Posts Tagged ‘Marina Abramovic’

Too in the Pink

Monday, March 1st, 2010
What just happened? was the dominant thought as dumbstruck art kids shuffled out of a second-floor gallery at PS1.
To hear the varied accounts is like watching Rashomon.  Everyone saw the same events unfold, but every version is different.
As part of the “Saturday Sessions” initiative, curators Sarvia Jasso and Andres Bedoya brought their “Brooklyn is Burning” project to Queens.  After many other performances and videos, Georgia Sagri completed her self-hijacking performance.  Whether or not it was a success, most people were shocked when the next performer, Ann Liv Young, took the stage and trashed Georgia’s romp with lots of disparaging remarks.  Then it gets blurry.
Ann Liv Young urinated into a tray, Georgia left and then returned with middle fingers ablazing, both taunted each other, and then Ann Liv Young began masturbating on the floor, flopping and grinding her pelvis toward Georgia, her bare flesh flapping against Christian Marclay’s matrix of vinyl records.
Not sure what happened to Georgia after that, because most (wide) eyes were on Ann, who now appeared to be bleeding downstairs and staggering around with the tray of urine, only to spill a little and then dump it over herself like a Gatorade tank on Coach Paterno.  And now the lights are out.
“Is this real?” some thought.  “Is it part of the show?” “Maybe it’s like a Martin Creed sort of thing.”  No wonder the NY Times said of Ann Liv Young, “For the viewer it can be hard to tell if the show is unraveling or if Young’s behavior is the show itself.”
Who made the call to cut the power?  Most people blame the PS1 staff and decry the apparent censorship.  It would be especially confusing if it came down from new Director Klaus Biesenbach.  Surely, the champion of the edgy and provocative Marina Abramovic would not sink to puritanical censorship, right?
After all, who can forget “the Vault,” which was the subterranean sex dungeon component of Klaus’ 2006 survey at PS1, Into Me/Out of Me?  How about the sensational Pipilotti Rist supervideo he brought to MoMA, Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters)?  Rist’s content was risky (risty?) business, too.  And I’m not alone in singing that it was one of the absolute coolest undertakings we’ve ever seen at the new MoMA.  He also brought us the mesmerizing Douglas Gordon: Timeline and at PS1, Fassbinder: Berlin Alexanderplatz (2007)
But then PS1 has compromised unusual projects for specious reasons.  One example comes from a few years ago, when PS1 support staff removed part of an installation by Jesse Bercowetz & Matt Bua: a dead chicken suspended from a window.
Artist and Brooklyn is Burning participant Julia Oldham might be the first to blog about the event.  We chatted about it over email and I spoke for the steady stream of dejected viewers upset about the apparent censorship.  But don’t listen to me; I had just been watching Keith Olbermann all day to help with my Seasonal Affective Disorder.
Even if Klaus issued the cut-off directive, we can’t just assume it was censorship.  Maybe it was about public safety.  If an aggressive performer is bleeding, flinging urine, and staggering around, maybe someone should hit the Panic Button.  Intervening into the escalating altercation might have prevented a catfight or worse.  Maybe Ann Liv Young’s performance quickly crumbled into uncooth hysteria, and censorship doesn’t apply, since antics aren’t really content.  But then that would mean that the institution is deciding what is art…

What just happened? was the dominant thought as dumbstruck art kids shuffled out of a second-floor gallery at PS1.  To hear the varied accounts is like watching Rashomon.  Everyone saw the same events unfold, but every version is different.

svablogbrooklynisburning

As part of the new Saturday Sessions initiative at PS1, curators Sarvia Jasso and Andres Bedoya brought their Brooklyn is Burning faction to Queens.  After performance artist Georgia Sagri completed her self-hijacking fugue, most viewers were shocked when the next performer, Ann Liv Young, took the stage and verbally trashed Georgia’s romp.  Then it gets blurry (and messy).

Ann Liv Young urinated into a tray, Georgia left and then returned with middle fingers ablazing, both taunted each other, and then Ann Liv Young began masturbating on the floor, flopping and grinding her pelvis toward Georgia, her bare flesh flapping against Christian Marclay’s matrix of vinyl records.

Ann Liv Young, censored by me (Photo: David Shapiro/MUSE)

Ann Liv Young, censored by me (Photo: David Shapiro/MUSEO)

Not sure what happened to Georgia after that, because most (wide) eyes were on Ann, who now appeared to be bleeding downstairs and staggering around with the tray of urine, only to spill a little and then dump it over herself like a Gatorade tank on Coach Paterno.  And now the lights are out.  “Is this real?” some wondered aloud.  “Is it part of the show?” “Maybe it’s like a Martin Creed sort of thing.”  No wonder the NY Times said of Ann Liv Young, “For the viewer it can be hard to tell if the show is unraveling or if Young’s behavior is the show itself.”

