Initially, I was very intrigued by
Brooks’ article because of the interesting topic she presented. In her abstract,
she revealed that through the paper she examined “the politics of black women’s
pop music culture in relation to the Gulf Coast catastrophe and the extreme
marginalization of black women in American sociopolitical culture.” (p. 180) However,
the links to Hurricane Katrina and the governmental response and lack of relief
efforts appeared convoluted. The relation of Blidge’s performance to the relief
efforts and as an effort to potentially bring about issues of “black female
citizenship in American culture” appeared somewhat relevant because of the
platform she utilized. (p. 189) The obvious connection of performing a rock song
with a white man in an effort to raise money for Hurricane Katrina victims
played a role in linking Blidge, as well as her music, to the catastrophe.
However, the use of Beyonce’s second solo recording, B-Day, in relation to Hurricane Katrina appeared to be an artificially
produced bridge between the two. The connection between Beyonce’s album and
underlying issues regarding black female representation and an effort to
dismantle stereotypes about black women that were perhaps more blatantly
revealed through media coverage regarding Hurricane Katrina appeared to be a
far stretch. Brooks’ discussion of female discontent and Beyonce’s attempt to
create a new identity for black women was a much more convincing argument
without her attempt to force a connection between Beyonce’s representation of
this complex topic and Hurricane Katrina. Brooks used examples such as visual
aspects from the album and music videos that related the music to the bayous of
the south to link B-Day to Hurricane
Katrina. The information that was utilized through the discussion of Beyonce’s
work in connection to Hurricane Katrina appeared somewhat shallow. Overall, the
idea of the marginalization of black women in American sociopolitical culture
was discussed in an in-depth and convincing way. Yet, the aspects of the
article that discussed its connection to Hurricane Katrina were somewhat
lacking. Of course, the entire theme of the article would lack a significant
part, yet Brooks’ article would have been much more compelling without the
attempt to associate it with the Gulf Coast catastrophe.
Monday, November 30, 2015
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Reflections on Kristine Stiles: RODFORCE
RODFORCE is a term, but also a moniker used by performance artist Sherman Fleming. I find Fleming’s use of the RODFORCE persona to be insightful, playful, and honest in its mockery. In Kristine Stiles article the author quotes Fleming explaining the use of the term: “I was trying to make a commentary on the Abstract Expressionists who I feel represented the Western ideal of brute men…” RODFORCE, a power driven by phallic energy becomes almost satirical in Fleming’s performances. I find his motivational perspective to be rather fascinating. The artist explains, “Ax Vapor is actually a thesis on the role and tradition of dance in society.” He goes on to explain that dance had changed after the industrial era, “…the waltz arrived. In that type of dancing, women lost their status; they had to be led around the floor.” Ax Vapor consisted of Fleming wearing combat boots constructed with halved bowling balls on the soles. The effect of the bowling balls was an unstable and unpredictable effect when he danced. When Stiles writes, “the necessity to endure and persist, the ability to recover from a metaphorical “fall,” the keen and artful balance of remaining upright at the same time in attempting to move along a surface that constantly changes”, I see clearly a powerful metaphor for the way we stumble through life. The satire of RODFORCE arrives in Fleming’s explanation of physical endurance as they relate to ritual and myth. The idea of physical exertions being a practice of, “male rights of passage”, and Fleming’s belief that these tasks ultimately, “will help them to gain a kind of mystic intelligence associated with female knowledge", resolve my interpretation that “RODFORCE” essentially explains the ritual action of the male as a means to invoke female intuition, insight, intellect.
What I found especially interesting was Stiles opinion on performance. She says, "Who that person is, his or her very Being-- fundamentally dictates the quality of the art."
Stiles believes that the quality of a performance is to be judged by, "ability to capture the mind of the observer through the physical magnetism and movement of the body." Does this marginalize performers by agility and age? Why does "Who that person is" dictate quality? Is it possible that rather than "who that person is" but how that person presents who they are might dictate quality?
What I found especially interesting was Stiles opinion on performance. She says, "Who that person is, his or her very Being-- fundamentally dictates the quality of the art."
Stiles believes that the quality of a performance is to be judged by, "ability to capture the mind of the observer through the physical magnetism and movement of the body." Does this marginalize performers by agility and age? Why does "Who that person is" dictate quality? Is it possible that rather than "who that person is" but how that person presents who they are might dictate quality?
