Abject Bodies Abject Art
Abject Bodies Abject Art
Abject Bodies Abject Art
Teri Frame
2
Introduction
Abjection
Primal differentiations allow humans to cope with the mysterious and enigmatic
workings of the natural world and its link with social reality. Rules, and therefore
taboos, were established in order to more clearly define the boarders that designate
proper ways of living, of being a part of the social body. According to both Douglas and
Kristeva, the earliest of culture’s demarcations took place in order to separate not only
human and animal domains, but also the realms of male and female. Any place in
between these distinctions is the space in which the liminal, the abject, exists. It
becomes the domain of those things that are jettisoned from the social structure, for their
1
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 1-2.
4
2
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 103.
3
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 5.
4
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 173-4.
5
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 217-8.
6
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 99.
5
According to Kristeva, defilement has two sources, that of excrement and that of
menstrual blood, both of which are the domain of the maternal and/or feminine. The link
between the menstruation and the maternal/feminine needs no explanation. In order to
explain how women are linked with excremental defilement, Kristeva refers to Freud’s
placement of sphinctoral training. When a child begins this process he/she is mapping
his/her own body, choosing to make his/her own distinctions and categorizations of filth
and placement. The child has now entered the world of the symbolic “...the symbolic
light that a third party, eventually the father, can contribute helps the future subject... in
pursuing a reluctant struggle against what, having been the mother, will turn into an
abject. This abjection, which threatens the ego... [explains] the incest dread of which
Freud speaks.” “A whole facet of the sacred, true lining of the sacrificial, compulsive,
and paranoid side of religions, assumes the task of warding off that danger... The
function of these religious rituals is to ward off the subject’s fear of his very own identity
sinking irretrievably into the mother.”8
Here Kristeva applies the same need for segregation to the animal kingdom. “The
abject confronts us, on the one hand, with those fragile states where man strays on the
territories of animal. Thus, by way of abjection, primitive societies have marked out a
precise area of their culture in order to remove it from the threatening world of animals or
animism, which were imagined as representatives of sex and murder.”9
Douglas points out that there is a general conception (perhaps a universal one)
that women are more closely associated with the animal world than men. Douglas gives
two other examples where there are human links with the animal territories. The first is
evil, those “humans who become sorcerers. They turn their back on their own kind and
run with the hunted, fight against the hunters, work against diviners to achieve death
instead of healing. They have moved across to the animal sphere and they have caused
some animals to move in from the animal to the human sphere...”10
The other ambiguous mode of being is concerned with fertility. It is believed by
the Lele that human birth involves pain, danger and singularity. Animals, however, are
thought to be naturally fecund, as their births happen in pairs or litters. A human couple
that has produced a birth beyond the singular is an anomaly, for they have broken into the
7
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 70.
8
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 63-64.
9
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 12-13.
10
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 208.
6
territory of animals. They have a counterpart in the animal world, one that straddles the
divisions within the animal kingdom (it is covered in scales but climbs trees, lays eggs
but nurtures its young) as well as the division between human and animal territories, for it
gives birth singularly. Both the parents who have born twins or triplets and the pangolian
are celebrated for their fertility. Rather than shunting the pangolian, the Lele partake of
its flesh in order to increase fertility among their community.11
Both Kristeva and Douglas have found that those things, which fall among the
gray areas of existence are universally shunned, and regarded as taboo. “...one
encounters it as soon as the symbolic and/or social dimension of man is constituted, and
this throughout the course of civilization. But abjection assumes specific shapes and
different coding according to the various ‘symbolic systems.’”12 In Powers, Kristeva
examines evidence of abjection as found in taboo (as well as in defilement, food, and
sin).
Douglas makes the connection between categorization and taboo when
pinpointing the two main themes discussed within Purity and Danger. She explains that
taboo is that device which serves to keep the social structure organized and reduces
disorder. It shields the distinctive categories of the universe from contamination.
Douglas poses the question, “Why is it necessary to protect the primary distinctions of
the universe?”, then answers it bydescribing the discomfort that humans feel concerning
ambiguity. Her claim is that “taboo confronts the ambiguous and shunts it into the
category of the sacred.” Her findings show that the concept of dirt in contemporary
culture is analogous to taboo. We denounce behavior that infiltrates the classifications of
the universe by calling it dirty and dangerous; primitive cultures taboo it.13
The link between taboo and dirt is quite clear. Douglas explains that dirt as a
physical substance does not exist, “there is no such thing as dirt; no single item is dirty
apart from a particular system of classification in which it does not fit.”14 Food is not
dirt unless it spills on one’s blouse. We call the blouse “dirty” because food does not
belong on it. It is displaced matter. The premise of Purity and Danger is that dirt is a
universally offensive concept. Cleanliness, for Douglas, is a highly classified way of
living, and dirt is that which impairs order. Cleaning is a way of “positively re-ordering
our environment... dirt, in the form of bodily excretions, produces a universal feeling of
disgust...”15
Kristeva’s thinking on the subject is parallel: “It is thus not lack of cleanliness or
health that causes abjection but what disturbs identity, system, order. What does not
respect borders, positions, rules. The in-between, the ambiguous, the composite.”16
Douglas goes on to suggest that “dirt involves reflection on the relation of order
to disorder, being to non-being, form to formlessness, life to death.”17 Kristeva takes
uncleanliness and its link to death a step further by saying,
11
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 208.
12
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982):
13
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): xi.
14
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): xvii.
15
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 2-3.
16
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 4.
17
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 7.
7
Both Kristeva and Douglas point out the link between uncleanliness bodily
borders. Douglas discusses body fluids as the stuff that leaks from the body through the
marginal areas of its orifices, which symbolize the body’s most vulnerable points.
“Spittle, blood, milk, urine, feces or tears by simply issuing forth have traversed the
boundary of the body. So also have bodily parings, skin, nail, hair clippings and sweat...
All margins are dangerous. If they are pulled this way or that the shape of fundamental
experience is altered. Any structure of ideas is vulnerable at its margins.19
Douglas explains that any type of treacle gives an ‘ambiguous sense-impression.’
