
Kiki Smith, Untitled, 1989, glass and rubber, 3 x 108 x 108 inches

Kiki Smith, Untitled, 1989, glass and rubber, 3 x 108 x 108 inches

Mona Hatoum, Chain, 1999. Installation, Leather gloves and nylon threads. Centre d’art Contemporain, Thiers, France.
Mona Hatoum, Recollection, 1995, installation, hair balls, strands of hair hung from ceiling, wooden loom with woven hair, table, soap, Beguinage St. Elizabeth, Kortijk, Belgium.
Mary Kelly
Interim Part I: Corpus, Supplication, 1984-85, Laminated photo positive, silkscreen, acrylic on Plexiglas
2 Details from Menace, Laminated photo positive, silkscreen, acrylic on Plexiglas 30 panels total, 36 x 48 x 2 inches
Interim, Part III: Historia, 1989, Oxidized steel, silkscreen, stainless steel on wood base, 4 units, 61 x 36 x 29 ins. each
1 detail from Appel), 1984-85, Laminated photo positive, silkscreen, acrylic on Plexiglas, 2 of the 30 panels, each: 36 x 48 in. (90 x 122.5 cm)
Interium Part I: Corpus, Extase (detail), 1986, Laminated photo positive, silkscreen and acrylic on Plexiglas, 36 by 48 by 2 in. 91.44 by 121.92 by 5.8 cm. each.
Mary Kelly
1-6) Interim, Part I: Corpus, 1984-85
(detail, Menacé)
Laminated photo positive,
Silkscreen, acrylic on Plexiglas
Each pictured is 1 of 30 panels,
90 x 122.5 cm each
7) Interim: Corpus, Preliminary Artwork, 1984, Detail
8-9) Interim, 1984 – 89
Installation View
New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, 1990
“INTERIM examines the woman-as-subject as she enters middle age, a time when her
increasing invisibility and powerlessness in the masculine world may lead her to
experience vividly her own “constructedness.” Conspicuously absent in most
novels, films, and ads, the older woman is not considered sexy because she’s no
longer seen to be a useful measure of a man’s potency. Because power accrues to a
woman in a patriarchy by virtue of her body’s procreative capacities and its potential
for fetishization, the aging or aged female body becomes a relic, a site of loss. For
1 Kelly, this loss of power lodged in the body renders transparent the economic,
political, and cultural conditions that deprive a woman of power-the very
conditions which simultaneously keep her from her own subjectivity.
Weaving together divergent positions of relative distance and closeness, neutrality
and engagement, fact and fantasy, from both a personal and political perspective,
Kelly explores the relational aspects of subjectivity and objectivity. To achieve this,
the “voice” used in INTERIM is necessarily disjunctive and multiple, a densely
textured melange of different tones, different times, different positions. Structured
on Brechtian principles, INTERIM is full of visual and linguistic interruptions that
radically challenge the seamless nature and unitary terms of so much traditional
arrmaking. To structure a piece with the device of interruption is to produce a work
punctuated with frozen gestures; without narrative continuity, discrete moments
collide. As Walter Benjamin observed, an audience, deprived of traditional linear
narrative, experiences not the usual empathy-the cathartic emotional release that
results from an identification with the characters-but “[astonishment] at the
circumstances under which they function.” 1 To this end, Brecht’s epic theatre offers
“the representation of conditions rather than the development of actions.” 2
So does Kelly’s INTERIM. As the work makes clear, it is the representation of
conditions that defines women’s subjectivity. For three years before she began to
give form to the project, Kelly kept a notebook-an archive, as she calls it-in
which she recorded conversations she had overheard or engaged in with women who
were responsible for launching, or had been affected by, the second wave of
feminism-the women, in other words, of 1968. Arranging her notes in various
forms, she offers us the opportunity to hear these women as they explore their
experiences as wives, mothers, sisters, and daughters, most of them from the
vantage of middle age. In the process, we discover that we too are being encouraged
to search and research our own histories and responses, an engagement which
creates both a new definition of authorial power and a sense of pleasure in the
interchange of subjectivities. As for Kelly’s own subjectivity, the issues investigated
in the work are clearly indicative of her own interests and experience, though
INTERIM is not specifically autobiographical.
Mary Kelly began the work in 1983 while she was living in London. She isolated
the themes which figured dominantly in the collected conversations and used them
to organize the project into four sections:
Parr I, Corpus [the body], pairs images and narrative panels on reflective
plexiglass (white on black, with phrases and parts of the images picked out in red),
in an arrangement of five groups, three pairs to a group. Each takes its title-
“Menace,” “Appel,” “Supplication,” “Erotisme,” and “Extase” -from the nineteenth-century
French neuropathologist J.M. Charcot’s attitudes passionelles, his
classification of the hallucinatory phase of hysteria. The texts are hand-written,
first-person accounts which explore how older women experience the body shaped
socially and psychically by the discourses of popular medicine, fashion, and romantic fiction”
–New Museum

Louise Bourgeois
Passage dangereux (detail)
1997
Mixed media
264 x 355,6 x 876,3 cm
I’ve seen it @ Fondation Beyeler yesterday.

felix gonzalez-torres

Yoko Ono with Half a Room, 1967

rona pondick
Urs Fischer
Untitled (Hole)
2007
Bronze
200 x 200 x 200 cm
Yoko Ono, Stone Piece, from The Riverbed, 2015
Since the early 1960s, audience participation has been a crucial aspect of Ono’s work. To make a village is a political gesture, as well as a formal one. Audience participation is key to completing the THE RIVERBED through everyday action coupled with contemplation; they are collaborators with the artist, similar to the collaboration between the artist and the two galleries. Additionally, it is significant to Ono that all three “principals”— the artist and two gallery leaders—are female; the support and participation of women in power is one of Ono’s longstanding concerns.
Conceived as two room-sized installations shown in two spaces—a whole in two parts— visitors are encouraged, via instructions, to visit both spaces in order to experience and fully understand THE RIVERBED. Both galleries will have a pile of large river stones that Ono has selected and gathered. She will inscribe the words like remember, dream, and wish on the stones, which have been honed and shaped by water over time. Visitors may pick up a stone and hold it in their lap, concentrating on the word and letting go of their anger or fear, transforming the stone into an emotional object to be placed upon the pile of stones in the center of the room.