Who made the call to cut the power?  Many people blame the PS1 staff for silencing a daring performance.  That would be especially confusing if it came down from new Director Klaus Biesenbach.  The champion of the edgy and provocative Marina Abramovic wouldn’t be easily shocked; Ann Liv Young has nothing he hasn’t seen before, right?

(l-r) Ulay, some guy, Marina Abramovic; Marina Abramovic

(l-r) Ulay, some guy, Marina Abramovic; Marina Abramovic

After all, who can forget “the Vault,” which was the subterranean sex dungeon component of Klaus’ 2006 survey at PS1, Into Me/Out of Me?  How about the sensational Pipilotti Rist supervideo he brought to MoMA, Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters)?  Rist’s psyche-sanguine content was risky (risty?) business, too – and one of the absolute coolest undertakings we’ve ever seen at the new MoMA.  He also brought us the mesmerizing Douglas Gordon: Timeline and at PS1, Fassbinder: Berlin Alexanderplatz. Hot!

That Marina photo reminds me of Man Ray's "Le Violin D'Ingres"

That Marina photo reminds me of Man Ray's "Le Violin D'Ingres"

But then PS1 has compromised unusual projects for specious reasons.  One example comes from a few years ago, when PS1 support staff removed part of an installation by Jesse Bercowetz & Matt Bua: a dead chicken suspended from a window.

Artist and Brooklyn is Burning participant Julia Oldham might be the first to have blogged about the event.  We chatted about it over email and I spoke for the steady stream of dejected viewers upset about a repressive gesture that looked reactionary and hypocritical.  But don’t listen to me; I was just riled up after watching Keith Olbermann all day to help with my merciless winter depression.

Even if Klaus issued the cut-off directive, it might be unfair to wolf-cry censorship.  Censorship entails a greater degree of deliberation for the purpose of personal or political gain. If an aggressive performer is bleeding, flinging urine, and staggering around, maybe a prudent adult should hit the Panic Button.  Intervening into the escalating altercation might have prevented a catfight or worse.  Or maybe PS1 thought Ann Liv Young’s performance spilled over into uncooth hysteria, and censorship doesn’t apply, since antics aren’t really content.  Maybe Admiral Klaus ruled that Ann had jumped the shark when the mad clam bared its teeth.

nom nom nom meow

nom nom nom meow

More Ann Liv Young (link NSFW)

UPDATE 1: From BiB co-curator Sarvia Jasso:
As one of the curators of BiB, I would like to take this opportunity to express my opinion about the event at PS1. Despite the fact that BiB is a collaborative project, my fellow curator Andres Bedoya and I have respectfully diverging opinions that have not necessarily been fully reflected in any of the statements posted thusfar.

While I do not claim to know the reason the museum turned the lights off, I can say that the perceived animosity and escalating verbal and gestural attacks in the room from one artist to another were absolutely antithetical to my understanding of what BiB represents. The situation ultimately compromised the participation of the other artists involved, causing the last artist to perform in the dark. Despite the unforeseen and unfortunate outcome, I remain committed to a completely open format for expression. I think the framework (content and context) for any ensuing discussions should take into account the complexities of experiencing a live performance within an institution, instead of jumping to the conclusion that the impetus for removing power during the event originated in an attempt at censoring the performers.

A claim of censorship could easily develop into a self-serving mythology with its own inertia, which could then quickly become detached from the event itself. I think we need to be very clear that no one was asked to leave and all of the planned performances occurred during the course of the event.
From a curatorial point of view, a broad range of performances is vital to the program, but the underlying message always stays the same—BiB is forging a community that respects and celebrates diversity in all its complexities. Anybody who has ever attended a BiB event can attest to the fact that we try to create a positive environment in which to present work that can be challenging and, at times, difficult to digest.

UPDATE 2: From PS1:
The decision by the Director of PS1 to curtail the performances near the end of Saturday Sessions was made to safeguard the audience, performers, and PS1 staff from an escalating and potentially volatile situation. The performers’ actions were not previously discussed with or planned by PS1.

Use Yr KOHllusion

Friday, November 20th, 2009
Koh intern and vamp, Val

Koh intern and vamp, Val

If I were a member, I’d be livid,” whispered one super fierce publishing figure last night at the National Arts Club, referring to the dinner jacket-clad grown-ups who weren’t there for the Terence Koh lecture, who might have felt uncomfortably bumrushed by the scores of the artist’s ab fab fans, friends, a-KOH-lytes, and KOH-konspirators.