The fact that it is neither liquid nor solid makes it anomalous within this set of
classifications. 20 This statement automatically brings to mind the writings of Sartre.
Rosalind Krauss provides the connection between Visqueux (slimy) and Kristeva’s
theory on abjection, and describes it as follows:
18
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 3-4.
19
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 150.
20
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 47.
8
Both Kristeva and Douglas describe the ways in which art and/or literature
explore the realms of ambiguity. Douglas notes that “The richness of poetry depends on
the use of ambiguity, as Emerson has shown. The possibility of seeing a sculpture
equally well as a landscape or as a reclining nude enriches the work’s interest.
Ehrenzweig has even argued that we enjoy works of art because they enable us to go
behind the explicit structures of our normal experience. Aesthetic pleasure arises from
the perceiving of inarticulate forms.”22
Kristeva explains that literature has directly addressed the abject for centuries and
points to the writings of Aristotle, Artaud, Batailles, Baudelaire, Celine, Dostoyevsky,
Kafka, Lautreamont, Plato, Proust, and Sartre. Kristeva states that “Language is a way of
organizing, distinguishing, and categorizing. Poets try to come up with a word that
means both pleasure and pain.”23 She expands upon this by saying that “The various
means of purifying the abject- the various catharses- make up the history of religions,
and end up with that catharsis par excellence called art, both on the far and near side of
religion. Seen from that standpoint, the artistic experience, which is rooted in the abject
it utters and by the same token purifies, appears as the essential component of religiosity.
That is why it is destined to survive the collapse of the historical forms of religions.”24
She concludes Powers by stating, “On close inspection, all literature is probably a version
of the apocalypse that seems to me rooted, no matter what its sociohistorical conditions
might be, on the fragile border (borderline cases) where identities (subject/object, etc.) do
not exist or only barely so-double, fuzzy, heterogeneous, animal, metamorphosed,
altered, abject.”25
In his article, Abject / Informe / Trauma, Jan-Ove Steihaug explains the
theoretical discourse concerning the differences of interpretation of George Bataille’s
discussion concerning the informe among Julia Kristeva, Yve-Alain Bois and Rosalind
Krauss. Steihaug explains the polarity involved in the abject/informe argument, and
posits that Hal Foster’s concept of trauma is the mediator between the two. However, I
will look at Batailles’ interpretation as understood by Bois and Krauss in order to
demonstrate the common relationships between his concept of the informe and Kristeva’s
writings on the abject in Powers. “Krauss grants that Bataille himself used the term
abjection, and states that what Kristeva takes over from him is “the linking [of] the sacred
21
Rosalind Krauss, “Informe without Conclusion,” October no. 78 (Fall 1996): p.92.
22
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London and New York: Routledge, 1960): 47.
23
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 61.
24
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 17.
25
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 208.
9
26
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 23.
27
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 19.
28
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 19.
29
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 19.
10
Here Batailles’ connection of the heterogeneous to human waste and trash can be
directly correlated with the previous discussion of dirt and uncleanliness and their
relationship to the body as posed by both Kristeva and Douglas. His reference to dreams,
neurosis and madness relates to Kristeva’s situating of Freud’s work on dreams as well as
his description of the borderline personality. One must also take into consideration that
simultaneous attraction and Kristeva has described repulsion as within the realm as the
abject. “Abjection is immoral, sinister, scheming, and shady: a terror that dissembles, a
hatred that smiles, a passion that uses the body for barter instead of inflaming it, a debtor
who sells you up, a friend who stabs you. . .”31
Krauss recognizes that in the experience of Batailles, opposites only exist in
language as a way of making categorizations. “In the confounding of the logic that
maintains terms like high and low, or base and sacred as polar opposites, it is this play of
the contradictory that allows one to think the truth that Bataille never tired of
demonstrating; that violence has historically been lodged at the heart of the sacred; that to
be genuine, the very thought of the creative must simultaneously be an experience of
death... ”32
Hal Foster discusses the idea of Trauma “in terms of Kristeva’s concept of
abjection and then goes on to the concept of the informe, seemingly unproblematically
integrating them. ‘Here, as often in horror movies and bedtime stories alike, horror
means, first and foremost, horror of maternity, of the maternal body made strange, even
repulsive, in repression.... Such images evoke the body turned inside out, the subject
literally abjected, thrown out. But they also invoke the outside turned in, the subject-as-
picture invaded by the object-gaze.... At this point some images pass beyond the abject,
which is often tied to substances and meanings, not only toward the informe, a condition
described by Bataille where significant form dissolves because the fundamental
distinction between figure and ground, self and other is lost...’33
This idea of boundaries between self and other is synonymous with the way
Kristeva applies her interpretation of Freud to abjection, that there are psychological
boundaries between self and other that are discovered when the a child begins to
understand itself as an entity that is separate from the mother. During this separation the
child abjects the mother. Simon Talylor interprets Kristeva’s writings concerning this
topic:
30
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 20.
31
Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982): 4.
32
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 21
33
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 27.
11
34
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 61.
35
Charlene Roth. “Skin and Bone,” Artweek v.28 (February 1997): p22.
12
“The twentieth century has restored and deepened the notion of flesh, that
is, of animate body.”36
-Maurice Merleau-Ponty
In order to gain a better understanding of the body and its place within abject art,
it is essential to understand the changing climate of the twentieth century in relationship
to a shifting bodily paradigm, and how this has been demonstrated within the visual arts.
Tracey Warr describes this transformation of thought in her introduction to The Artist’s
Body.
