelight in quite some time. But this year, the Glam godfather made an inexorable transformation, officially trading his status as a Golden Rock God to become a card-carrying senior citizen, hitting age 65 in January. Just this week, Bowie’s seminal album, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, celebrated the 40th anniversary of its release with a lushly remastered CD reissue that includes unreleased bonus tracks and high-resolution audio.
Meanwhile, director Ridley Scott says he partly modeled Irish actor Michael Fassbender’s outer-space humanoid character in the upcoming sci-fi thriller Prometheus on
the androgynous singer. “We … took inspiration from David Bowie and
some of his looks as well,” Fassbender recently explained at a press
event for the film. “I liked the idea of having a feminine quality to
him for sure.”
It
all adds up to a curious cultural predicament. Although Bowie basically
dropped below the radar in 2003—recording no new music since then,
performing only sporadically, and ceasing to give any interviews—the
entertainer never announced his “retirement.” Now, some eight years
after suffering a massive heart attack, Bowie seems to be everywhere and
nowhere all at once.
“He has consciously dropped out of sight,” says Paul Trynka, author of David Bowie: Starman,
considered the definitive biography of the singer. “For someone so
consistently vain and self-obsessed, the heart attack—the realization of
his mortality—came as a massive psychological blow. But he’s someone
who has always had a real understanding of how to manipulate the media
and saw the dramatic potential of a disappearance in a very Hollywood
way. It became a kind of Houdini disappearing act. The fact that it’s
gone unstated makes it even more mysterious.”
You can almost carbon-date Bowie’s disappearance to two specific points. In September 2003 the erstwhile Thin White Duke released his 24th studio album, Reality—his
last recorded output. And after touring extensively that year into
2004, at a concert in Oslo, Norway, a fan threw a lollipop that nailed
Bowie directly in the eye, causing the rocker to shout out in pain and
outrage. A few days later at a Prague concert, he cut his performance
short, complaining of a pinched nerve in his shoulder. Little did Bowie
know that the muscle pain was due to an “acutely blocked artery.” In
June 2004 he took the stage in Scheessel, Germany, and minutes after a
final encore of “Ziggy Stardust,” went backstage and collapsed. The
singer was rushed by helicopter to the hospital and underwent immediate
heart surgery; the tour was canceled.
These
days, sources close to Bowie say he lives in semi-seclusion in a $7.7
million penthouse apartment in New York’s SoHo with his wife of 20
years, the supermodel Iman,
and their 11-year old daughter Alexandria (better known as Lexi).
There, the shape-shifting rock pioneer—who was famously addicted to
cocaine for 10 years followed by a hellish descent into alcoholism he
later overcame—strenuously avoids paparazzi-bait restaurants and
hyped-up nightspots, instead preferring to draw, paint, and collect
20th-century British artwork.
Over
the past few years, he has performed sporadically, joining the Canadian
group Arcade Fire onstage at a 2005 Fashion Rocks event. And in 2006
Bowie surprised those attending David Gilmour’s performance at London’s
Royal Albert Hall, joining the Pink Floyd leader for two songs. In 2009
Bowie announced he would perform in New York for a concert celebrating
the inaugural High Line festival. But later, the pop revolutionary
mysteriously canceled. “Due to ongoing work on a new project, David
Bowie has announced that it will not be possible for him to perform,” a
press release explained.
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