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David Hart, Associate Media Producer, Digital Media at the MoMA:

You can imagine how excited I was when we received the photos of sitters from Marina Abramović’s The Artist Is Present performance and discovered that installation photographer Marco Anelli had been keeping an unofficial minutes-per-participant tally. On a long car ride I decided to compile these and chart out some of the basic information.

Above: Sitters by Duration and Date

For each date, individual sitters are represented by a colored vertical bar, and that bar’s length represents their sitting time. The first sitter of each day is at the bottom of the chart, and the last is at the top.

Worth viewing full-size, along with a few more awesome graphs on MoMA’s Blog.

and, 1999, by Janine Antoni

Mi Casa Su Casa, 2005, by Paul Ramirez Jonas

After [a lecture about space and how we defined it as locked or unlocked] the public was invited to exchange keys with the artist and each other. The equipment necessary to duplicate keys was available, along with blank keys engraved with a symbol of trust and generosity. Anyone willing to have one of their keys duped onto these custom keys, received someone else’s key in exchange. The lectures took place in schools, corporations, clubs, universities, and a jail.

Every Person In New York

Jason Polan reports (in drawing form, of course) that there is already a line queueing up outside the MoMA to catch the last day of Marina Abramovic’s exhibition tomorrow. Sitters will be limited to 15 minutes each. I was going to try to make it over there, but now I’m not so sure that I can handle the madness.

(via jenbekmanprojects)

Being available in response

Tumblr doesn’t even permit reblogging chunks of text this large anymore (instead defaulting to an excerpt and a link) but these quotes about “being available” have been kicking around in my brain since I read them a few days ago so I wanted to repost them here.

linedandunlined:

…I had to share one reading that I’ve been revisiting a lot over the last few days. It’s from Lawrence Weschler’s incredible book Seeing Is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees, which is about the artist Robert Irwin. Chapter 15 is called “Being Available in Response,” which is also the name of a project initiated by Irwin.

The first time I read this chapter I nearly lept out of my chair — I got so excited I reread it three or four times right away.

Rather than trying to explain the project too much, though, I’ll let Irwin (and Weschler) tell you about it as they do in the book. Here’s Irwin:

“I just sort of let it be known that I was available, in a way like I’m saying it to you. I mean, I didn’t put out any ads or anything, but word got around. And you could be, let’s say, up at UCLA, and you’d say, ‘Well, let’s take advantage of that. We’ll have him come up and talk to the students.’ And that’s what I’d do. Or, ‘We’ll have him come up and do a piece on the patio.’ And I would just come up and do that.

“There’s an important distinction to be made here,” [Irwin] continued, “between organizing and proselytizing, on the one hand, and responding to interest, on the other. I was and continue to be available in response. I mean, I don’t stand on a corner and hand out leaflets. I’m not an evangelist. I’m not trying to sell anything. But on the other hand, if you ask me a question, you’re going to get a half-hour answer.’”

People scratched their heads. Weschler explains:

Irwin was availble in response but for a long time nobody asked. Nobody knew what to make of the offer, and Irwin was no help: he didn’t have a clue. “Curators would ask me, ‘If we invite you, what are you going to do?’ and I would have to say, ‘Well, I don’t know what I’m going to do; I’ll just spend some time there and then decide.’ […] In other words, we had no connection, because they kept needing something tangible, and I kept saying, ‘I don’t know,’ which also put into these situations the possibility of failure. I could go to the Walker Museum, let’s say, and they’d set up an exhibition with all their catalogues and press releases and everything, and there was a risk that when I got there, I wouldn’t be able to come up with anything.”

Though it was slow to gain momentum, Irwin’s idea eventually caught on. Weschler continues:

[…] By 1972–73, enthusiasm had soared to such an extent that Irwin was almost continually on the raod, wending his way through labrynthine tours, travelling weeks on end, for example, from one small midwestern college to another. […] At each stop he might stay a week, talk with students, contrive an installation, stir things up, and then be gone. For many young art students in the vast middle reaches of this continent during the pale middle reaches of the past decade, Irwin’s roadshow constintuted a first exposure to significant strains of modernism and minimalism.

The trips also grounded Irwin:

“The ideas I came to be dealing with during this period were getting real obscure, even for me, to the point where I was beginning to wonder what and how I practiced in the world. There were some critics who from a political perspective attacked that obscurity as a kind of elitism. […] To me, the crucial difference between obscurantism and elistism is availability.”

He charged nothing for his visits:

“I do things which from any social or political view are outrageous. I mean, they absolutely ignore all the social issues of the day. […] But my way of balancing that out is that there’s one thing I can do that has immediate social value, and that has been this kind of running around and talking with people. So I do that for free. Because I don’t want to put economics on it at all.”

The name Robert Irwin sounded familiar but I couldn’t remember exactly who he was…incidentally, I posted one of his pieces back in January. Thank you searchable external brain Tumblr.

When you perform, half of the brain has to be in complete control and the other half of the brain has to be at a complete loss.

Maria Callas, from a conversation between Marina Abramovic and Laurie Anderson in BOMB Magazine

(via Stacy)

An interview with the Marina Abramovic doppelganger, Anya Liftig.

We totally called that she was a performance artist.

(via @HeartAsArena)

Theresa posted a Facebook update from the MoMA that there is a girl sitting across from Marina Abramovic wearing the exact same outfit. I promptly clicked over to the MarinaCam to snap this golden screenshot.

Yes!! I have been waiting for this moment.

Semiotics of the Kitchen, 1975, by Martha Rosler

Marina Abramović - Rhythm 10 (“The Star”, 1999)

The recreation of performance “Rythm 10” (1973) from “The Star” movie