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Then and NowŒuvres d'Histoire

excerpt
Thirty-five years on from Viet Flakes (a collage film that Carolee Schneemann made in 1965 using pictures of the Vietnam War), Snows and Terminal Velocity (a montage of photographs from 9/11 that show bodies falling from the World Trade Center) reveal how much Carolee Schneemann – who is regarded as having been a trailblazer for the first generation of feminist artists – has been a closely focused and committed witness of the events and conflicts of her time. Although her visual art – the mingling of disciplines in her oeuvre since the early 1960s has included painting, assemblage, theatre and cinema in her “kinetic theater” or “expanded cinema” – made her a recognized pioneer of performance, cinema and multimedia art, this exhibition and its accompanying book are among the first to focus on the constant engagement of her work with contemporary history.
Then a young painter in the bubbling new york art scene, she tried to extend the gestural nature of her creations into space, primarily of the relief paintings that she energetically composed using elements she found in the neo-Dadaist sphere of Robert Rauschenberg and in the example of Joseph Cornell's Surrealist boxes. The solution she discovered was to take her painterly gesture outside of the picture frame, as demonstrated by her first transformative acts executed in her studio in 1963, where the results of using her body as a support for painting and assembly were immortalized in photographs. “Get that nude down off the canvas” is part of a plastic performance, in which she brings new life to painting by becoming one with the matter and putting it on the same level as the world, but it is also a political act in that a woman was reappropriating the female nude and casting out the stereotypes in a completely novel fashion. From this point on, Schneemann began to use the human body and its relationships as her material. in her earliest happenings, she created situations of tense confrontations of the body of the performer with that of the viewer on a physical level. A happening called Newspaper Event performed in new york's Judson Theater in 1963 made current affairs an actual material when seven dancers created sculptural forms out of piles of newspapers. in 1964, her performance Meat Joy debuted at the American Center in Paris when Jean-Jacques Lebel organized the first Festival de la libre expression. This orgiastic and Dionysiac production in which in fur and feather underwear performers dance with objects, paint, chickens and fish, was one of the first moments of body art and the liberation of the body. Starting in 1965, she integrated films into happenings in which the bodies of the performers served as relays between the images. in Snows, the use of abstract mime – particularly the scenes of abandonment and letting go (bodies hanging from a rope, being packed in materials) – was the medium used for intercession and expiation for the violence of the armed conflict presented in Viet Flakes. [...]
The question begging to be answered on the subject of “history painting”, by which is meant a form of art that allows the history of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries to be more interpreted than illustrated, is how to show what cannot be imagined, represented or justified. The artist is obliged to avoid the two extremes of an age in which all is made public, which, with the Second world war, the Holocaust, the atomic bomb, etc., saw the defeat of culture: in short, the impossibility of the image and the surfeit of images.
Annabelle Ténèze


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