Frances Bean Cobain was speaking in Ireland at the launch of a
new exhibition of the Nirvana frontman's belongings. Cobain died
in 1994 aged 27 from a self-inflicted gunshot while struggling
with heroin addiction.
"There is an association that is shameful and it shouldn't be,"
Frances Bean said, who has also struggled with addiction.
"It's taboo ... despite the fact that it is present in our
society every single day. And I think that in Europe it is a
little less taboo, I think in America it is very, very frowned
upon," she told Reuters.
Frances Bean, Cobain's sister Kim, and mother, Wendy O’Connor,
attended the opening of the exhibition at the Museum of Style
Icons in Newbridge, 50 km (30 miles) southwest of Dublin.
From his sketches and drawings to clothing and a car, "Growing
Up Kurt Cobain" displays dozens of Cobain’s personal items, some
of them never seen before by the public.
Fans of Cobain, who popularized grunge rock in the early 1990s,
can see the striped green sweater he wore in the video for
Nirvana’s 1991 hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit" and his MTV Video
award for the same song.
The singer's childhood drawings of cartoon characters,
handwritten lyrics and powder-blue 1965 Dodge Dart car are also
on display.
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"It felt like the right time to show who Kurt really was as a child
growing up. To go back to his roots of being a child, where he was
happiest," Cobain's sister Kim Cobain said.
The small museum in County Kildare held the exhibition in part
because its owner knows Cobain's family. The museum also has outfits
worn by the likes of Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor and Grace
Kelly on display, and has previously hosted exhibitions dedicated to
Michael Jackson and Prince.
Asked about what Cobain would have made of the current political
climate in the United States, Frances Bean said she would like to
think he would have taken a stand.
"The violation of basic human rights that seems to be a prevalent
them in our country right now ... I would like to believe that Kurt
wouldn't have stood for that or accepted that," she said.
(Reporting by Graham Fahy; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg)
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