“Throughout history artists have drawn, sculpted
and painted the human form. Recent art history, however,
reveals a significant shift in artists’ perceptions of the body,
which has been used not simply as the ‘content’ of the
work, but also as canvas, brush, frame and platform. Over
the course of the last hundred years artists and others have
interrogated the way in which the body has been depicted
and how it has been conceived. The idea of the physical
and mental self as a stable and finite form has gradually
eroded, echoing influential twentieth-century developments
in the fields of psychoanalysis, philosophy, anthropology,
medicine and science. Artists have investigated the
temporality, contingency and instability of the body, and
have explored the notion that identity is ‘acted out’ within
and beyond cultural boundaries, rather than being an
inherent quality. They have explored the notion of
consciousness, reaching to express the self that is invisible,
formless and liminal. They have addressed issues of risk,
fear, death, danger and sexuality, at times when the body
has been most threatened by these things.”37
The work of those artists who employ the body as a medium and/or material
demonstrates a cross-fertilization of discourses and ideologies from various disciplines
and cultures. The ideas expressed by Freud concerning the unconscious mind and its
power over a subject’s behavior has radically changed the way that Westerners view the
correlation between mind and body. The Dada movement, which came to life shortly
after Freud’s major writings were published, involved the reality of the physical body
within its subversive, performative and multidisciplinary strategies that challenged
traditional representation in art. Dada eventually developed into Surrealism, which was
more psychologically bent and in turn, helped to popularize the Freudian fascination with
sex, dreams and the unconscious. “The collage, photomontage, installation, performance,
36
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body (unpublished doctoral thesis): 45-50.
37
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 11.
13
environments and assemblages of Dada and Surrealism broke out of the frame and the
flat plane of painting and began to engage with everyday life.”38
Several Modernist artists have been known for their fascination with ‘primitive’
cultures. Picasso helped to popularize this phenomenon with his Les Demoiselles
d’Avignon (1907), his interest being most evident in this work. The advent of
anthropology was a catalyst for various exhibitions dealing with primitive colonial
cultures, and was the catalyst for Western enchantment with ‘irrational’ paradigms. A
less repressive view of body and mind became favored within this atmosphere. Artists in
particular became enthralled with “traditions in which altered states of mind such as
dreaming, insanity, hallucination and near-death experiences were directly related to the
body as forms of somatic knowledge... Non-Western cultures were not so focused on a
notion of the individual as a central, cumulative point, but rather on an understanding of
self as part of a continuum in time, a community, an environment, a cosmos. Ecstatic
rites, alien social customs such as human sacrifice, ritual initiation, circumcision, body
painting, scarification, tattooing and piercing, were observed to use the body as access to
another plane.”39
Viennese artist Oskar Schlemmer understood the massive impact of the First
World War, as is made clear in his statement written on the battlefield, ‘the new artistic
medium is a much more direct one: the human body.’ Tracey Warr expands upon this:
That alteration was made most evident in the work of the Abstract Expressionists.
Perhaps the most obvious example of this is the distorted and monstrous women painted
by Willem de Kooning. As a whole, those who made up the New York School had found
themselves unable to paint traditionally and representationally. The devastation caused
by the war had made it impossible. Those who worked with paint had to find a more
direct way of handling their medium.
38
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 11-12.
39
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 11-12.
40
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 12.
14
The work of Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Marc Rothko was
centered in somatic ideology, and was extremely influential to artists working with the
body in the 1960s, 70s, 80s and 90s.42 Although Rothko was not an action painter, the
significance of the body within his work directly related him to the action painters. All
three artists employed proprioception (bodily knowledge) as a device for their classic
painting methods, using canvases that related to the scale of their bodies in order to
express an message imbued in the corporeal. The importance of the painter’s and/or
spectator’s body and its link to the psyche was emphasized.
Through their artwork, De Kooning, Pollock, and Rothko responded to the
“philosophers of the body.” The writings of Jean-Paul Sartre, Freidrich Neitzshe, Carl
Jung, Paul Schilder, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty contributed toward their thinking and
making processes. Their ideas were interconnected and adamantly anti-Cartesian. The
18th century philosopher Rene Des Cartes viewed the body as a mechanical organ with
deceptive senses. His focus was on reason, mental purification, and the separation of
mind and body. Sartre, on the other hand, emphasized the body, claiming that it is the
conscious incarnate. Pollock, De Kooning, and Rothko were influenced by his writings
and explored his ideas within their artwork. Rothko’s work with color and emotional
response makes evident his readings of Neitzsche. In his Genius Resides in Instinct
Neitzsche stressed that instinct is conscious intelligence, and states that human beings
have strayed from the instinctual aspects of themselves. He posits that this instinctual
wisdom is carried by the body.43 Pollock, who was a patient of Jung, was extremely
influenced by their psychotherapeutical sessions. Through the way in which he used his
body during his classical drip paintings, Pollock was able to tap into an unconscious of
which Jung spoke, and ‘unify body and spirit.’ It was the only time in his life that he was
able to overcome alcoholism.44 Schilder, in his book The Image and Appearance of the
Human Body, stated that the body image is in continual flux, and stresses its mobility,
flexibility, and fluidity. This strongly echoes De Kooning’s method of painting,
especially in his women series of the 50’s and 60’s. Unlike Rothco’s highly controlled
painting style, De Kooning’s was fast and wild. He used the feeling of his own body to
gauge where the head, shoulders, chest, and hips, of his female figures would fall into
place on his canvasses. He spoke of the internal changes that he went through as he
painted and how they affected the marks that he made. Essentially, he painted his body
in flux as he himself was fluxing. Schilder also related the body image to feelings,
attitudes, emotions, and the unconscious. He stated that the body image could shrink and
expand. It can give parts to the outside world and can take parts into itself. He saw the
body as the primary subject of art. He used the term ‘body image’ not only as a
psychological construct, but also as a depiction of the body in art.
41
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 49.
42
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): 35.
43
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): 22.
44
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): 33.
15
In the mid to late 1950’s artists like Georges Mathieu, Saburo Murakami, Kazuo
Shiraga, and Shozo Shimamoto brought the visceral way in which Jackson Pollock
45
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): 36-50.
46
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): Notes 9-30.
47
Leesa Fanning, Abstract Expressionism and the Body. (unpublished doctoral thesis): Note 82.
48
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 23.
16
approached the canvas into the three dimensional world. They painted with their bodies.
