34 min., Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present, Photo by Marco Anelli. © 2010 Marina Abramović
I’m not sure Marco Anelli’s photographs of the sitters in Marina Abramovic’s performance at MoMA are worth more than the rounds they’re making on the internerds, but there’s a good chance they are. They are surprisingly powerful. Abramovic, who is seated in the atrium for the duration of the exhibition, invites visitors to sit silently with the artist, in what amounts to an emotional stare-off. As noted by The Year in Pictures, Anelli’s photographs, all posted and annotated with sitting times, are their own act of endurance. (Thx SS)
RELATED:
- Kottke provides a great link round up.
- As per usual MetaFilter hosts a great comment thread on the subject.
- Observation: Philip-Lorca diCorcia’s series of photographs capturing people traveling through the Time Square do not share common conceits, yet have strikingly similar quality.
{ 11 comments }
Missing notables:
Anne Bogart, theatre director (and one of my heroes): http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4538119150/in/photostream/
and Tehching Hsieh (unconfirmed), who knows a thing or two about endurance:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4478809767/in/set-72157623741486824/
Missing notables:
Anne Bogart, theatre director (and one of my heroes): http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4538119150/in/photostream/
and Tehching Hsieh (unconfirmed), who knows a thing or two about endurance:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4478809767/in/set-72157623741486824/
Missing notables:
Anne Bogart, theatre director (and one of my heroes): http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4538119150/in/photostream/
and Tehching Hsieh (unconfirmed), who knows a thing or two about endurance:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4478809767/in/set-72157623741486824/
Missing notables:
Anne Bogart, theatre director (and one of my heroes): http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4538119150/in/photostream/
and Tehching Hsieh (unconfirmed), who knows a thing or two about endurance:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4478809767/in/set-72157623741486824/
Missing notables:
Anne Bogart, theatre director (and one of my heroes): http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4538119150/in/photostream/
and Tehching Hsieh (unconfirmed), who knows a thing or two about endurance:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4478809767/in/set-72157623741486824/
One of my favorites is the Marina mirror:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4479259355/in/set-72157623741486824/
A performance artist doppelganger named Anya who sat with Abramovic the entire day. There’s an interview with her here:
http://nosmarties.com/2010/seein-dis-the-anxiety-of-influence/
One of my favorites is the Marina mirror:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/themuseumofmodernart/4479259355/in/set-72157623741486824/
A performance artist doppelganger named Anya who sat with Abramovic the entire day. There’s an interview with her here:
http://nosmarties.com/2010/seein-dis-the-anxiety-of-influence/
I have some work that is similar formally. My Auto Show and Insite series.
I have some work that is similar formally. My Auto Show and Insite series.
i think the power of the images and the power of the piece are related; to experience both requires a commitment of time/energy (and for some it also requires being open to new ideas about art).
but just like a visit to MoMA, immersing oneself in the portraits provides a multi-layered experience; one that addresses energy, commitment, humanity, presence, curiosity, emotion, stamina, etc.
through both the portraits and the performance comes the realization that life is made up of all these things and that art serves as a mirror them back to view life in new (and sometimes unexpected) ways.
i think the power of the images and the power of the piece are related; to experience both requires a commitment of time/energy (and for some it also requires being open to new ideas about art).
but just like a visit to MoMA, immersing oneself in the portraits provides a multi-layered experience; one that addresses energy, commitment, humanity, presence, curiosity, emotion, stamina, etc.
through both the portraits and the performance comes the realization that life is made up of all these things and that art serves as a mirror them back to view life in new (and sometimes unexpected) ways.
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