Mary McCartney on cooking for A-list pals Gigi and Bella Hadid, Cate Blanchett and Stanley Tucci for Feeding Creativity, her book blending vegetarian recipes, celebrity anecdotes and food photography
- Paul McCartney’s daughter used her connections to arrange intimate sit-downs with Nile Rodgers, Jeff Koons, David Oyelowo, David Bailey and the Haim sisters – cooking up a personalised dish for each interviewee
- She leads her own show Mary McCartney Serves It Up! and was a founder of Meat-Free Monday along with her Beatle father and sister, fashion designer Stella McCartney
So despite Feeding Creativity seeming like a straightforward tome of vegetarian recipes designed by Mary McCartney for her famous friends, it is in fact much more. For one, it is a series of telling and personal anecdotes that reveal a peek into the homes and lifestyles of the artist and her celebrity subjects. It’s also a series of portraits, and in more than just a photographic sense – each dish was created, as McCartney says, by “contemplating that person, imagining myself going to them and the process, and how I would like to make them feel”.
So essentially, these are portraits of people manifested in food. You get to contemplate why Beth Ditto is a smoky black-eyed bean stew, or Jeff Koons a rainbow hundreds and thousands cake. (“His art is so bright, joyful and colourful,” McCartney says, “the idea for a hundreds and thousands cake came into my mind.”)
That includes the stumbles as much as the successes: “At first I started off a little bit neat. Then my husband said, you need to admit to them that you had a hangover when you went to David Hockney, or when you went to Haim, you had a huge rip in your all-in-one.”
All of this came about rather organically, as part of the chaos that she likes to think feeds her own creativity. What started out as a blog project became a book when McCartney decided having a publisher give her a deadline would be the best way to motivate her to get things rolling. Then a change of name cemented its purpose. The original title was simply Cooking for Artists, but it became Feeding Creativity, as suggested by McCartney’s husband, writer and director Simon Aboud – a much more fitting heading, as the book feeds more than the tummy.