But this time the focus was not on the painting as an object, but the act and/or process of
making. “The artist’s presence in the work through the act of painting led to the artist’s
body becoming a tool for applying paint, akin to the paintbrush, leaving a direct trace of
the body in the work. In some works the body itself became the ‘canvas’ on which to
paint.”49
By the beginning of the 1960’s many artists had abandoned the object in search
for an art that was fused with life, an idea having its roots in Dada. Through this search
were born Happenings and Fluxus, both of which would be based upon the non-
commodification of art and the bodies of non-heroic artists and spectators alike.
According to Amelia Jones, such acts and groups were closely associated with the
metaphysical aspects of action painting. Loosely planned and unrehearsed public
performances modeled after mundane everyday life events were the focus of the artists
involved. However, some of these Happenings, such as Carolee Schneemann’s Meat Joy,
went beyond the mundane, and entered into the realm of hysterical and sensual frenzy.
Schneeman says of Meat Joy, “it has the character of an erotic rite: excessive, indulgent,
a celebration of flesh as material: raw fish, chickens, sausages, wet paint, transparent
plastic, rope, brushes, paper scrap. Its propulsion is toward the ecstatic - shifting and
turning between tenderness, wildness, precision, abandon: qualities which could at any
moment be sensual, comic, joyous, repellent. Physical equivalences are enacted as a
psychic and imagistic stream in which the layered elements mesh and gain intensity by
the energy complement of the audience.”50
By the close of the decade a raw and intense kind of artwork had emerged. The
stage had been set both socially and art historically for the most radical and revolutionary
artworks of the 20th century, perhaps any century, to materialize. Body Art had been
born and continued along the extreme paths of Happenings as an art that would be
independent of the gallery. Artists writhed during the onslaughts of the Vietnam War,
and tested their own physical limits in response. Vito Acconci bit his own body in every
area within reach of his mouth. Dennis Oppenheim suspended himself between two walls
for long as possible, only to move them further apart each time that he fell. Chris
Burden bore wings of glass and fire, locked himself in his school locker for five days and
nights, and had himself shot, as well as nailed to a Volkswagan. In a piece titled Rhythm
0, Maria Abromovik put her body at the mercy of her audience members, offering them
seventy two objects which they could use on her as desired. “By the end of the
performance all her clothes had been sliced off her body with razor blades, she had been
cut, painted, cleaned, decorated, crowned with thorns and had had the loaded gun pressed
against her head. After six hours the performance was halted by concerned spectators.”51
Jonathon Benthall writes of the body in art and in life during these turbulent
times, “Demonstrations, street art and sit-ins are literally and palpably embodying
arguments to challenge verbal mystification and lies... all repressed groups will tend to
find their most effective and confident expression through the body’s wider resources
rather than within [only] the enclosure of verbal language, in so far as they opt for self-
49
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 49.
50
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 60.
51
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 125.
17
assertion rather than for integrating with the norms of the majority.”52 These words are
particularly true for the rights movements, for in the words of Amelia Jones, “The artists’
gestures in public were in the 1960’s often transformed into a particular form of activism,
which introduced a political dimension to the work.”53 This continued throughout the
70’s, 80’s and 90’s, in the body-based artwork non-white, non-male artists who have
become known as the ‘Other.’ “According to feminist and multiculturalist analysis, the
notion of the Other inevitably implies a hierarchy. To be Other is to be considered less
than the male and less than the individual of white European heritage. The Other is
viewed as marginal, a sideshow in the grand narrative of world history.”54 Women, racial
minorities, and homosexuals, are shunted into this realm and many of these artists have
employed their bodies in order to get political messages across.
Feminist’s views in the 1970’s and the decades to follow would vary greatly and
widely. However, their focus on the body cannot be denied. Many women artists of the
1970’s felt that their experience of the world was uniquely female, and their approach to
art reflected it. Feminist critic Lucy Lippard agreed that a female sensibility could be
found within their work and pointed out that eggs, spheres, biomorphic shapes, and
vaginal imagery, as well as a tendency toward the body and body-like materials, were
reoccurring themes. “First Wave Feminists who had celebrated female sexuality and
publicly exposed their own, often voluptuous, naked bodies were criticized for playing
into patriarchal power structures.”55 They were found guilty by other feminist groups of
‘essentialism’, and were accused of embracing the designations imposed upon women by
patriarchal culture- woman as nature, woman as body, woman as emotion- and merely
changing them from negative to positive qualities. Postmodern feminists chose not to
serve any ideologies, nor to show positive images of the female experience. They instead
revealed the ways in which ideas of womanhood and femininity are socially constructed.
In place of what society referred to as femininity, they saw “a set of poses adopted by
women in order to conform to societal expectations about womanhood.”56
Those who have found themselves on the socially repressed side of the ‘color
line’ generally made statements concerning their social status by looking at historical
models:
52
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 29.
53
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 70.
54
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodernism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002): 65.
55
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodernism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002): 54.
56
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodernism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002): 53.
