Introduction to Art Making: Motion and Time Based:
A question of the body and its reflection
Art
VIS 2
Tues: 7pm to 8:50pm
CENTER 115
Professor: Ricardo Dominguez
Email: rrdominguez@ucsd.edu
Art as gesture has almost always been anchored to the body, the body in time, the body in space and the leftovers of body. The body has a long history as a site of aesthetic experimentation and reflection. This class will focus on the history of these bodies in performance art. An additional objective for the course will be a focus on the question of documentation of technologies in order to understand their relationship to performance as an active reflection.
We will look at post-contemporary, contemporary and classic
work by Chris Burden, Ulay and Abramovic, Allen Kaprow, Vito Acconci, Coco
Fusco, Faith Wilding, Anne Hamilton, William Pope L., Maria Teresa Hincapie,
Nao Bustamante, Ana Mendieta, Cindy Sherman, Adrian Piper, Sophie Calle, Patty
Chang, James Luna, Surveillance Camera Players and the work of many other
performance artists.
Students will develop 1 short performance action a week, for 5
weeks, for a total of 5 actions (during the first part of the class),
individually or in collaboration with other students. The class will view and
discuss each students performance documentation with the specific Teaching
Assistant Block they are assigned to for the quarter. Students will also be
expected to Write a 10 page Final Paper (*MLA - Manuel of Style*) on a
performance artist, performance theme, or performance genre. The paper should
compare and contrast the above with your own gestures.
Course Requirements:
1)
5 performance gestures (10% each): You will be required to
construct a performance gesture and document the gesture. All gestures will be
done beyond UCSD.
2)
Final Paper Ten Pages (30%): In the Final Paper students will
frame the work they have made in class by comparing and contrasting it with the
work of Performance Artist, theme or genre covered in class. (MLA).
FINAL PAPER DUE MARCH 21st,
2006
3)
*Students who have to miss any classes due to an emergency
(with documentation) will be able to take a cumulative make-up exam during the
last week of classes (dead week). Note that social events such as weddings,
anniversaries, quinceañeras or barmitzvahs, though important, are not
considered emergencies.
4)
Attendance and participation (20%): I will be taking attendance
every time our class meets. Aside from counting toward your overall grade, attendance
and participation will be crucial. Students who do not show up to class and are
unaware of the material and discussions covered in lecture are not likely to
obtain a passing grade.
Course Website:
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ucsd/performance1.html
This
website is a crucial component of this course. The site will include the
syllabus and links for review. I strongly urge you to review the Class Site on
a weekly basis.
Grading Scale:
100-97 =
A+
96-93 =
A
92-90 =
A-
89-87 =
B+
86-93 =
B
82-80 =
B-
79-77 =
C+
76-73 =
C
72-70 =
C-
69-67 =
D+
66-63 =
D
62-60 =
D-
59 and below = F
PERFORMANCES
Commitment/Risk
Creativity in Presentation
A General Understanding of Performance Art/Art History
Application of Critical Connections in each of your performances
REQUIRED TEXT
Buy This Text for Class (You will save lots of cash if you
order it on-line at
Amazon or Powells Books rather than have the bookstore get
it). But get it!
Performance Art from Futurism to the Present, Roselee Goldberg
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0500203393/ref=pd_bxgy_img_b/102-4818180-4832106?%5Fencoding=UTF8
Or At
http://www.powells.com/s?kw=+Performance+Art+from+Futurism+to+the+Present&x=0&y=0
UCSD PRICECENTER BOOKSTORE SHOULD ALSO HAVE THEM IN
BY NEXT WEEK.
