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Perform, Repeat, Record: Live Art in History [Pehme köide]

Edited by (Roski School of Art and Design, University of Southern California, USA), Edited by (University of Roehampton)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 652 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x178 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2012
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1841504890
  • ISBN-13: 9781841504896
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 652 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x178 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2012
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1841504890
  • ISBN-13: 9781841504896
Teised raamatud teemal:
Bringing together contributors from dance, theatre, visual studies and art history, Perform, Repeat, Record addresses the conundrum of how live art is positioned within history. Set apart from other art forms in that it may never be performed in precisely the same way twice, ephemeral artwork exists both at the time of its staging and long after in the memories of its spectators and their testimonies, as well as in material objects, visual media and text. These multiple occurrences and iterations offer new critical possibilities for thinking and writing the histories of performance. Among the artists, theorists and historians who contributed to this volume are Marina Abramovic, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Rebecca Schneider, Boris Groys, Jane Blocker, Carolee Schneemann, Tehching Hsieh, Orlan, Tilda Swinton and Jean-Luc Nancy.

Arvustused

'A work of art can never be produced the same way twice. ... this concern ... continues to provoke a multitude of questions and opinions regarding how works should be documented and re-created. ... [ Jones and Heathfield] address these concerns in relation to performance art, body art, and live art; simultaneously, they construct a history of these broad artistic fields.'  Caylin Smith, Moving Image Archive News  





'The breadth and depth of Perform, Repeat, Record are astonishing and the range of artists, scholars and insights invigorating ... It leaves me overwhelmed.'  Caroline Wake, RealTime Arts  





'An impressive collaboration between two of the field's most dedicated scholars.'  Lisa Newman, Artillery  





'This is a weighty text in all senses of the term'  New Theatre Quarterly, Chris Gilligan  





'In its exhaustive presentation of different types of performances, documentation, and critical approaches, it suggests a way of reading performance that is no longer beholden to modernist notions of transgression, transformation, and the avant-garde.'  A Journal of Performance and Art, Jennie Klein  





'[ A] broad and thoughtful investigation of how the history of performative art should be documented and studied.The book covers a particularly international scope, with essays devoted to performance art in the U.S., Western Europe, South America, China, the Middle East, Australia, and the Soviet Union, including a timeline of Soviet and Post-Soviet performance and another of performance historiographythat is, surveys and re-performances. The final section records eleven conversations between scholars and performance artists, including Carolee Schneemann, Tehching Hsieh, Ron Athey, Janine Antoni and Marina Abromavic. The book will be very useful for scholars of performance and can serve as an introduction to the history and questions around the field for performance artists themselves.'  The Drama Review, Pannill Camp  





'The collection offers a wealth of research on previously little researched work.'  Drama and Performance Studies  





'Taken as a whole, then, 'Perform, Repeat, Record' embraces the mammoth task of challenging how history making occurs within this field of contemporary art. Embracing a diverse and unconventional range of responses to the provocation How does live art get remembered?, it has implications for the broader field of historical discourse'  Limina, Janet Carter  





'A valuable sourcebook and toolbox'  Theatre Journal, Marie Pecorari  





'[ A] broad and thoughtful investigation of how the history of performative art should be documented and studied.The book covers a particularly international scope, with essays devoted to performance art in the U.S., Western Europe, South America, China, the Middle East, Australia, and the Soviet Union, including a timeline of Soviet and Post-Soviet performance and another of performance historiographythat is, surveys and re-performances. The final section records eleven conversations between scholars and performance artists, including Carolee Schneemann, Tehching Hsieh, Ron Athey, Janine Antoni and Marina Abromavic. The book will be very useful for scholars of performance and can serve as an introduction to the history and questions around the field for performance artists themselves.'  Artblog, Andrea Kirsh