18
James Luna, Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Pena have used their bodies in
pseudo anthropological displays in order to point out the ways in which the paradigms
behind colonization continue to influence Western thought. In The Artifact Piece, James
Luna laid atop an exhibit table at San Diego’s Museum of Man, and was labeled with a
nametag along with written documentation involving how the scars on his body were
obtained during a drunken binge. Accompanying him in the exhibition were two display
cases containing his personal documents and some ceremonial items. Warr states that
“Luna’s literal presence as a museum exhibit disrupts the viewer’s ability to observe the
ethnic and historical ‘other’ by the presence of a consciousness and answering gaze.”58
Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Pena take Luna’s approach a step further in Two
Undiscovered Amerindians Visit.... In this piece the two artists cage themselves, dressed
in Hollywood style Native American costumes, and humor those visitors who drop coins
in a box with their ‘native’ song and dance.59
By the mid-1970s it had become obvious that a critical dialog on the notion of the
body needed to be set forth. October magazine made this discussion its priority. It was
in this theoretical climate that supported Jaques Lacan psychoanalytic and theory and
French poststructuralist thought that “the body in culture was seen as discursively
constituted and outside discourse at the same time, as a border of discourse opening onto
something other.”60
At this point in time the artist’s body appeared within two genres, activist
performance art and the portrayal of the fetishized and objectified self. The latter would
gain momentum throughout the 1980’s. Warr explains, “The anti-commercial, sober
enactments of everyday experience in Fluxus in the early 1960s give way to the activist
projects of, for example, Hi Red Center, the Guerrilla Art Action Group, Suzanne Lacy
and Mierle Laderman Ukeles, and the simulacral self-masquerades of Yayoi Kusama, Urs
Luthi, Eleanor Antin, Hannah Wilke, Cindy Sherman, Robert Mapplethorpe, Laurie
Anderson, Jeff Koons and Lyle Ashton Harris.”61 In the 1980s body art branches into a
performance which is staged, leaving the audience mostly uninvolved, and
commodifying photographic self-portraiture that reflects the general sentiment of a 1980s
preoccupation with wealth and its signified equivalents. This era is known for a “wide-
scale embrace of consumerist culture at least in US and British contexts, the body/self is
experienced in a more and more alienated, commodified form, calling for an increasingly
dramatic mode of representation. In the 1980s exaggeration rather than critique thus
becomes the dominant means of negotiating the alienation of everyday life in
pancapitalism.”62 As the decade progressed many artists became increasingly social
aware.
57
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodernism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002): 65-66.
58
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 154.
59
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 159.
60
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 159.
61
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 22.
62
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 22.
19
The body had become a ground for political action and artists were getting their
messages across by employing their own bodies as an art medium. Although they owed
much to predecessors such as Acconci and Burden, they were also strikingly different.
“Artists [of the 1980’s and 90’s] tended to take more overtly political stands, using these
as a metaphor for the marginalized and victimized members of society. And they also
tended to pursue a more theatrical format, acting on stage before real audiences, rather
than setting up actions to be observed only by a few friends, or by a still or video
camera.”64
The 1980s marked an era of increased wealth, influence and media attention for
artists and subjected them to “more intense scrutiny as they entered the mainstream.”65
Artists whose work investigated the corporeal were left vulnerable to the onslaughts of
conservative politicians who, along with leaders of the religious right, sought to repeal
funding from those whose work they found offensive.
The ensuing culture wars were a series of conflicts that have been in the forefront
of our media since the late 1980s and have caused heated debates concerning art, free
speech, obscenity, politics, and religion. The 1991 Whitney Biennial curator Lisa
Phillips wrote in the biennial’s catalogue, “In the realm of culture, pornography and
obscenity had replaced Communism as a new threat to American values.”66
Well known art critique Eleanor Heartney noted that the body had become the
battleground in these culture wars.67
63
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p4
64
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodern Heretics, (New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2004): 59.
65
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p5.
66
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p5.
67
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodern Heretics, (New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2004): 9.
20
Perhaps the most infamous of these controversies revolved around a work created
by Andres Serrano. Serrano’s Piss Christ (1987) (a piece in which a crucifix floats
within a glass bottle of urine) was attacked vehemently by Jesse Helms as a ‘sickening,
abhorrent, and shocking act by an arrogant blasphemer.’ Serrano had received several
thousand dollars in fellowship money and the National Endowment for the Arts was one
of his contributors. Steihaug describes the results of Helms’ condemnations:
Karen Finley was another artist who was targeted by conservatives. In We Keep
our Victims Ready Finley dealt with materials that represent bodily fluids in order to get
her point across. By smearing herself with chocolate she demonstrated how women are
treated ‘like shit.’ After covering her chocolate smeared body with red heart candies she
explains, ‘after a woman is treated like shit she becomes more lovable.” Finley then
covered herself in bean sprouts that she associated with semen ‘because after a woman is
treated like shit she is jacked off on.’ Heartney points out that Finley’s, amongst others,
“offense was connection to the public exposure to bodily excretions... What seemed most
objectionable to these conservative critics was the foregrounding of the physicality of the
human body and its excretory functions.”70
By the 1990’s the body in art begins to emerge with tremendous momentum.
Warr states, “what Vergine calls the ‘love of romance of the self in earlier body art’
makes way for a return to the art object or staged installation. But this return is one in
which the body is obsessively referenced... This new articulation of the artist’s body... is
paralleled by American scholar Michel Feher’s formulation about the meaning of the
body in contemporary life:
68
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodern Heretics, (New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2004): 64.
69
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p 4-5.
70
Eleanor Heartney, Postmodern Heretics, (New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2004): 61.
21
71
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 22.
22
In his study Abject / Informe / Trauma, Jan-Ove Steihaug asserts that there are
three ways in which abjection has been defined within the contemporary setting. The
first is by the four curators of the Whitney Museum’s Abject Art: Repulsion and Desire
in American Art, who recognize abjection as a central theory in 1990’s art that employs
abject materials and debunks the high status of fine art. The second definition comes
from the writings of Hal Foster in his book Return of the Real. Foster claims that this art
form can be seen in two categories, which are generally separated by gender. There are
female artists who explore the repression of the maternal body by paternal law and those
male artists who twist ‘the paternal law of difference - sexual and generational, ethnic
and social.’ A somewhat opposing definition in relationship to gender is noted in the
ideas set forth by the Swedish Curator Gertrud Sandqvist who organized the exhibition
Abject. Her interpretation of the concept is that it applies only to women and the
psychology of the female child; therefore, the exhibition included only female artists.
Sandqvist acknowledged abject art as a strictly contemporary phenomenon by placing
only the works of young and recently emerging within artists the show.73
It was in the year of 1990 that Sandqvist organized Abject, and Michael Wilson
deems it the year that abject art began to surface in the United States as well. It became
evident when three exhibitions that explored similar types of work came to fruition in a
72
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 80.
73
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>. p17-8.