Cut/Across
Not Just An "Other" Exhibition took place on March 5, 1988 at Washington Project for the Arts in Washington, D.C. The synopsis of the exhibit was formulated around the artist's groups: Black Artists/ White Artists, Latinegro Theatre Collective, and Seoul Group.
I was very intrigued by the personal writings, questions, concerns, photographs, etc. workshop with the focus on racism and the nature of identity. The installation was displayed by BAWA and allowed the public to participate with questions and/or their own experiences. This particular exhibit allowed people, the artists and viewers, to participate in what otherwise would be an uncomfortable conversation.
"I breathe air. Air is important. Air and space are important. I walk on the ground. Ground is important. I cook to make me warm. I need fire. Fire is important. The five elements are important...We need to find a better position from which to communicate. We need each other. We are basically the same," as spoken by Yuriko Yamaguchi resonates to me for several reasons. One being that race is political. Ethnicity is not bad, it is not good, it just is. Yamaguchi strips race down to being/ the act of being and I find that to be most impressive.
Cut/Across was intended to exemplify what it means to be American. I wonder if an exhibition like this would be more effective today?
Fleming and RODFORCE
I appreciate Stiles’s article on
Sherman Fleming, particularly for highlighting the concentrated amount of
details and layered meanings that Sherman puts into his performative pieces. I
imagine it would have been near imperceptible to be aware of them embedded in the
work while witnessing it in person. I think he intended it this way, as Stiles
explains “his performance to be ‘populist’ in orientation…. He considers that
artists… who refuse to conventionalize their work in any manner, run the risk
of failing to envelop the audience and thereby gaining wider understanding.”
(36) His work also seems to perceptively evolve over time and to current social
concerns, likely through his constant ambitions to learn: ‘I am concerned with
history, a part of history that is always left out. I am always doing research into
… phenomena that have been ignored.’ (35)
The discussion of his persona,
RODFORCE, illuminates an aspect of the creation of art that I find intriguing,
and have never actually thought before. This name as a response to the
hypermasculine ideal represented by the Abstract Expressionists, who mostly
acted like “spoiled assholes” and whose lives were out of control, begs the
questions: ‘Why do you have to be on the fringe to make good work? Why do you
always have to piss people off and literally hurt yourself?’ (36) I think these
are good questions for us to address. Also, considering our last discussion of “Couple
in the Cage,” how effective is Fleming’s embodiment of a personification that he also means to critique?
Sherman Fleming
In Kristin Stiles’ article about
the work of Sherman Fleming, I particularly was interested in the ways in which
Fleming attempts to communicate to his viewers in his performances. Fleming
prefers his performances to be “populist,” perhaps because performance art has
gradually become removed from popular notions of the visual arts (page 36).
Fleming believes that artists who tend to avoid conventionalizing their art can
unfortunately lose their audience and an understanding of their work (page 36).
Fleming employs movement, such as dance, in order to connect with his viewer
and make his work easy to identify with: “‘I think that dance, like in Ax Vapor, really hits people somewhere around
here,’ (he points to the lower chakras: the region of the hear, guts and sexual
organs) (page 36).” Stiles notes the
importance of performance and its connection to the viewer, “This ability to capture
the mind of the observer through the physical magnetism and movement of the
body is of cardinal significance in performance and one of the central means by
which the quality of the work may be judged (page 37). I admire that Fleming
attempts to make his performances understandable to his audience, and even
considers how to spread this connection without viewers feeling threatened by
his work (page 36). But how much should a performance artist concern him or
herself with making their work understandable? Not every viewer will be able to
connect. Should the notion of connecting with the viewer always be considered
by the artist when first developing a new performance work?
Sunday, November 22, 2015
"Couple in a Cage"
Diana Taylor's piece on A Savage Performance: Guillermo 'omez-Pena and Coco Fusco's "Couple in a Cage" examines Pena and Fusco's recreation of colonialism in contemporary time. "Couple in a Cage" was performed in the early 1990's and traveled the world exhibiting Pena and Fusco while incorporating the very real theme of "other". Taylor discusses that for many centuries, "The 'primitive' body as object reaffirms the cultural supremacy and authority of viewing the subject-the one who sees, interprets, and records from the divine Columbus to the ethnographer... The objectified, 'primitive' body exists, isolated and removed" (p. 163). Taylor also examines that the 'encounters' with the 'other' and breaks it down by stating that the only way society understands 'discovery' is through the eyes of the 'explorer'. This automatically is a separation between us and them.
