Re-watched Clive Barker’s Nightbreed (director’s
cut, still a disappointment) and noticed in protagonist Boone’s apartment Peter
Blake’s “Babe Rainbow.”
Not “noticed”—Barker cuts from a bottle of spilled
pills to a hand-held shot of “Babe Rainbow” on a free-standing, wood paneled wall,
surrounded by hubcaps. Cuts to another hand-held shot, this from behind Boone
as he takes off his t-shirt and steps forward—toward “Babe Rainbow.”
Search Nightbreed + Clive Barker + Babe Rainbow
and find “Now watching Nightbreed with my babe” and this quote from the film: “It’s
all true. God’s an astronaut. Oz is over the rainbow, and Midian is where
monsters live.”
“Babe Rainbow” is a screen print on tin; according
to the University of Warwick Art Collection website, the central
image, a woman dressed in a white bathing suit, is “based on a 1967
cover of the French magazine Marie Claire”—a cover image easy to track down (Joanna Shimkus is the model). The woman in the print takes a step forward, from a dark background, beneath an arch. Framing
that arch is the rainbow. Beneath the woman are the words “Babe Rainbow.” 10,000
“genuine multiples” of the print were made.
Which means lots of people have an original copy
of “Babe Rainbow”—there’s a copy down the hill from me at the RISD Museum.
Apparently, Clive Barker has a copy too. And fictional character Boone, too. Why is “Babe Rainbow” so prominently featured in
Nightbreed?
There’s lots written about how queer Nightbreed is. Yeah—its coding is ABC. That quote about Oz, for one. Then there’s this exchange between
two of the Nightbreed, Narcisse and Ohnaka: “Hey. Love those tattoos” [Ohnaka
glances at the tattoos that circle his nipples, runs away; Narcisse, to
himself, says] “Sailors.” There’s a priest who tries to stop the massacre of the
Nightbreed by a mob of police—the sheriff calls him “faggot”; the sheriff is
promptly killed by Boone, who warns the priest away, but the priest pulls off
his collar and declares, “No. I have to see. Take me with you.” Once he does, he
becomes Nightbreed and destroys the sheriff—who so obviously represents
unthinking, violent, and frightened adherence to conformity. Read Trace Thurman’s
“The Inherent Queerness of Clive Barker’s ‘Nightbreed’” for a light-hearted
examination of other queer tropes in the film.
So, I wondered—is “Babe Rainbow” simply another signifier?
Maybe. But why that rainbow?
Another possibility occurs to me. There’s Clive
Barker the English horror author and film director and there’s Clive Barker the
English pop artist. Clive Barker the pop artist made a collage portrait of
Peter Blake; Blake and Barker have shown work together. Maybe director Barker
was making an oblique shout-out to pop artist Barker?
(I first learned of Clive Barker the pop artist
when I saw his “Van Gogh’s Chair” [1966] featured on the cover of Paul
McCartney’s 1983 album Pipes of Peace. As you all know, Peter Blake and Jann
Haworth executed Paul McCartney’s rough idea for the Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band album cover.)
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