23
mere matter of months. They include Just Pathetic at Rosamund Felsen Gallery in Los
Angeles, Work in Progress? Work? at Andrea Rosen Gallery and Stuttering at New York
City’s Stux Gallery. Between the three, these exhibitions represented some of the artists
who would become key individuals in abject art’s ‘anti-movement.’ However, it wasn’t
until the London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts exhibited True Stories in 1992 and The
Whitney hosted Abject Art: Repulsion and Desire in American Art in 1993 that this genre
became notorious within the artworld.74 Other exhibitions which confirmed the potency
of the abject art during the 1990’s were the Centre Georges Pompidou’s femininmasculin
(1995) and L’Informe: Mode d’emploi (1996), which shared six of the same artists
(Marcel Duchamp, Jean Fautrier, Cy Twombly, Claes Oldenburg, Mike Kelley, and
Robert Morris).75 At the same point in time that the latter was being planned it was
found that yet another Parisian exhibition, entitled From the Informe to the Abject, was in
its early stages. Eventually it was cancelled after the curators were made aware of
L’Informe’s similar and earlier intentions.76
Although many of the artists featured in these exhibitions were young and
upcoming Generation Xers from the postmodern era, there were equally as many mature
artists included, many of who were Modernist heroes. The question then becomes how is
it possible that artists from these supposedly dissonant eras within art history exhibit
together in a contemporary setting under a body of work whose genre, the abject, wasn’t
termed by Julia Kristeva until 1982? Rosalind Krauss and Yve-Alain Bois explain that it
was during the early eighties that “certain artistic practices with which Georges Bataille’s
name had never been associated... could only be characterized adequately through the
operations of Bataille’s informe.” and also point out that “the repression of certain
careers or certain parts of famous oeuvres”77 (perhaps in part by Clement Greenburg?)
has made it necessary to take another look at a great deal of Modern Art with fresh eyes.
Let us not forget the tremendous influence that Modernism’s Dada had on bodily
and performance art, as well as on work that includes found objects and/or base materials.
Jennifer Riddell points out that some of Jean Arp’s writing on Dada is very in tune with
“contemporary” thinking behind abject artwork. He wrote, “I had accepted the transience,
the dribbling away, the brevity, the impermanence, the fading, the withering, the
spookishness of our existence. Not only had I accepted it, I had even welcomed
transience into my work as it was coming into being.”78
Riddell posits that 1990’s abject art asserts the material presence of the body in
the use of ‘not-art’ objects. This includes the ‘realm of lived experience’ as opposed to
high art mediums. Much abject work shows a ‘lack of deliberateness (although not
intentionality)’ as viewers, rather than approach an esteemed object, simply ‘stumble
across’ it.79 This is strongly reminiscent of Dada’s most notorious functions.
The curators of Abject Art quote a statement made by Claes Oldenberg, yet
another Modernist, which shares the sentiments of contemporary abject art:
74
Michael Wilson. “Michael Wilson on Sore Winners,” Artforum v.43 no.2 (October 2004): 117
75
Yve-Alain Bois and Rosiland Krauss. Formless: A User’s Guide. (New York: Zone Books, 1997). 236.
76
Rosalind Krauss. “Informe without Conclusion” October no. 78 (Fall 1996): 89.
77
Yve-Alain Bois and Rosiland Krauss. Formless: A User’s Guide. (New York: Zone Books, 1997). 9-10.
78
Jennifer L. Riddell. “The Abject Object,” New Art Examiner v.20 (October 1996): 29.
79
Jennifer L. Riddell. “The Abject Object,” New Art Examiner v.20 (October 1996): 27.
24
Some of the many Modern artists who have been included in abject art’s realm are
Louise Bourgeois, Jean Dubuffet, Marcel Duchamp, Willem de Kooning, Robert Morris,
Claes Oldenburg, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Cy Twombly and Andy
Warhol. Each of them has made reference to the abject body within their work, despite
the fact that this type of acknowledgement seems to be a postmodern phenomenon. The
curators of Abject Art note in the introduction the exhibition’s catalogue:
Jennifer Riddell has similar thoughts regarding bodily hierarchies: “...that which
is abject can be thought of as a metonym for the body itself, indexing an array of
historically seated privilege, repression, or negation of specific forms of art practice
(painting over craft, sculpture over fiber, the permanent over the ephemeral, the precious
over the pedestrian).”82
The same sentiments can be found in the work of Marcel Duchamp, Claes
Oldenburg, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Cy Twombly and Andy Warhol.
80
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 12.
81
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 59.
82
Jennifer L. Riddell, “The Abject Object,” New Art Examiner v.20 (October 1996): 27
25
Warhol, who made a series of copper paintings that he oxidized with his urine, is well
known for artwork dealing with the role of the improper body. Both Rauschenberg and
Twombly employed proprioception within their work, as Helen Molesworthy observes:
“Rauschenberg radically reinserts the lower body into art. He desublimates the hand of
the artist, allowing it to smear and rub, press and blur, privileging tactility over sight.
Rauschenberg’s work catalogued the body through its products - shit, stain, blood....”83
Simon Taylor notes that Twombly’s use of proproception involves “scratching,
smudging, and smearing” and that Pollock’s classic horizontal paintings demonstrate a
form of embodiment.84
Postmodernist artist Kiki Smith addresses bodily hierarchy as well. “The way
Smith explores the exterior and interior regions of the body, examining the nervous,
digestive, and urogenital systems, skin, orifices, and bodily fluids, suggests an
investigation of body symbolism, one that rejects the bourgeois hierarchy of the body,
which privileges the head and denigrates the lower bodily stratum. Many of her most
recent works focus on the body’s excretory functions-shitting, pissing, cumming,
vomiting, and bleeding...’”85 Smith says of her own work that the “mind/body
dichotomy...has had enormously devastating ramifications in the society...to justify great
quantities of oppression...we have this split where we say the intellect is more important
than the physical. And we have this hatred of the physical.”86
Smith’s bodies are often maimed and/or fragmented, leaking through their orifices
those abject fluids. Their skin no longer offers a barrier between inside and outside, as
organs protrude through and fall away.87 About her work, Kiki Smith says: “When
people are dying, they are losing control of their bodies. That loss of function can seem
humiliating and frightening. But, on the other hand, you can look at it as a kind of
liberation of the body. It seems like a nice metaphor - a way of thinking about the social
- that people lose control despite the many agendas of different ideologies in society,
which are trying to control the body(ies)... medicine, religion, law, etc. Just think about
control - who has the control of the body? Does the body have control over itself? Do
you? . . . Does the mind have control over the body? Does the social?”88
“As Judith Butler states, the body is a materialization of a norm, it is the
performance of an ideal construct, which one has to comply with to ensure his or her
subjectivity so as not to be abjected, excluded, and marginalized into the spheres of
nonsubjectivity. But as Butler also affirms, one never quite succeeds in complying with
the norm he or she is supposed to reiterate. So abject performances of the female
body are those where the failing to reproduce the norm is made manifest where the
spectre of abjection is being played out. Abject art is saying to the viewer: this failure is
not necessarily unproductive, for it can have the effect of complexifying the body. “89
83
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 9.