I like Pena and Fusco's performance because it scrutinizes the barbaric American history that has been taught for the last couple of centuries. From their avoidance of eye contact, the use of collars and leashes to be worn for when the artists needed to use the bathroom, as well as using an unintelligible, their performance eroticized and sexualized a fable. Through their exploitation of 'other' it seemed to open a dialogue and (hopefully) helped bring to question how history has been written i.e. the discoverers vs. discover-ees.
Reflections on Diana Taylor: A Savage Performance
In Diana Taylor’s essay “A Savage Performance” the author discusses the role of the museum in an ethnographic context as it relates to Guillermo Gómez-Peña and Coco Fusco’s “Couple in a Cage” performance. Taylor states, “Museums enact the knower/known relationship, preserve (a particular) history, (certain) traditions, and (dominant) values” (p 164). I found Taylor’s phraseology with the use of parentheses in this passage effective in communicating the hegemonic devices at work within the curation of museums especially those of natural history or ethnography. The authority of the museum to edit is exemplary of their power and dominance of other societies or cultures, as Taylor explains, “the monumentality of most museums emphasizes the discrepancy in power between the society which can contain all others, and those represented only by remains, the shards and fragments salvaged in miniature displays” (p164). The museum itself, a symbol of that hegemonic order, functions as the authoritative superior which has the power to “contain", display or exhibit the “other” cultures.
The artists created a documentary of the performance. I find the discussion of whether the video does the same thing as the very museums and discoverers that the artists are critiquing to be quite interesting. Does this video perpetuate the view of “us and them”? Does “reversing the ethnographic lens” provide an insight to the audience subject? (p169). Taylor explains, “the subject of analysis in the Cage performance is not the “couple” inside but the audience outside” (p 172). If that is the case, than the video provides the audience to see themselves as subject, albeit unknowing performers. The author asked artist Gómez-Peña, “what his ideal spectator would have done”; his response, “open the cage and let us out” (p 169). In the discussion of intervention I cannot help but consider the standardized restrictions of the museum in context of performance and theatricality and their symbolic relationship to colonialism; specifically, "don’t touch the art" and "don’t interrupt the show”.
Taylor Reflection
Diana Taylor’s discussion in the
section on “Theatricality” adds some dimension to the consideration of
Gómez-Peña’s “Welcome to the Third World.” By supplanting the anonymous faces of
the “indigenous” from various “exotic” lands with the names of famous Western
Europeans who were known for exploitation of non-western culture, Gómez-Peña
quite effectively satirizes the colonialist incentive to use “indigenous bodies
[to] perform as a ‘truth factor; they ‘prove’ the material facticity of an
‘other’ and authenticate the discoverer/missionary/anthropologist’s adventure….”
Taylor also discusses the “unidirectional gaze” involving the “native body” as
an object to be viewed (“discovered”) by the “civilized observer.” I think
there is somewhat of a parallel between this idea and the last words by
Gómez-Peña in this piece: “I talk, therefore I am.” Taylor emphasizes the presentation
of the “native bodies” as “not speaking.” “Voiceless, it lets us speak for it….
‘We,’ those viewers who look through the eyes of the explorer, are (like the
explorer) positioned safely outside the frame, free to define, theorize, and
debate their (never ‘our’) societies.” (162)
"Two Undiscovered Amerindians Visit the West"
Diana Taylor’s article discusses
the performance, Two Undiscovered
Amerindians Visit, by Cuco Fusco and Guillermo Gómez-Peña.
In this traveling performance, the two artists confined themselves in a cage where
viewers could observe and explore them. The artists chose specific places for
their performances, countries that have histories of abuse towards natives
(page 163). This performance “repeated the colonialist gesture of producing the
‘savage’ body, and it historicized the practice by highlighting its citational
character (page 164.” What I found interesting in Taylor’s discussion of this
performance was her exploration of the histories of confining the “other.” For
example, the way in which museums present a discrepancy in power and how they
come to represent “the theatricality of colonialism (page 167).” When Taylor uses the word “theatricality” does
she mean colonialism is a spectacle in this context? Taylor also claims that “the
cage confronted the viewer with the unnatural and violent history of representation
and exhibition of non-Western human beings (page 167).” The cage also brings
into discussion the history of caging rebellious people in Latin America and
pre-Hispanic times. The cage in this performance opens the artists up to being
labeled and classified, while they remain silent, removing any individuality, similar
to the effects of colonialism and even imprisonment (page 167). In what ways
can we see the artists owning any sense of agency in this performance?
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