Representing Pain in Body Art
Representing Pain in Body Art
Representing Pain in Body Art
Miguel Á Hernández-Navarro Pain is a recurring theme for artists who use their own bodies
in their art. Their motivations may be manifold, but collectively
they have much to say about the body and its place in
contemporary life.
‘B
ody art’ was a term coined to describe the practices of artists such
as Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, Bruce Nauman and Dennis Oppenheim
during the late 1960s and the early 1970s. The principal mouthpiece
of this movement was the 1970s magazine Avalanche. Nowadays, however,
use of the label ‘body art’ has broadened and its meaning has become more
diffuse. Art historians and art critics do not use body art in a purely historical
context, but in a more inclusive sense. Body art has become an artistic
discipline, a practice or ‘way of creating’, that has emerged from the
confluence of dance, theatre, sculpture and painting. This broad definition
of body art is the one I will adopt, an inclusive category including events,
performances, action art, behaviour art, body painting and so on.
In this sense, body art is an artistic ‘genre’ or discipline, much the same as
painting or sculpture. It was a development that started among several arts
of the late 1950s, although it was consolidated in the mid-1960s and reached
its climax during the 1970s. The main characteristic that distinguishes body art
from traditional art is its use of the living body as its principal medium. Body
art draws upon forms and procedures of dance and theatre – particularly their
existence in ‘real time’ and in ‘real space’ – to express concerns and reflec-
tions characteristic of art throughout history.
painful experiences. For instance, the French artist Gina Pane has cut her
forearms, eyelids and abdomen with knives; Chris Burden asked a friend to
shoot him, to crucify him on a car, to shut him in a locker; Vito Aconci has
bitten, hit and injured his own body; the artistic partners Ulay and Marina
Abramovic have been slapped, burnt, cut, and have removed pieces of their
own skin; in the early 1970s Rudolf Schwarzkogler and, more recently, the
North American Bob Flanaghan have mutilated themselves, even resorting
to castration; Orlan has subjected her body to plastic surgery in order to
change her body appearance and become a form of human sculpture; and
Hannah Wilke has even exhibited her own pathologies, being photographed
with a body swollen due to a lymphoma that would kill her. As is clear – and
these are just a few examples – artists hurt themselves in many different ways
when meditating on pain.
If the ways of inflicting pain on the body have been varied, the artists’
motivations have been similarly diverse. One of the best analyses is by
Kathy O’Dell in Contract with the Skin: Masochism, Performance Art and
the 1970s, which drew out similarities but also substantial differences in the
work of artists such as Chris Burden, Gina Pane, Vito Acconci, and Marina
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Abramovic and Ulay. Thus, to write about pain in body art one would have
to examine specific cases and the motivations of each artist. When this is not
done, the work tends to get categorized and condemned as sensationalist,
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essentially frivolous. The fact is, only a deep study will truly reveal the point
of this work, for a casual reading only reveals its shock value, never the true
motivations. As Arthur C Danto argues, to understand a work of art, it is nec-
essary to explore the things that the eye cannot see, the things that lie
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beyond the simple view.
Although artists have injured themselves in similar ways, even though they
may have used different approaches, they have studied pain from different
points of view. In fact, reflections on pain have hardly ever constituted a
purpose in itself. More usually, pain is a metaphor or a means of accusation.
Pain in body art, I would like to suggest, is a kind of ‘somatization’, a rendering
in flesh and blood, of issues of politics, race, identity, or art. In this sense,
Mary Kelly’s notion “the personal is political” can be recast as “the corporeal
is political”.
One of the core concerns of body art – and contemporary art more generally –
is the issue of gender. Most of the painful works of Gina Pane, Mary Kelly,
Ana Mendieta, Carol Schneeman, Hannah Wilke, Orlan and many others were
driven by a desire to highlight the objectification of women in a male-dominated
capitalist society. French Artist Gina Pane’s work is typical. Dressed in
“by her suffering, her
an immaculate white costume, Pane hammered rose thorns into her forearms,
risking (…) the body
chewed broken glass, and made cuts in her abdomen or in the soles of her
is projected as the feet. In 1971 in ‘Bleeding Climb’, she ascended a ladder with cutting edges
conscience of the barefoot and barehanded. These actions seek to represent women’s plight as
self. It is pure a ‘wound’, as a bleeding and painful injury that has remained hidden and must
thought, an be exposed. As François Pluchart observes, “by her suffering, her risking (…)
intellectual and the body is projected as the conscience of the self. It is pure thought, an
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sensitive analysis”.7 intellectual and sensitive analysis”.
Pain: Passion, Compassion, Sensibility M3
The American artist Vito Acconci marked his body with bites, reaching as far
as he could with his mouth. Dennis Oppenheim searched for the limits of his
own body flexibility by stretching it between two surfaces. Chris Burden was
shot in a shoulder, crucified on a Volkswagen and thrown wrapped in a sack
onto a motorway – in all cases risking his life, examining the seduction of
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‘risk’, one of the passions of our time.
Thus, one of the essential problems is the question of reality. Body art is
a kind of art where the boundary between life and art, between representation
and reality, is broken. Here pain is presented rather than represented (or
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In some senses, one could say that the pain that the artist feels is not a real
pain because it is self-inflicted. The ‘art-body’ is distinct from the ‘real-body’.
The individual who really feels the pain is not the person, but the ‘artist-person’;
in other words, a body-supplement, an ‘I-supplement’. As Amelia Jones states,
the artist’s real entity disappears in performance, and the subject acts as a
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symbol in a context: he/she becomes a form of communication or language.
The pain that artists feel takes place in this context and is – although real – a
symbolized pain, put to work by means of a series of acquired codes. Here,
pain occupies a half-way house between the real and the symbolic.
boundary or limit, skin is what encapsulates the body. Most of the painful
experiences in body art are concentrated on the skin. The wound (incision,
cut, puncture) is an opening of the body, a kind of violation of the ‘external
inside’ of the body.
Nevertheless, the fact that almost all painful actions are carried out on the
skin probably reflects more prosaic matters, such as the nature of each per-
formance. Body art is first and foremost a visual art, so there must be ‘some-
thing to see’. Moreover, many of works are carried out live, with spectators
sharing the space – the gallery scene – and to some extent sharing the expe-
rience with the artist. In certain cases, it is possible to
‘perform’ in private, with photographic or video documentation. Even when
the source of pain is internal, as in Marina Abramovic’s ‘Rhythm 2’, the visual
impact remains paramount: how does what is happening inside manifest on
the outside, visible through changes in facial expression. It remains a matter
of visual art.
In this sense, body art aims to challenge the ‘discourse of spectacle’ – the
view that life is being reduced to little more than a series of representations –
subverting it and, on occasion, taking it to the extreme. In a society focused
on ‘the spectacle’, the body is aseptic, perfect and without pain. Pain as
witnessed in body art displaces the body from this pedestal, breaking its
fiction, returning it to a visceral reality.
Miguel Angel Hernández-Navarro is a Lecturer of Art Theory and an expert in body art.
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