84
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 9.
85
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 65.
86
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 65.
87
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 152.
88
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 152.
89
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 154.
26
The Oxford English Dictionary defines an abject person as “one who is cast off; a
castaway, and outcast; a degraded person.90 Julia Kristeva has implied that the maternal
body essentially represents that which is both abject and is abjected. In the words of
Christine Ross it is the site where ‘nature confronts culture,’ and ‘supplies the paradigm
for social othering...’91 Kiki Smith as well as Cindy Sherman, Mona Hatoum, and Judy
Chicago, creatively explore notions of the maternal body.
90
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 86.
91
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 61.
92
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 65.
93
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>.
94
Wayne Koestenbaum. “Fall Gals,” Artforum v.39 no.1 (September 2000): 151.
95
Rosiland Krauss. “Informe without Conclusion” October no. 78 (Fall 1996): 93.
27
The work of both Sherman and Smith are compatible with Mary Russo’s
‘monstrous feminine’ and ‘female grotesque.’ An element of the carnivalesque is imbued
by a performance of hysteria, theatricality and masquerade. Much of their work has been
produced in response to women’s issues such as abortion, rape and a backlash against the
rights of women. It has been suggested that Smith’s and Sherman’s portrayal of the
abject, along with Julia Kristeva’s, reinforces the patriarchal ideas that they attempt to
subvert.97
Art critic Joseph Koerner has stated that “abject art exposes the mechanism
whereby some subjects are expelled in order to objectify the sovereignty of others.”98 If
96
Rosiland Krauss. “Informe without Conclusion” October no. 78 (Fall 1996): 93.
97
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 66.
98
Joseph Leo Koerner. “The Abject of Art History,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 31.
28
anything, this is the case in Mona Hatoum’s Corps etranger, which has been referred to
by Kristeva directly as a work that evokes the abject.99
Hatoum’s work deals not only with the othering of the feminine, but of the
foreigner as well. Corps etranger imbues the myth of the vagina dentata- the woman as
a vampire, animal or spider with a devouring sexuality that dissembles masculinity. It
also signifies the foreign Palestinean body that is abjected by the Western subject in order
to form cultural identity. The viewer is now confronted and consumed by the ‘other,’
and when observed from a medical point of view is the same.101
Judy Chicago employs maternal fluids in Menstrual Bathroom, in which the
display of menstrual blood can no longer be shunted into a private realm. This exposure
of the maternal body is a threat to patriarchy.102 In discussing the work of Kristeva,
Elizabeth Gross explains: “Horror of menstrual blood is a refusal to acknowledge the
subject’s corporeal link to the mother.... It marks the site of an unspeakable and
unpayable debt of life, of existence, that the subject (and culture) owes to the maternal
body.” In Kristeva’s terms, Chicago uses “nature” to confront “culture” and thus disturbs
identity, system, order.”103
Just as the abjected bodies portrayed in the work of Mona Hatoum, Kiki Smith
and Cindy Sherman recognize “the horror of loss, decay, and illness,”104 the homosexual
body as signified by artists such as Robert Gober approached in a similar fashion. Simon
99
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 151.
100
Amelia Jones, Tracey Warr. The Artist’s Body. (New York: New Phaidon Press Inc, 2003): 132.
101
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 151-2.
102
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 151-2.
103
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 36.
104
Christine Ross. “Redefinitions of Abjection,” Res no.31 (Spring 1997): 156.
29
Taylor explains the dynamics of fear within heterosexual culture by citing Judith Butler:
Jennifer Riddell points out, “abject art claims and asserts what has been made
invisible.”106 Robert Gober’s work exposes the public to a gay male desire that has been
marginalized for centuries. Like many individuals who have “come out” to friends and
family members, gay culture has in term “come out” to the public. Simon Taylor points
out that “the dismembered limb in Gober’s work is, among other things, a metaphor of
the pathology of homophobia. Ideologically, the fragmented body functions as a critique
of the body politic, continuing a long tradition in political satire and iconography,” and
that the use of prosthetics in Gober’s works “invoke the abject through... a horror related
to the fear of dismemberment and death.”107 His uni-sexed torsos consisting of hairy-
chested breasts confront the deterioration of male/female boundaries by implying
androgyny and the hermaphroditic, which further disrupt the designation of sexuality and
gender.
Much of Gober’s work has been centered on the public’s response to the AIDS
epidemic, and has addressed the panic affiliated with spread of the disease as well as the
proposal to expose those who have been plagued by it. His sink pieces deal with the idea
of purifying the disease. Taylor explains that the absence of functional elements such as
plumbing fixtures denies access to water. The lack of this restorational (both physically
and spiritually) fluid cuts off the access to cleanliness and represents, according to the
artist, the lack of a cure for those who are HIV positive. In 1989 William H. Buckley Jr.
publicly insinuated that men who were HIV positive should be branded on the buttocks.
“Gober’s apparent response was a sculpture of a male backside and legs emerging from a
wall; on the backside is engraved a musical score in imitation of a figure from
Hieronymus Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights. ( Kristeva refers to the grotesque
105
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 86.
106
Jennifer L. Riddell. “The Abject Object,” New Art Examiner v.20 (October 1996): 27.
