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Exploring Authenticity in Performance Art

The document discusses the question of authenticity in performance art, specifically whether a work can retain its essential meaning and character when performed by someone other than the original artist. It notes that in other art forms like music and theater, repeated performances by new performers who reinterpret the original are generally accepted. However, in performance art where the artist and performer are the same, substituting a new performer may dramatically change the work. Nonetheless, the authenticity of a performance remains even if experienced through documentation rather than live. Ultimately, whether a re-performance of a work can be considered legitimate depends on whether the intentions of the original work remain similar in the new presentation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
116 views3 pages

Exploring Authenticity in Performance Art

The document discusses the question of authenticity in performance art, specifically whether a work can retain its essential meaning and character when performed by someone other than the original artist. It notes that in other art forms like music and theater, repeated performances by new performers who reinterpret the original are generally accepted. However, in performance art where the artist and performer are the same, substituting a new performer may dramatically change the work. Nonetheless, the authenticity of a performance remains even if experienced through documentation rather than live. Ultimately, whether a re-performance of a work can be considered legitimate depends on whether the intentions of the original work remain similar in the new presentation.

Uploaded by

indexicalimage
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Independent Curators International - Performance and Reperfo...

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INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL Journals

Performing Between Action and Script, Nina Horisaki-Christens


October 28, 2011 In his recent musings in Artforum on the future of Trisha Browns work, Douglas Crimp posits that her signature solo Watermotor, as performed by Brown, is a masterpiece. He then follows up by inquiring, Will it ever be danceable by anyone but Brown? The question is not so much will it be danced by anyone else, as Crimp was likely aware that it would inevitably be performed by another at some point, but would it be danced as expressively and imaginatively by anyone else other than its maker. In Performance Art this seems to be the crux of the question of authenticity: can the work reach its full potential, retain its essential meaning and character, when performed in a different context or by a different individual? Within other forms of live art such as theater and music, it is generally taken for granted that successful works will be performed repeatedly. Inevitably, repeated performances will be carried out both by the original performers or later by others who will often re-interpret and slightly alter the original to t their own work. In fact, this is a general conceit of much classical training: as a young violinist I was taught to mimic a specic performance of each new song, learn the work through that voice, and once I knew that interpretation intimately, to then begin experimentation using my own impression of the original written work as I saw t. Similarly, a good theater actor is aware of historical renditions of her character, but rather than attempting to recreate a previous performance, she embeds her own unique voice inside the character. Authenticity is found in each individual performers novel interpretation of the original score or script. The main difference between Browns Watermotor and a violinists recital of Sibelius Concerto in D Minor is in the conation of author and performer in the former. When the author and the performer are the same, as is often the case in performance art, then the intention of the work can speak to action rather than recreation. As Catherine Wood explains in her analysis of Yvonne Rainers The Mind is a Muscle, It was the performance situation only, perhaps, that might for the performing modern subject that Rainer represented collapse the activities of doing and thinking into a single present instant. The importance of that idea of presentness becomes even more critical in works like Matt Mullicans series of performances done under hypnosis: the work collapses a past and a present in the psyche of the artist that is out of his/her conscious control. The author surrenders to the moment, responding to the props not according to some script or even some specic set of rules, but rather due to the volatile impulses of his psyche. To expect that a second or third performance by Mullican, let alone another performer, would yield the same results is unthinkable, as it would require a scripting that precludes an authentic hypnotic experience. In these hypnotized works, as performed by Mullican, however, there are certain recurring themes within the

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Independent Curators International - Performance and Reperfo...

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series. Similar actions as well as a recognizable, though constantly evolving, language of symbols emerge. While the performances may not be identical, the basic parameters of the work remain the same, and thus could be considered to constitute a re-performance of the work. In the case of these performances under hypnosis, the substitution of a new performer would dramatically change the results, and as such it would be hard to consider it an accurate restaging of the work since the psychologies of the new performer would be so inuential on the outcome. But this concern over presence can also be overstated. It is possible as an audience member to experience works such as Rainer's or Mullicans without an awareness of the author/performers presentness in that moment. If performed well, a scripted work can appear as spontaneous as Mullicans ramblings and outbursts and cause the audience to be aware of their role as viewers or spectators without Rainers personal involvement. In fact, this concern relates directly to the argument regarding performance documentaiton that emphasizes the importance of physical presence to truly experience the performance. As Amelia Jones elucidated, there is no possibility of an unmediated relationship to any kind of cultural product, including body art. She goes on to argue that while the live viewers may have access to the phenomenological aspects of the performance, they may not have the distance and resources to understand the work from an historical or analytical standpoint, crucial in comprehension of the works meaning. Just as the authenticity of the performance experienced live versus performance experienced through documentation is really a misnomer (the authenticity remains but the experience differs), the authenticity of the performance remains regardless of whether one experiences the original performance or a considered restaging in a different context or with different performers. To return to the question of presence, it is also important to understand that once the author and performer become separate entities, the work begins to read more like a script than an action. Fields that take this scripting for granted, such as music and theater, avoid this question of authenticity. However, Performance Art, perhaps thanks to its relationship to the visual arts eld, continues to feel uneasy with the idea of the script. This is unless, like many Fluxus works, it leaves a great deal of ambiguity that forces the performer to think about their action, bringing back the presence of the performer in the moment once again. Perhaps this discomfort felt by performance artists stems from the shift of visual artists from studio practices into performative works: the performance space often seems to serve as a stand-in for the studio, allowing the audience a view into the creative process. If the performance space takes the place of the studio, then the performance itself the actions and their traces are equivalent to the painting, sculpture, or drawing for which there is only one authentic original. Any copies undermine the authority of the original, and so in this equivalence a copy of a performance (i.e. a restaging or representation of an old performance) undermines the authenticity of the original performance. However, it is important to realize that as the creative process shifted from studio to performance space, so did the procedural parameters. Visible inuences upon Performance Art also extend to music, theater, literature, and conceptual practices unhindered by this one-to-one concept of process and product found in the studio. Performance Art is a eld that constantly questions the basic expectations of all performing and ne arts, and so while it is impossible to give one blanket statement that re-performance of all formats of Performance Art are legitimate renderings, the so-called question of authenticity is misleading. In reality, it is a question of whether the intentions of the work, including its effect on performer and viewer, remain similar enough in the new presentation to still consider it a restaging of the original. And while action may give way to script as more and more Performance Art works nd themselves subject to revisitation, this can be generative in and of itself, breathing new life into works that are not, as we

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must remember, static, but rather nd their purpose in the variability of live action.

Cited Sources: Crimp, Douglas. You Can Still See Her. ArtForum, January 1, 2011. Wood, Catherine. Yvonne Rainer: the mind is a muscle. London: Afterall, 2007. Jones, Amelia. Presence in Absentia: Experiencing Performance as Documentation. Art Journal 56, no. 4 (1997): 11-18.

Posted to Performance and Reperformance (/journal/performance_and_reperformance)

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About ICI
Independent Curators International (ICI) produces exhibitions, events, publications, and training opportunities for diverse audiences around the world. A catalyst for independent thinking, ICI connects emerging and established curators, artists, and institutions, to forge international networks and generate new forms of collaboration. Working across disciplines and historical precedents, the organization is a hub that provides access to the people, ideas, and practices that are key to current developments in the eld, inspiring fresh ways of seeing and contextualizing contemporary art.

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