The New York Observer
  • Betabeat
  • Politicker
  • GalleristNY
  • Velvet Roper
  • Commercial
  • VSL
  • PolitickerNJ

Gallerist NY

Next in Gallerist
  • Review: Dana Schutz at Petzel
  • Review: Müller and McAlpine

Losing Our Appetites: Pictures from Marina Abramovic’s MOCA Gala

11/14/11 12:08pm
Tweet
LAST
/
NEXT

9 Things to Do in New York’s Art World Before Nov. 21

  • 2011 MOCA Gala - An Artist's Life Manifesto, Directed By Marina Abramovic - Inside
    Start The Slideshow

    Marina Abramovic made performance art mainstream with her Museum of Modern Art retrospective “The Artist is Present.” If you’ll recall, this was when people lined up for hours in MoMA’s atrium to take a seat across from Ms. Abramovic and stare, a gesture at the artist’s contradictory celebrity and public persona. (Would audiences stand in line to simply stare at Tino Seghal? Or Terence Koh? We think they’d have to work a bit harder.)

    This was 2009, around the time when the term “performance art” really started to become bastardized: every time a celebrity made a bad career move it was easily forgiven—“That dress made of raw meat? That was just performance art,” or whatever. This has gotten so out of control, that The Wall Street Journal recently called Kim Kardashian’s divorce debacle a kind of advancement of performance art for the 21st century, a revision and update of Warholian celebrity at a time when becoming a celebrity has never been easier (and never been more superficial).

    Last week, Yvonne Rainer accused Ms. Abramovic’s plans for the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles gala—which included performers cramped underneath dinner tables, their heads poking out of holes and staring at the attendees like a big turkey served up on a silver platter—of being exploitative.

    Ms. Rainer wrote a venomous open letter, co-signed by a number of artists and writers to MoCA’s director Jeffrey Deitch, and did not back down from her feelings about the gala after watching a rehearsal. Images from the event, which happened over the weekend, just arrived in our inbox. Take a look for yourself.

    Debbie Harry appears to be cutting apart a naked Debbie Harry cake and serving it up to the crowd. Whether you find this legitimate or not depends on how you define performance art. All we’ll say is that staring at a head poking through a table that looks as if it’s been removed from its body is not really how we like to enjoy our supper.

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by John Sciulli/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by John Sciulli/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Jeff Vespa/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward Marina Abramovic.

    Marina Abramovic.

    Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward Debbie Harry at MOCA LA.

    Debbie Harry at MOCA LA.

    Photo by John Sciulli/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Jeff Vespa/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward Ms. Abramovic and Ms. Harry.

    Ms. Abramovic and Ms. Harry.

    Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back Forward "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    "An Artist's Life Manifesto," directed by Marina Abramovic, at MOCA LA.

    Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for MOCA

  • Back MOCA director Jeffrey Deitch, Ms. Abramovic, Tilda Swinton, Ms. Bell.

    MOCA director Jeffrey Deitch, Ms. Abramovic, Tilda Swinton, Ms. Bell.

    Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for MOCA

blog comments powered by Disqus

Most Popular

    Mailing List

    Send

    Across the Wire

    • books

      'Mini-Martha' Jolie Kerr Sells Housekeeping Guide to Plume

    • Mysteries

      Mystery Buyer Pays Over $90 Million for Penthouse at One57

    • Bad weather

      Would Facebook Postpone IPO in Light of Dismal Market Conditions?

    • television

      MTV Drops Pants, Revealing Love of Crap

    • Drama

      Drudge Drops Link After Gawker Questions His Sexuality

    • About
    • Advertise With Us
    • Masthead
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service