blue-n-ivory:

Oleg Kulik 
“For his performances, Kulik creates a symbolic set of parameters to define the environment which he will inhabit in the persona of a dog, and then devises a series of actions that unfold as a response. The artist describes the dialogue within his practice as “a conscious falling out of the human horizon” which places him on hands and knees. His intention is to describe what he sees as a crisis of contemporary culture, a result of an overly refined cultural language which creates barriers between individuals. Thus, he simplifies his performance language to half of the basic emotional vocabulary of a domestic animal.
At the Interpol group exhibition in Stockholm in 1996, he performed in the gallery chained next to a sign labelled ‘dangerous’. An international scandal occurred when he not only attacked members of the public who chose to ignore the sign, in one case biting a man, but also attacked other artworks within the exhibition, partially destroying some pieces. For Kulik this was an excusable act, as there was a warning label attached to his performance which people chose to disregard. His intention was to divulge his angst at the current cultural crisis through the violent anger of a dog.”
http://www.dt-project.com/en/Works%20by%20other%20artists%20-%20Oleg%20Kulik.html

blue-n-ivory:

Oleg Kulik 

“For his performances, Kulik creates a symbolic set of parameters to define the environment which he will inhabit in the persona of a dog, and then devises a series of actions that unfold as a response. The artist describes the dialogue within his practice as “a conscious falling out of the human horizon” which places him on hands and knees. His intention is to describe what he sees as a crisis of contemporary culture, a result of an overly refined cultural language which creates barriers between individuals. Thus, he simplifies his performance language to half of the basic emotional vocabulary of a domestic animal.

At the Interpol group exhibition in Stockholm in 1996, he performed in the gallery chained next to a sign labelled ‘dangerous’. An international scandal occurred when he not only attacked members of the public who chose to ignore the sign, in one case biting a man, but also attacked other artworks within the exhibition, partially destroying some pieces. For Kulik this was an excusable act, as there was a warning label attached to his performance which people chose to disregard. His intention was to divulge his angst at the current cultural crisis through the violent anger of a dog.”

http://www.dt-project.com/en/Works%20by%20other%20artists%20-%20Oleg%20Kulik.html

(via performanceartempire)


theresa hak kyung cha. blind voice. 1975.

Ana Mendieta,

Love of my life.

These are awesome videos of her work.

spread knowledge.

arte directa.

Performance Artists

FADO

Sundance.

interview with Marina Abramovic.

also, this.

direct art.

a working history of ‘performance’ art, for my archival purposes:

birth: 1954 Jiro Yoshihara- Gutai Group

1954: Georges Mathieu, Shigeko Kubota

1957: Guy Debord, Michele Bernstein, Attaila Kotanyi, Raoul Vaneigem, Giuseppe Pinot-Gallizio -Situationist International

1952: John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, Merce Cunningham, David Tudor, Charles Olson- Black Mountain College-

1959: Allan Kaprow, Al Hansen, Robert Whitman, Dick Higgins, Jackson Mac Low, George Brecht -happenings

1964: Carloee Schneemann, Jean-Jacques Lebel 

1966: Raphael Montanez Ortiz- Guerrilla Art Action Group

1957: Wolf VostellFluxus

1962: Ben Vautier

1962: Milan Knizak, Jan Mach, Vit Mach, Sonja Svecova, Jan Trtilek and Zdenka Zizkova - AKTUAL

1960s: Hermann Nitsch, Otto Muhl, Gunter Brus, Rudolf Schwarzkolger

1970s- 1980s: Valie Export, Ulricke RosenbachMarina Abramovic, Ulay, Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Spalding Gray, Karen Finley, Chris Burden, Eleanor Antin, Tom Marioni, Suzanne Lacy, Adrian Piper, Martha Wilson, Lucy Lippard, Jacki Apple, Cindy Sherman, 

1990s: Homi K Bhabha 

F-Artists.

Ladies, thank you for all the valiant work you did, doors you opened, the change you made!

we are your daughters and we need to say “THANK YOU.”

Martha Wilson. 

Martha Rosler.

Ana Mendieta.

Judy Dater.

Leslie Labowitz.

Suzanne Lacy.

Faith Wilding.

be a feminist!