CATALOGUES AND BOOKS THAT ARE RECOMMENDED:
CATALOGUES:
Art and Performance: Live (TATE U.K)
Out of Actions (LA MoCA)
Outside the Frame: Performance and the Object (Cleveland Center
for Contemporary Art)
Performance Art (edited by Roselee Goldberg)
Body and the East: Form the 60s to the Present, (Museum of
Modern Art, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
BOOKS:
Ethno-Techno; Writings on
Performance, Activism and Pedagogy, G. Gomez-Pena
The Twentieth Century Performance Reader, eds. Michael Huley
and Noel Witts
Performance, Marvin Carlson
Contract with the Skin, Kathy Odell
Performing the Body, Amelia Jones
The Explicit Body of Performance, Rebecca Schneider
Happenings and Other Arts, ed Mary Ellen Sandford
Unmarked, Peggy Phelan
Acting Act: Feminist Performances, eds. Lynda Hart and Peggy
Phelan
Let¹s Get it On: The Politics of Black Performance, ed.
Catherine Ugwu
Corpus Delecti: Performance Art of the Americas, ed. Coco Fusco
Greenwich Village 1963, Sally Banes
The Blurring of Art and Life, Alan Kaprow
Imaging Her Erotics, Carolee Schneeman
The Citizen Artist: An Anthology from High Performance Magazine
Liveness, Philip Auslander
Dada Performance, ed. Mel Gordon
Futurist Performance, eds. Michael Kirby,
Jan 10 - Introduction to the Class:
Opening discussion on the nature of the class, what will be
expected from each of you and the grading process? Explanation of contexts for presentation
and documentation of your 5 Gestures.
CLASS ONE
Jan 17 A History of Gestures
Reading:
Futurist Performance
http://futurism.org.uk/sintesi/
Dada
Sound Poems
http://www.ubu.com/sound/dada.html
Surrealism
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=Surrealism
Jarry,
Joyce, Duchamp and Cage
http://www.toutfait.com/issues/issue_2/Articles/anastasi.html
Gesture One:
Choose a site where you can engage in a performance activity
for at least 2 continuous hours. You can move for this exercise or be still. If
you move, don¹t leave the site you have chosen. Choose and develop a means of
recording your actions/inaction AND the events or non-eventfulness around you.
Try to be as aware as possible of the smallest of changes in your own body,
mind and immediate environment. Don¹t just wait for something really noticeable
to happen. Do not use any cameras or electronic recording devices. Limit
yourself to what you can commit to memory, write down or otherwise record with
some part of your body. Once you have completed your action, chronicle the
experience in writing if you have not already written it down. Keep in mind
that while writing is PERMITTED, it is not the ONLY way to make a record of
actions, so consider other means too!
BRING DOCUMENTATION TO CLASS. Each TA Block will review and
discuss everyone¹s performance and non-traditional documentation.
CLASS TWO:
Jan 24th - Gestures in Public Space and Time
Read:
Theory of the Dérive
Guy Debord
http://www.ubu.com/papers/debord_derive.html
Suzanne Lacy
Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gómez-Peña
Notes on crawling piece William Pope L.
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0425/is_n4_v56/ai_20544728
Rev. Billy
Yesmen
Gesture Two:
Using any type of camera, to
record only segments of your body doing the same performance you did last week.
CLASS THREE:
Jan 24th Ephemeral Gestures
Ground Breaker
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/antoni/clip2.html
Loving Care
http://digitalconsciousness.com/artists/JanineAntoni/
http://archiv.hkw.de/deutsch/kultur/2001/translated_acts/shiota.html
http://www.dianathompson.net/Gesture/g1.html
Gesture Three:
Using any type of camera record a performance of your making
something.
Many performances involve making, from concrete objects to ephemeral
or immaterial things, to traces of actions, to records of actions, to waste
products resulting from actions. Choose one of these approaches and develop a
performance that is organized around the act of making.
BRING DOCUMENTATION TO CLASS. Each TA Block will review and
discuss everyones work.
CLASS FOUR:
Jan 31 Photographs as Gestures, Gestures for Photographs
Some Thoughts on the Work of Hannah
Wilke
http://blogs.warwick.ac.uk/zoebrigley/entry/deconstructing_the_feminine/
Mariko
Mori Images
More Mori
http://www.mcachicago.org/MCA/exhibit/past/Mori/
http://hemi.nyu.edu/gallery/exhibit2_eng/alicia_statement.html
Gesture Four:
Most of the history of performance actually is known through photographs. Many performance artists rejected the use of photographic documentation in the 50s and 60s, and also elaborated a critique of the objectification of performance through photography. On the other hand, many artists create performances exclusively for the camera. For this session, you should choose to create one of two kinds of performance: either a performance that incorporates the process of photographing the artist into the act itself (other students can act as photographers) or a performance that is presented as a photograph or series of photographs.
