David Remfry: Hollywood puppy love at the Chelsea Hotel

Portraits by the British-born painter celebrate the relationship between dogs and their owners

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Having housed some of history’s most famed writers, poets, musicians and artists, New York’s legendary Chelsea Hotel is remembered for its wild, creatively fecund and often tragic past.

Andy Warhol famously threw up on the hotel’s dining room carpet during a fundraising luncheon organised by his patron Peggy Guggenheim. Leonard Cohen and Janis Joplin enjoyed a secret tryst here, as did Jack Kerouac and Gore Vidal. Stanley Kubrick penned 2001: A Space Odyssey at the hotel while Nancy Spungen met a grizzly end in Room 100 when she was stabbed by her lover Sid Vicious. From bohemian love-ins and spells of creative genius to decadent parties and death - the Chelsea Hotel has seen it all.

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