raveneuse:

Chris Burden, Shoot, 1971, F Space, Santa Ana, California.

“He was every inch an artist, as tough and uncompromising as any I have ever met.”

– Larry Gagosian on Chris Burden

Chris Burden, the American sculptor and pioneering performance artist, has died from cancer at the age of 69, his art dealer, Larry Gagosian, has confirmed. 

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CHRIS BURDEN
Samson
1985
Turnstile, winch, worm gear, leather strap, jack, timbers, steel, steel plates
Dimensions variable

A museum installation consisting of a 100-ton jack connected to a gear box and a turnstile. The 100-ton jack pushes two large timbers against the bearing walls of the museum. Each visitor to the museum must pass through the turnstile in order to see the exhibition. Each input on the turnstile ever so slightly expands the jack, and ultimately if enough people visit the exhibition, SAMSON could theoretically destroy the building. Like a glacier, its powerful movement is imperceptible to the naked eye. This sculptural installation subverts the notion of the sanctity of the Museum (the shed that houses the art).

hey, i really appreciate your addition to my Chris Burden post. it’s like the first genuine contribution to the discourse around any of my arts related posts. i get so annoyed when people erase my longer captions (usually either contextually or critically relevant to the image in question, especially remarks critical of works i post but don’t like) or they just add a critically-absent ‘this is bullshit’ which i have no time for. anyways, thanks for taking the time to add it. all the best. x

Ah! Of course— thank you so much for the lovely post. I completely understand how you feel about people erasing the larger captions. It happens quite a bit when I am writing something about body art or feminist art and without the context it can just seem like a glorification of an socially un-contextualized, apolitical masochism. Anyway, I love your blog and really appreciate the care you take with your curation, both in terms of the aesthetic flow and because it is obvious that you have an ethics and philosophy behind the work that you catalogue. Each time I look at your page, I challenge myself to slow down on my manic spree posting and move towards a more contextualized curation. Though I am a ways off from that. I’m actually thinking of starting a new blog with a smaller following so I can avoid some of the issues you’ve outlined here. Thank you for what you do—it enriches my life. ❤

raveneuse:

Chris Burden, Through the Night Softly, Main Street, Los Angeles, California: September 12, 1973.

“He was every inch an artist, as tough and uncompromising as any I have ever met.”

– Larry Gagosian on Chris Burden

Chris Burden, the American sculptor and pioneering performance artist, has died from cancer at the age of 69, his art dealer, Larry Gagosian, has confirmed.

Read More

In 1973, Chris Burden purchased  ten-second clips late night commercial spots on a local television station in order to air his ironically-titled action Through the Night Softly. This piece consisted of Burden crawling and slithering across shards of glass in his underwear with his hands bound behind his back. This raw performance forced the audience into stark confrontation with the the pain  Burden felt as the field of broken glass shredded his bloodied torso. By offering this piece to viewers in the detached setting of their homes, Burden emphasized our increasingly desensitized reception of atrocities. Burden’s “ad” was proceeded by a Ronco record ad and followed—in an eerie juxtaposition—by a soap commercial in which man lathered his nude body. This piece suggests American alienation from social pain—indeed, his crawling posture evokes the pose of American soldiers in Vietnam (our first dramatically televised war), confronting the viewer with the ways in which we alternately disengage from the suffering of others and keep it at a remove through transforming it into an object of spectacle. 

mylistofthangs:

Chris Burden, Beam Drop, Brazil.

ART MAKE OF I-BEAMS AND CONCRETE

By DOUGLAS C. MCGILL

“There is some violence in this piece, but there is beauty, too,” said Chris Burden, the conceptual artist, as he watched 60 steel construction beams fall one by one into a 30-foot pond of wet concrete.

The performance was held yesterday at Artpark, the 200-acre state park in this village, which is about 10 miles north of Niagara Falls on the Canadian border. It culminated in the creation of a sculpture called “Beam Drop,” the latest of Mr. Burden’s decidedly curious works.

Mr. Burden is best known for a work he staged in 1971, in which a marksman shot him in the left arm with a .22 rifle. On another occasion, he crawled on his bare belly across a parking lot strewn with broken glass, and he once crucified himself by having his hands nailed to the back of a Volkswagen.