CLASS FIVE
February 7th - Naked Gestures
http://www.caroleeschneemann.com/
franko.b
http://www.franko-b.com/gallery/g_performance.htm
Liminal Spaces Within The Transgressive Body
by Colleen Walker, U.C. 2004
http://www.franko-b.com/text/cw_introduction.htm
http://www.thing.net/~vanessa/screen.html
http://www.vanessabeecroft.com/
Gesture Five:
For this session use any type of camera to create a performance
of your
naked self. Use the camera as a confession machine or as a
disciplinary
machine. You could tell us secrets, show us your tattoos or sit
naked eating lunch. Just be naked!
BRING DOCUMENTATION TO CLASS. Each TA Block will review and
discuss everyone¹s effort.
CLASS SIX
February 14th Gender Gestures
Judy Chicago
Guerrilla Girls
http://www.guerrillagirls.com/
Digital Drag Kings
http://www.technodyke.com/drag/default.asp
START TO DRAFT FINAL PAPER (MLA).
PRESENT ONE PAGE ON WHAT YOU WOULD LIKE TO COVER IN YOUR PAPER TO
YOUR TA BLOCK.
CLASS SEVEN
February 21st Queer Gestures
Tim
Miller
http://feastoffools.net/archives/2005/07/fof_121_-_tim_m.php
Tim
Miller
http://hometown.aol.com/millertale/timmiller.html
Dyke Action Machine
http://www.dykeactionmachine.com/
Critical Regionalism: Mexico's Performative Range-of-Motion in Madre por un día & the Rodríguez/Felipe Wedding. by Amy Sara Carroll
http://hemi.nyu.edu/journal/2_2/carroll.html
CONTINUE TO READINGS
CLASS EIGHT
February 28st Erotic Gestures
Tap and Touch cinema
http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/works/tapp-und-tastkino/video/1/
Frank Moore
http://www.eroplay.com
http://www.bobsart.org/sprinkle
CONTINUE TO READINGS
CLASS NINE Pain Gestures
Subjective Made Object: Pain in
Contemporary Art
http://www.ampainsoc.org/pub/bulletin/jul04/path1.htm
http://www.suspectthoughts.com/flanagan.html
Ron Athey¹s Artful Crown of Thorns
by C. Carr
December
9 - 15, 1998
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9850,carr,2061,4.html
SHOULD ALREADY BE WRITING YOUR PAPER
CLASS TEN
March 14 Techno_Distributed Gestures
Lygia Clark
http://mitpress2.mit.edu/ejournals/Leonardo/isast/spec.projects/osthoff/osthoff.html
I know of no other artist http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0268/is_5_37/ai_53590127
Stelarc
Orlan
Life_sharing
http://www.0100101110101101.org/home/life_sharing/index.html
ON-LINE DOCUMENTATION OF PERFORMANCE ART - MORE TO COME.
Nam June PaikNam
June Paik dies at 74
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11098552/
Linda Montano
http://www.bobsart.org/montano/
Translated Acts: Performance Art from East Asia
http://archiv.hkw.de/translated_acts.html
Media Art Net
http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/mediaartnet/
The Practice of Everyday Life
Michel de Certeau
http://www.ubu.com/papers/de_certeau.html
http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/sl1.html
e-misferia (Latin American Performance and Politics)
http://hemi.nyu.edu/journal/2_2/splash.html
http://artandcommitment.umn.edu/webstream.html
International
symposium took place as part of the Live Culture
program of Live Art performances, debates and presentations.
http://www.tate.org.uk/onlineevents/archive/live_culture/live_conference.htm