Garrick Gott and event organizer Stacey Engam

Garrick Gott and event organizer Stacy Engman, NAC Chair of Contemporary Art

To appease the outnumbered, but patient and actually very welcoming real NAC members, and to satiate the hungry, anxious club visitors, refreshments were abundant, including exotic absinthe spritzers, chocolate covered ants, port wine cheese spread, and Campbell’s soup with straws.

svablogkohlecture11

Who was there? Who wasn’t?

NAC President Arlene S. Hamsun introduces Terence Koh

NAC President Arlene S. Hamsun introduces Terence Koh

Marina Abramovic, Klaus Biesenbach, Phil and Shelley Aarons, Jerry Saltz, Roberta Smith, Cecilia Dean, Adam McEwen, Jeffrey Deitch, Mary Boone (happy belated birthday, still sexy at 58), RoseLee Goldberg, Kathy Grayson, Sophia Lamar…

svablogkohlecture4

…and lots of fashion people I can identify only by their looks.

W.W.W.D.?

W.W.W.D.?

The patrician, oil-on-canvas dinner jacket set would have been pleased.

Armchair historians

Armchair historians

At 45 minutes, with nearly 400 images handpicked from local libraries and the artist’s bookshelves, individually scanned to ensure the highest quality, Terence Koh’s Art History 1642-2009 was a whirlwind tour of Western and Eastern Art, mostly chronological from 1642 to the present, and admitting into the Koh canon a few book covers, party photos, vintage porn, and even some line graph charts to diagram art market confidence.

Autumnal Degas moment at the NAC

Autumnal Degas moment at the NAC

Who was in it?  Who made the Terence Koh Canon?

KOHlympia

KOHlympia

Marcel Duchamp, Vermeer, Velasquez, Warhol, Koons, Aurel Schmidt, Adam McEwen, Marina Abramovic, David Shrigley, Goya, Rembrandt, Judd, Bourgeois, Wojnarowicz, William Blake, Hockney, Rob Pruitt, Kelley Walker, Dash Snow, Bruce High Quality Foundation, Karen Black/Kembra Pfahler, Christian Holstad;

svablogkohlecture5

Maurizio Cattelan, Aaron Bondaroff, Muntean/Rosenblum, Yoko Ono, Bianca Jagger, Nauman, Robert Smithson, Yayoi Kusama, James Lee Byars, Girodet, Chardin, Flavin, Jenny Saville, Damien Hirst, Julian Schnabel, Murakami, Zhang Huan, General Idea, Dan Colen – not in that order (no McGinley? no AVAF?) – and that’s just a fraction of art history according to Terence Koh – which is more expansive than the Eurocentric humanities courses I took in college.

RIP Jeanne-Claude, Long live Bruce High Quality

RIP Jeanne-Claude, Long live Bruce High Quality

Koh spoke his own private ida-Koh language, which sounds something like Proto-Indo-Cabbie, though I heard someone ask Terence if it was Swedish.

Tonight at NAC

Tonight at NAC

He barely stopped to breathe, only taking breaks to sip from his glass of vodka.  He frequently strided away from his lectern to gesticulate and indicate details of the projected images.

svablogkohlecture19

A few times, he ranted at a rapid-fire clip, sounded like a Sotheby’s auctioneer, notably while discussing the Jeff Koons chrome bunny, which at the scale of the projection, looked like a anthropomorphic Sputnik.

RIP Dash Snow

RIP Dash Snow

Terence shouted and waved his arms indignantly while covering pictures of Hitler looking at artwork, and in the more emotive moments, slowed and spoke solemnly, especially when Dash Snow appeared, and when he displayed AA Bronson’s heartbreaking AIDS revelation, Felix, which is, for me, one of the most moving images of contemporary art since I first saw it in the 2002 Whitney Biennial.

Long live AA Bronson

Long live AA Bronson

In these heavyhearted moments, Terence sounded plantive and morose, though somehow resisted tears.  His lecture was politically charged, addressing, for example, 20th Century China and the Reagan administration’s delusional failure to intervene during the incipient AIDS epidemic.

Ups and Downs

Ups and Downs

And although nobody but Terence understood his words, he still said a lot, contextualizing himself and refreshingly reminding us that ultimately, art is remembered for being seen, and all that matters is how it looks!

Shrigley vs. Seymour (vs. Brant)

Shrigley vs. Seymour (vs. Brant)

Is this the new Terence Koh, post market crash, post Snow?  Still cheeky, but more substantial, orchestrated, polychrome, narrative, and profound?  Let’s find out at his “secret” performance tomorrow evening at Tompkins Square Park.

Ike-Koh (gesundheit!)

Ike-Koh (gesundheit!)

Oh, and rumor reveals a potential Terence Koh/Lady Gaga collaboration! DisKOH Stick!

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