Yesterday’s performance was gentle by comparison. Using a hydraulic crane, Mr. Burden had 60 steel construction beams hoisted a hundred feet into the sky, and then dropped them into a pool of wet concrete 30 feet square and 3 feet deep. The beams fell silently, looking weightless until they sliced into the ground with a terrific crunching, scratchy sound. After they stuck, they swayed a bit, back and forth, like thrown knives.

“The beams are symbolic of culture and order,” Mr. Burden said yesterday at the site. “Our most dignified structures, like the World Trade Center or Chicago’s Sears Tower, are made of them. My idea is to play with these building blocks of order, to be impudent with them. I think people relate to that.”

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Reactions Were Mixed

At Artpark yesterday, some related and some didn’t. About a hundred spectators, including other artists, concrete pourers and crane operators, gathered in the early morning to watch the performance, and the reactions were mixed.

“That cement would look great in my driveway,” said Jim Ellis, a summertime Artpark groundskeeper who was watching bemusedly from a distance. “I don’t really see this as art. I see it as a lot of money.”

Yet the work, formally called “Beam Drop,” and which will stand at the entrance to Artpark now that it is finished, had its defenders, too.

Mike Weber, for example, who poured the concrete for the sculpture, seemed to enjoy it for reasons quite similar to those predicted by Mr. Burden.

“I’ve always wanted to do something like this, only with cars,” he said. “A few of them. I see the demolition derby every year at the Erie County fair, and I get a lot of enjoyment out of that.”

Reminded of Childhood

A colleague of Mr. Weber, Wade Cook, who watched the falling beams with a large grin on his face, said that the event reminded him of certain childhood pleasures. “It’s like when you were a kid, you liked to poke twigs into your pancakes, or jab your birthday cake with candles,” he said.

Surprisingly, perhaps, the sharpest criticism of Mr. Burden’s sculpture came from other artists, many of whom watched the proceedings from a highway embankment high above the cement pit. For some of them, the Beam Drop seemed neither random nor violent enough.

“I was hoping to see concrete splashing all over the place,” said Alan Burton Thompson, a jewelry maker from Buffalo. “I’d like to see six trucks pouring cement, and then six cranes dropping I-beams all at once. Now that would be violent.”

As for the issue of randomness, Mr. Burden’s sculpture sparked a brief but fierce debate among fellow artists. At one point, for example, when a small beam fell over sideways, half out of the pit, Mr. Burden ordered it picked up and dropped again.

An Unanswered Question

“Hey, what happened to random?” demanded one artist. “Why’d he pick it up?”

“Because it fell on a damn pile of dirt, John, give him a break!” replied another. “It was a mistake!”

“How do you make a mistake if it’s random?” shot back John, unsatisfied. But the beam was hoisted up and dropped again, catching everyone’s attention, and the question went unanswered.

All in all, “Beam Drop” went off nearly perfectly. The only exception was when one 20 foot, half-ton beam hit a patch of hardened cement and toppled over, crushing a movie camera perched at the edge of the cement pond. “I think I got the footage,” said the film maker, Michael Rudnick, gamely.

As the beams fell, Mr. Burden walked nervously, and at a safe distance, from his sculpture as it took shape. From the crowd of television and print reporters, he was repeatedly asked, “Is it art?”

He answered every time with apparent earnestness and not a trace of a smile. “When the crane lets go of the beams, they seem to hang in mid- air for a full second, as if they’re trying to decide whether or not to fall,” he said. “And when they fall, they come down quietly almost like dancers. There’s something real nice when those beams go down.’

CHRIS BURDEN
Relic from “Back to You”
1974
Stainless steel bowl and push pins
Case: 10 x 10 x 10 inches
25.4 x 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Back to You
112 Green St., New York
January 16, 1974

Dressed only in pants, I was lying on a table inside a freight elevator with the door closed. Next to me on the table was a small dish of 5/8" steel push pins. Liza Bear requested a volunteer from the audience, and he was escorted to the elevator. As the door opened, a camera framing me form the waist up was turned on, and the audience viewed this scene on several monitored placed near the elevator. As the elevator went to the basement and returned, Liza told the audience that a sign in the elevator instructed the volunteer to “Please push pins into my body.” The volunteer stuck 4 pins into my stomach and 1 pin into my foot during the elevator trip. When the elevator returned to the floor, the door opened, the volunteer stepped out, and the camera was turned off. The elevator returned to the basement.