
Paul Thek

Paul Thek

Kiki Smith

Berlinde de Bruyckere

Kiki Smith, Untitled, 1992, c-print, Size:29 x 22 in. (73.7 x 55.9 cm.)

Damien Hirst
Adam and Eve (Breaking Open the Head)
1994

“French performance artist ORLAN has gone under the knife nine times for art. Her seventh surgery, a 1993 piece entitled “Omnipresence,” performed in New York was broadcast live to her studio in New York (the Sandra Gering gallery) and many others. All were connected to ORLAN’s operating room by videophone and to each other’s screens.Before the surgery begins, she reads from a script, in French, “Man treats this skin so cheaply, though it means so much to him. He sheds it at the slightest bidding, for he wants to shed his skin. The only thing he possesses. ‘I only have my skin.’ It is too much since having and being do not coincide.”She seats herself on the operating table and answers questions asked her through videophone while a woman draws on her face – under her eyes, then outlining her cheekbones, then around the implants as she holds them to ORLAN’s face. “It’s about renaissance and reconstruction,” she says. A skull rests nearby, with blue implants (normally used for enhancing cheekbones) attached to show how her facial structure will change – on the cheekbones, along the ridge of the nose, along the outer edge of the brow bone, and on the underside of the chin. The first question comes from the New York gallery: “what will the body be in the future?” ORLAN replies, “the body is now obsolete, totally obsolete.”“
—The Art Pour

Tracey Emin, Self-Portrait, 2001

Berlinde De Bruyckere
Lost III, 2011
Horsehide, wood, iron, epoxy
Courtesy of Tony Podesta Collection, Washington, DC
© Berlinde De Bruyckere. Photo Courtesy Hauser & Wirth
Photographer: Mirjam Devriend

Genevieve Cadieux, Memory hole, unexpected beauty, 1988

Rachel Lachowicz
Forensic Projection (28, 58, 88 Years), 1992
Date: 1999
Identifier: 15773
Image Format: 35mm slides
Installation view: “The Time of Our Lives,” New Museum, New York, 1999.
Photography Credit: Fred Scruton

Geneviève Cadieux