‘Crazy Love’: The Crazy Art Show

Two girls, possibly running away from Riss's husband.All photos courtesy of Linda Riss
Post-attack, Linda joined a friend for an art class at the Jewish Guild for the Blind. “When I showed my teacher my first painting, he told me I should take up sculpture,” Riss says. “How’s that for an answer?” Riss kept at it, painting and illustrating birthday cards (“I was big on poodles and pussycats”) until her vision fully gave out in 1990.

Klores and Steven contacted gallery owner Andrew Edlin, pitching a gallery show in conjunction with the film’s release — complete with correspondences between Riss, her lawyer, and her incarcerated suitor. The artwork is for sale, much to the control-freak Burt’s chagrin. “My husband’s not too happy; he doesn’t want to sell anything. Isn’t that kind of nice? What we have is all we have left; I can never redo it,” Riss says. “Listen, I’m not another Vincent Van Gogh, but Burt thinks my work looks like Van Gogh. He tends to get carried away.” —Rachel Wolff

Linda Riss at AE Space, 529 W. 20th St., 212-206-9723 [Andrew Edlin Gallery]

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