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J.J.
Child victim of a Midwestern
suburban divorce, J.J. Caucus managed not only to track down and reconcile with the mother who had abandoned her, but went on to
fall in love with her mother's old friend Michael J. Doonesbury.
After spending her college years under the bell jar of Michael's
asphyxiating affections, J.J. emerged to celebrate her womanhood
in terms that even he could not ignore. Casting about for an avocation
worthy of her ebullience, she ultimately settled on performance
art, with mixed results. Amid the booming Soho art scene of the
late 80' s, J.J. thrived -- her 9-hour performance piece "Welcome
to Artville," her urinal installation at Club Stop 'N' Bop, and
her ceiling murals on the yacht Trump Princess were uncritically acclaimed. Her most successful piece was a live birthing of daughter Alex on cable television, an event which, fortunately, strengthened her marriage.
After some initial difficulties, her maternal instincts kicked in ("Oh sure, breast-feed her.
What do I look like, a National Geographic cover girl?"), and once nanny Zonker Harris
signed on board the sailing smoothed. But life with a chronically unemployed adman was
not easy. Though J.J. made driving a taxi a kind of rolling therapy, telling every fare ad
nauseum, "I'm really an artist," the marriage eventually collapsed. Inspired by The
Bridges of Madison County, J.J. ran off with ex-flame Zeke Brenner. Settling in Seattle,
she finally achieved remarkable and inexplicable success with her pricey assemblages and
sculptures. When the couple finally married in an online webcast, the nuptials were
streamed in Quicktime and other leading video formats. As she arrived at the age of 40,
J.J.was awarded a MacArthur "Genius" Fellowship. She and Zeke continue live in
Seattle, where she sculpts with renewed enthusiasm and shares the lighter end of custody
of daughter Alex.
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