107
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 72.
30
imagery of the body in Bosch’s fantastic visions and links abjection to biblical
abomination in Judeo-Christian culture.)108
Gober, along with Mike Kelley, has been known to engage in processes that enter
into the realm of ‘women’s work’ such as sewing.109 This type of work “is often imbued
with an oppositional, feminine sensibility, irrespective of the maker’s gender. Its
materials are associated with roles and tasks constructed as feminine: household items,
fabric, food, and other found ephemera.110 Therefore, not only does this work extend
Gober’s blur between the boundaries of the sexes and proscribed gender roles, but for
artists such Kelley, it addresses a kind of abject masculinity, one which refuses to
conform to paternal law. Taylor points out, “One of the most controversial issues
surrounding Kelley’s work has been... a general interest in ‘unmanly’ things like dolls.
Influenced by the feminist critique of masculinity, as revealed in several of his
caricatures, stuffed animal sculptures, and felt banners, Kelley produces objects deeply
involved in issues of sexuality and gender difference.”111
Along with the theme of gender, Rosalind Krauss has located both excremental
substances and Kelley’s use of “lumps” as other ways in which Kelley explores the
‘low.’ She states that:
“Excrement both as bodily waste and as the traces
of infantile use that stain the stuffed toy animals ...cast
scatology in the familiar terms of abject art... Kelley’s
work Monkey Island (1982-83) - particularly its poster Ass
Insect, in which symmetrically linked monkey profiles
generate the image of leering eyes from the animals’ paired
anuses, in a direct allusion to the role of the monkey in the
whole series of [Bataille’s] ‘Pineal Eye’ texts, as well as
‘La Jesuve... Batailles discussion turns to the forces of
exclusion in the field of the social and takes the path of
Marx’s old mole, which, Bataille says, ‘begins in the
bowels of the earth, as in the materialist bowels of
proletarians. So it is not surprising that Kelley should have
done a work called Lumpenprol (1991), which with its
slightly smaller version, Riddle of the Sphinx (1992), stages
the jesuvian process... The ‘lumps’ in these two works are
generalized as invasive conditions, erupting within the
horizontal field of the work.112
Hal Foster expands upon the deeper meaning of Lumpenprol by giving the
sociological context for its root, Lumpen, a term that is clearly associated with the
abjected other:
108
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 75.
109
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 71.
110
Jennifer L. Riddell. “The Abject Object,” New Art Examiner v.20 (October 1996):27
111
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 69.
112
Rosiland Krauss. “Informe without Conclusion” October no. 78 (Fall 1996): 101-2.
31
Much like Andy Warhol, Kelley’s work expresses a cynicism and irreverence
toward the New York School through the use of abject materials and devices. In some of
Kelley’s felt banners the profane is exalted and the elevated function of ‘fine art’ is
sublimated. These works “mock the implicit machismo of the [Abstract Expressionists]
and their works... Rothko’s Blood Stain Artist’s Conception/Body Print (Self-Portrait as
the shroud of Turin) (1985) is based on a remark made by one of Rothko’s friends after
the artist had committed suicide - that the bloodstain Rothko’s body created was his best
stain painting. By invoking the auratic presence of the artist-messiah, Kelley appears to
be mocking the mystification of art-world ‘masterpieces.’”114
Kelly’s employs what he calls ‘the worst and trashiest stuff that the main culture
abhors’ as artistic materials. The pitiful looking found objects and stuffed animals that
compose his sculptures and installations are stained with baby’s drool, urine and feces.
Rhonda Lieberman notes that “Mike Kelley’s sock dolls are... moving and pathetic,
pinned to the wall in some kind of S & M Romper Room moment.”115 The only other
artist who can vie with Kelley for his use of the infantile and the excremental is Paul
McCarthy. Jan-Ove Steihaug refers to his viewing of Paul McCarthys video installation,
Bossy Burger, as one of his three most compelling experiences he has had as a viewer of
art. He describes the documented performance in which McCarthy has been staged
within an old sitcom set:
113
Hal Foster. “Obscene, Abject, Traumatic,” October no.78 (Fall 1996): 119-20.
114
Jack Ben-Levi, Craig Houser, Leslie C. Jones, Simon Taylor, Abject Art (New York: D.A.P.,1993): 68.
115
Rhonda Lieberman. “Stuttering,” Flashart v.32 (March/April 1991): 137.
32
Art critic Micheal Cohen, in an article on Paul McCarthy in Flash Art, takes a
look back at one of McCarthy’s 1974 performances. To it, he applies Julia Kristeva’s
theory on abjection. After describing a piece entitled “Meat Cake Yum Yum, he says
‘What is this? What compels someone to subject himself to degradation, and to revel in
filth? It is abjection, the revolt of being. What Julia Kristeva described as a threat that
emenates from an indeterminable inside and outside.”117
116
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>.
117
Steihaug, Jan-Ove. Abject/Informe/Trauma. www.forart.no/steihaug/toc.html>.
33
Conclusion
'Abject Art' is a body of work that was named and popularized during the1990s.
Although Julia Kristeva is the thinker who coined the term abjection and described it
theoretically, one must not discount the writings of Georges Batailles and Mary Douglas,
as well as a plethora of others who have written about similar dynamics throughout the
centuries. Abjection is a complex and widely encompassing theory that explores
humankind's primal need to categorize and define. Those things that lay on the borders of
classification are abject. They are liminal, marginal, and ambiguous. They are unclean,
formless, low, and infantile. They are tabooed. Abjection accompanies art and literature,
religion, the body, madness, and corpse. It is shunted from the symbolic system along
with those most closely associated with it, particularly women.
The objective of this study has been to gain an understanding of the concept of
abjection and how it has been physically manifested within the visual arts throughout the
20th century. My findings have shown that abjection is closely associated with a great
deal of Catholic art, both contemporary and historical, and I plan on exploring this topic
further. I have also found that abjection can be affiliated with the animal, deformed,
grotesque, marked, macabre, and monstrous, and will be expanding upon these
relationships continuation of this study.
34
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