Carolee Schneemann: P.P.O.W.Carolee Schneemann's recent solo exhibition at P.P.O.W. coincided with Thomas Hirschhorn's latest at Gladstone Gallery. Both, it scarcely needs pointing out, dealt with the politics of representation and the representation of politics, but a more interesting point of comparison might be semantic. While Schneemann--a pioneering figure in feminism and body art--has sometimes met with accusations of narcissism narcissism (närsĭs`ĭzəm), Freudian term, drawn from the Greek myth of Narcissus, indicating an exclusive self-absorption. In psychoanalysis, narcissism is considered a normal stage in the development of children. and shallowness, Hirschhorn today claims superficiality itself as a site de resistance. "The truth and logic of things," he writes, "are reflected on their own surface.... Let's keep things on the surface, let's take the surface seriously!" [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Whatever one thinks of Hirsch-horn's proposition and, moreover, of the specificities of his exhibition's content, its terms demand that we consider the ways in which all ideological battles are played out over and within the materiality MATERIALITY. That which is important; that which is not merely of form but of substance. 2. When a bill for discovery has been filed, for example, the defendant must answer every material fact which is charged in the bill, and the test in these cases seems to of the body. Such a truth has been, of course, the purview The part of a statute or a law that delineates its purpose and scope. Purview refers to the enacting part of a statute. It generally begins with the words be it enacted and continues as far as the repealing clause. of numerous artists over the years, a great number of them pursuing specifically feminist practices. Thus, visiting "Corporeal Possessing a physical nature; having an objective, tangible existence; being capable of perception by touch and sight. Under Common Law, corporeal hereditaments are physical objects encompassed in land, including the land itself and any tangible object on it, that can be ," a miniretrospective of Schneemann's photographic works executed over the last forty years or so, one is reminded of just how recent--and how particular--such "superficial" considerations of the body really are. Indeed, the throughline of "Corporeal" (a title that surely signals an intention to take the surface seriously) issues from the artist's conviction that matters sexual, social, and political are most immediately inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. in the flesh. Included here were photographic sequences documenting those works of Schneemann's that, due to their sheer canonical status, sometimes verge on losing their original disruptive force. It is easy to forget the radicalness of Interior Scroll, 1975, for instance, in which a naked, mud-painted Schneemann pulled a text from her vagina vagina: see reproductive system. vagina Genital canal in females. Together with the cavity of the uterus, it forms the birth canal. In most virgins, its external opening is partially closed by a thin fold of tissue (hymen), which has various forms, and read its eloquent protest against a male-dominated art world. Easy, too (in our current oversexed o·ver·sexed adj. Having or showing an excessive sexual appetite or interest in sex. though paradoxically conservative moment) to miss completely the ethical imperatives driving Schneemann's eros-laden 1963 performance Eye Body, with its images of Schneemann as a ritualistically painted, serpent-strewn goddess. Yet for those new to Schneemann's practice (and even for those long acquainted), "Corporeal" offered a subtle contextual framework that disallowed easy or purely essentialized readings by explicitly linking (while never equating) gender-specific concerns to those one might label more humanist. The artist's striking seven-minute film, Viet-Flakes, 1965, offered a montage montage (mŏntäzh`, Fr. môNtäzh`), the art and technique of motion-picture editing in which contrasting shots or sequences are used to effect emotional or intellectual responses. of horrific--though never explicit--images culled from the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. , stitched schizophrenically together into a kind of anxious cinematic fabric. Accompanied by pop lyrics including "What the world needs now ..." and "We can work it out ..." Viet-Flakes, like Schneemann's other work, posited bodies as the real site of political struggle. Also included in the show were very early works (a 1960 painting) as well as very recent photo-based pieces addressing 9/11. One such work, Terminal Velocity terminal velocity Noun Physics the maximum velocity reached by a body falling under gravity through a liquid or gas, esp. the atmosphere Noun 1. , 2001-2005, featured now familiar repeating images of people jumping or falling from the Twin Towers. Perhaps because these appropriated images are already so ingrained in our heads or because of their overt symbolic status, this work lacked the enforced intimacy particular to most of Schneemann's practice, and was the less powerful for it. Yet the overall effect of "Corporeal" provided a succinct argument that, in discussing politics, we are--and always have been--discussing the body: which is to say, surface as much as depth. |
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