Introductions
The Now and the Has Been: Paradoxes of Live Art in History
9(18)
Amelia Jones
Then Again
27(12)
Adrian Heathfield
THEORIES AND HISTORIES
Introduction
39(8)
Amelia Jones
Chapter 1 The Performativity of Performance Documentation
47(12)
Philip Auslander
Chapter 2 Dead Mannequin Walking: Fluxus and the Politics of Reception
59(18)
Hannah B. Higgins
Chapter 3 The Viral Ontology of Performance
77(12)
Christopher Bedford
Chapter 4 Can Photographs Make It So? Repeated Outbreaks of Valie Export's Genital Panic Since 1969
89(16)
Mechtild Widrich
Chapter 5 Macular Degeneration: Some Peculiar Aspects of Performance Art Documentation
105(16)
Monica Mayer
Chapter 6 History and Precariousness: In Search of a Performative Historiography
121(16)
Eleonora Fabiao
Chapter 7 Performance Remains
137(14)
Rebecca Schneider
Chapter 8 Not as Before, but Simply: Again
151(20)
Andre Lepecki
Chapter 9 The Prosthetic Present Tense: Documenting Chinese Time-based Art
171(16)
Meiling Cheng
Chapter 10 Progressive Striptease
187(12)
Sven Lutticken
Chapter 11 Repetition: A Skin which Unravels
199(10)
Jane Blocker
Chapter 12 Art in the Age of Biopolitics: From Artwork to Art Documentation
209(10)
Boris Groys
Chapter 13 The Interstices of History
219(18)
Angela Harutyunyan
An Unofficial Timeline of Socialist and Post-Socialist Performance
231(6)
Angela Harutyunyan
DOCUMENTS
Introduction
237(4)
Adrian Heathfield
Chapter 14 A Text on 20 years with 66 footnotes
241(12)
Tim Etchells
Chapter 15 Faith Wilding, Waiting and Wait-With
253(6)
Chapter 16 Lynn Hershman and/as Roberta Breitmore
259(10)
Chapter 17 We Are Formatted Memories
269(4)
Chapter 18 Franko B and Kamal Ackarie, Don't Leave Me This Way
273(4)
Chapter 19 Make Me Stop Smoking
277(18)
Rabin Mroue
Chapter 20 The Personal Evolution of the Performance Object (Or, What to Do with Leftovers)
295(6)
Nao Bustamante
Chapter 21 Cai Yuan and J.J. Xi, Mad For Real
301(4)
Chapter 22 Hayley Newman, MiniFlux
305(6)
Chapter 23 Daniel Joseph Martinez, Call Me Ishmael or The Fully Enlightened Earth Radiates Disaster Triumphant
311(4)
Chapter 24 Multiple Journeys: A Performance Chronology
315(18)
Guillermo Gomez-Pena
Chapter 25 Attending to Anthony McCall's Long Film For Ambient Light
333(14)
Lucas Ihlein
Chapter 26 ReCut Project
347(4)
Ming-Yuen S. Ma
Chapter 27 Assuming a Migrant Woman's Identity
351(6)
Tanja Ostojic
Chapter 28 Barbara Smith, Intimations of Immortality
357(6)
Chapter 29 Santiago Sierra and the "Contexts" of History
363(4)
Chapter 30 Reconstruction2
367(18)
Janez Jansa
Chapter 31 Documents of Chinese Time-based Art: Three Impressions from Three Fragments
385(6)
Meiling Cheng
Chapter 32 Both Sitting Duet and Cheap Lecture
391(22)
Jonathan Burrows
Matteo Fargion
Chapter 33 Aftermath: The Performance / Installation Nexus
413(22)
Blair French
Timeline of Ideas: Live Art in (Art) History, A Primarily European-US-based Trajectory of Debates and Exhibitions Relating to Performance Documentation and Re-enactments
425(10)
Amelia Jones
DIALOGUES
Introduction
435(6)
Adrian Heathfield
Chapter 34 Interior Squirrel and the Vicissitudes of History
441(16)
Carolee Schneemann
Amelia Jones
Chapter 35 I Just Go in Life
457(12)
Tehching Hsieh
Adrian Heathfield
Chapter 36 The Maybe: Modes of Performance and the "Live"
469(14)
Tilda Swinton
Joanna Scanlan
Chapter 37 Photography as a Performative Act
483(10)
Shezad Dawood
Amelia Jones
Chapter 38 Do it Again, Do it Again (Turn Around, Go Back)
493(18)
Iain Forsyth
Jane Pollard
Andrew Renton
Chapter 39 Touching Remains
511(18)
Janine Antoni
Adrian Heathfield
Chapter 40 Perverse Martyrologies
529(14)
Ron Athey
Dominic Johnson
Chapter 41 The Live Artist as Archaeologist
543(24)
Marina Abramovic
Amelia Jones
Chapter 42 Every House Has a Door
567(28)
Lin Hixson
Matthew Goulish
Chapter 43 Alliterations
595(8)
Mathilde Monnier
Jean-Luc Nancy
Noemie Solomon
Chapter 44 Intangibles
603(14)
Hugo Glendinning
Adrian Heathfield
Tim Etchells
Acknowledgements 617(2)
Author Biographies 619(12)
Index 631
Amelia Jones is an art theorist, curator and researcher. She is the author of several books, including Seeing Differently: A History and Theory of Identification and the Visual Arts.





Adrian Heathfield is a writer, curator and professor of performance and visual culture at the University of Roehampton, London. He is the author of Live: Art and Performance and Out of Now, among others.