Body art
Body art is art made on, with, or consisting of, the human body. The most common forms of body art are tattoos and body piercings. Other types include scarification, branding, subdermal implants, scalpelling, shaping (for example tight-lacing of corsets), full body tattoo and body painting.
Body art is also a sub-category of performance art, in which artists use or abuse their own body to make their particular statements. More extreme body art can involve mutilation or pushing the body to its physical limits.
In more recent times, the body has become a subject of much broader discussion and treatment than can be reduced to body art in its common understanding. Important strategies that question the human body are: implants, body in symbiosis with the new technologies, virtual bodies, among others.
Background
The Vienna Action Group was formed in 1965 by Hermann Nitsch, Otto Mühl, Günter Brus, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler. They performed several body art actions, usually involving social taboos (such as genital mutilation).
Vito Acconci once documented, through photos and text, his daily exercise routine of stepping on and off a chair for as long as possible over several months. Acconci also performed Following Piece, in which he followed randomly chosen New Yorkers.
In France, body art was termed art corporel and practised by such artists as Michel Journiac and Gina Pane. In Italy in the 1980s, one of the famous artists in the movement was Ketty La Rocca.[1]
Marina Abramović performed Rhythm 0 in 1974. In the piece, the audience was given instructions to use on Abramović's body an array of 72 provided instruments of pain and pleasure, including knives, feathers, and a loaded pistol. Audience members cut her, pressed thorns into her belly, applied lipstick to her, and removed her clothes. The performance ended after six hours, when someone held the loaded pistol up to Abramović's head and a scuffle broke out.
Photographer Spencer Tunick is well known for conducting photo shoots which gather large numbers of naked people at public locations around the world.[2]
Artists whose works have evolved with more directed personal mythologies include Rebecca Horn, Youri Messen-Jaschin, Javier Perez, and Jana Sterbak.[3] Body art can also be expressed via writing rather than painting.
Extreme body art
For example, one of Marina Abramović's works involved dancing until she collapsed from exhaustion, while one of Dennis Oppenheim's better-known works saw him lying in the sunlight with a book on his chest, until his skin, excluding that covered by the book, was badly sunburned. It can even consist of the arrangement and dissection of preserved bodies in an artistic fashion, as in the case of the plastinated bodies used in the travelling Body Worlds exhibition.
Absence of body
Scientific research in this area, for example that by Stelarc, can be considered in this artistic vein.[4] A special case of the body art strategies is the absence of body. Some artists who performed the "absence" of body through their artworks were: Davor Džalto, Antony Gormley, and Andy Warhol.
Body art events
Burning Man festival is held annually in the Black Rock Desert of northwest Nevada (US), September. Jake Lloyd Jones, a Sydney-based artist, conceived the Sydney Body Art Ride, which has become an annual event. Participants are painted to form a living rainbow that rides to the Pacific Ocean and immerses itself in the waves.[5]
See also
- Body modification
- Cyborg art
- Female cosmetic coalitions
- Modern primitive
- Temporary tattoos
- Vajazzle
References
- Lea Vergine (1976). "Dall' Informale alla Body Art: dieci voci dell' Arte Contemporanea: 1960/1970". Gruppo Editoriale Forma.
- Matilda Battersby (19 September 2011). "Spencer Tunick creates 'naked Dead Sea'". Independent. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
- Green, John (2005). Looking for Alaska. New York: Dutton Children's. pp. 67–69.
- Dennis Publishing (2007). "Body Art". Bizarre.
- Elicia Murray (9 February 2007). "Sydney Body Art Ride". The Sydney morning Herald.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Body art. |
- Walker, John (1992). "Body Art". Glossary of Art, Architecture & Design Since 1945 (3rd ed.). London: Bingley. ISBN 9780853656395. OCLC 930752485.
- Gaweewong, Gridthiya; R. J. Preece (4 April 2019) [8 August 2010]. "Thai Women Artists: Doin' It for Themselves". Art. artdesigncafé.com. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
- Body art at Curlie
- Body Art section at the Australian Museum
- Body Art Page, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention