This book focuses on the performance art of Marilyn Arsem, an internationally acclaimed performance artist known for her innovative and experimental work. Arsem’s work addresses women’s history and myth-making capacities, the potency of site and geography, the idea of the audience as witnesses and the intimacy of one-to-one works.
One of the most prolific performance artists working in the United States today, Arsem performs carefully choreographed durational actions that are developed site-responsively and range from deceptively simple interventions to elaborately orchestrated actions. This edited volume seeks to extend Arsem’s legacy beyond the audiences of her live performances and enter her work into the lexicon of the art world. Accompanied by 200 images, this book will be of interest to scholars and students of performance studies, feminist performance, feminist art history and performance history. It will also contribute to the history of alternative spaces and galleries, which is only now being written.
I have had the privilege of knowing Marilyn for over 30 years. Her work has given me so many epiphanies about live art, time-based art practice and durational performance practice. How and why do you choose a single action and enact it over an extended period of time? How do you respond to site and create a sacred meditational zone; a reflexive space about the human condition? And most importantly, how do you teach future generations about the importance of living while making art as a spiritual and philosophical practice? This book is yet another example of Arsem’s legacy. Fundamental, I’d say.
- Guillermo Gómez-Peña
Watching Marilyn Arsem perform can be a slow, careful, vulnerable and heart-stoppingly profound experience. To see her is to know better the complex, intermingling particularities of body, space, time, being and action. Reading this comprehensive, lucidly written and deeply insightful book – the first significant publication on Arsem’s practice as a performance artist – will enable new perspectives on a major artist’s work. It also sheds vivid light upon enduring themes for the critical encounter with art: duration and doing, materiality and nothingness, truth and representation, commitment and experiment, togetherness and solitude, experience and endurance.
- Dominic Johnson, Queen Mary University of London
İçerik tablosu
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Responding to Site – Jennie Klein
Performance Photographs 1987-1999
SECTION ONE: DURATION AND ACTION
On Time at the Museum – Lucian O’Connor
Salt, Stones, and Stars – Jeffery Byrd
With the Others – Sandrine Schaefer
The Lightness and Darkness of Becoming-Marilyn – Paul Couillard
Performance Photographs 2003-2009
SECTION TWO: SITE AND HISTORY
“Lux Balcanica est umbra Orientis” Marilyn Arsem’s Balkan Performances – Kristine Stiles
Impossible Totalities: Political Performance as Palimpsest – El Putnam
Dropping the Frame: Orpheus to Red in Woods – David P. Miller
Performance as/of Shamanism and Mediumship: Writing Ada – John Dennis Anderson
Performance Photographs 2010-2013
SECTION THREE: PERFORMANCE AND PEDAGOGY
Some Thoughts on Teaching Performance Art, in Five Parts – Marilyn Arsem
Dialogues with Absence: Reflections on Time and If to Drift – Sandra Johnston
Documenting Arsem – Michael Woolley
“Reminding Me Always that Nothing Remains”—Marilyn Arsem’s Performance and Pedagogy – Kathy O’Dell
Performance Photographs 2013-2015
Afterword: Durational Forms and Pedagogical Encounters – Natalie Loveless
Performance Photographs 2015-2019
Appendix: Arsem’s Performances 1967-2019
Author Biographies
Further Reading
Index
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Jennie Klein teaches at Ohio University and writes about performance, feminism and gender. Her writing can be found on her blog Writing On Performance: http://jenniekleinperformancewriting.blogspot.com.