Category: Screenings

  • The Most Bleed Possible

    This essay was largely written during a November 2015 residency at the Luminary in Saint Louis, Missouri.

    Brody Condon
    Tuesday, November 3, 2015
    School of Visual Arts, 133/141 West 21st Street, Room 101C, New York

    Brody Condon in Miami Beach in 2010 (photograph and GIF by David Toro)

    Though the outrageous antics of Jim Jones and Charles Manson reverberate through the American public consciousness, a broad history of less-sensational activities from the 1960s and 1970s probably had a larger if surreptitious impact on US culture. Encounter groups, the human potential movement, large-group awareness training: these cultic approaches to self-actualization came shortly after mind expansion through psychedelic drugs in the sixties and just before business motivational seminars and self-help gurus of the eighties (followed by the deliriums of late-night religious programming and inspirational infomercials). Today, soccer moms practice yoga and mindfulness is all the rage, but once upon a time, New Age ideas were a serious threat to mainstream Judeo-Christian values. The objectors were partly correct, but I digress.

    Born in Mexico, Brody Condon is an American artist working in Berlin who has recently been mining the New Age practices of the Esalen Institute and Erhard Seminars Training, among other groups, cults, and otherwise strange organizations, through an aesthetic lens. Using live action role play (LARP) as an artistic form, Condon creates scenarios of psychic strain through what he calls performance engines, described during a lecture at the School of Visual Arts as “creative performative systems that drive action … that drive social choreography.” Through these events—typically documented on video—he produces not only an “emotional significant group encounter but also a psychologically charged art critique.”

    Brody Condon talks about performance engines (photograph by Christopher Howard)

    Crucial to Condon’s practice is gestalt practice, which he described as a conception of the physical body, the environment, and the mental state of the individual as an integrated, organic whole. Conversation gestalt therapy, he said, focuses on an individual’s expression and experience of the present moment—there is neither past nor future. Condon is not interested in actual healing and trauma. Likewise, there is no crossover with drama therapy or art therapy. Participants are supposed to maintain some critical distance when in the moment. The artist emphasized that performance engines are an alternative to, not a replacement for, real political dialogue. He also framed his work as an “experiential essay.”

    Some works come across as simple. For Circles of Focus (2015), one project from a four-year collaboration with the Scottish artist Christine Borland, people were encouraged to free-associate about museum objects they handled. Other pieces are just plain weird. Extracurricular Anatomy (2015) took place at the Laboratory of Human Anatomy at the University of Glasgow, where Condon and Borland devised a performance for five fourth-year anatomy students, three cadavers (two real, one played by a living person), and a carnivorous plant. One participant uttered sounds when touching parts of the cadaver, which the plant positioned above the body’s head “interpreted.” A second person “psychically communicated” with the plant and told a third where to dissect a geometric section from the body. “Yeah … that happened,” Condon said.

    The finished version of Future Gestalt (2012) consists of video of the fifth and final session of a performance that took place under a Tony Smith sculpture Smoke (1967), installed at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art—a building designed by the architect William Pereira that, for Condon, represents an “antiquated version of the future.” Smith’s sculpture embodied the “facilitator,” intended to be an artificial intelligence or “interdimensional entity” that, like a cult leader or psychotherapist, guided the four performers. Wearing colorful, loose-fitting robes and “playing fictional versions of themselves in the future,” the performers spoke to the sculpture, sometimes in shrills, clicks, and whispers; it also talked to them. The audio of Condon’s instructions and commands (such as “focus,” “responsibility,” “empathy,” an “control”) was split, with a clear signal sent to the performers’ earpieces and garbled distorted audio filled the room at LACMA. Watch the clip below for a taste of the work.

    Brody Condon, sample from Future Gestalt (2012) on Vimeo.

    LARP communities throughout the world volunteer to participate in Condon’s works. He also posts open casting calls, which convene both professional actors and regular folks, but the artist’s approach that contrasts the feel-good nature of most audience-involved art. Before screening footage from Zeigarnik Effect (2015), commissioned by Momentum 8: The Nordic Biennial, Condon explained, “I’m not casting, and they’re not performers. I’m providing a service for them. I’m providing an event for them to immerse themselves in, for a day to five days at a time. And often they pay me to participate.” This low “token fee” gives him more power as an artist and “changes the power dynamic of participatory work.” In museums, artists typically treat visitors as material. Condon perceives himself as a service provider. A live feed of Zeigarnik Effect was presented in a split screen. Condon said this was a nod to the psychiatrist Ian Alger, who in the 1970s introduced the two-camera technique in therapy. Alger would simultaneously record both sides of a patient’s face; the patient would choose the preferred side—or something like that.

    Brody Condon, sample from Ziegarnik Effect (2015) on Vimeo.

    The concept and script for Level Five (2010–11), the earliest and most historically grounded work, drew from elements of Erhard Seminars Training, Alcoholics Anonymous, Scientology, and gestalt therapy. Level Five was Condon’s reconceptualization of self-actualization seminars, using two actors with years of LARP experience to keep the psychological flow going (what he called “run-time game management”) during the two-day event. The performers—a mix of LARPers, actors, and volunteers—arrived as characters, emoted as them, and stayed in character for the duration of the piece. Filmed with three cameras, Level Five was streamed live next door, at the Hammer Museum’s theater. Perhaps not coincidentally, the Hammer has been offering weekly Mindful Awareness sessions since 2012.

    “In role playing,” Condon said, “bleed happens when the thoughts and feelings of the character start affecting the player, or vice versa.” Coming from a background in performance art, he wants “the most bleed possible.” Back in the day—Condon played Dungeons and Dragons as a kid—it was off limits for role-playing games to affect your real life. Today there are levels of bleed. “Rather than forgetting the existence of an original self,” the artist said about Level Five participants, “the character becomes a tool for projection, self-exploration, and experimentation.” Sometimes performers intentionally try to puncture the illusion; sometimes they experience a minor schizophrenic break. For each work trained professionals are on hand, Condon revealed, to pull a person aside in either case. “We can’t stop these events,” he said. “Once they start, they run…. If they hate what’s going on, they leave.”

    Brody Condon, sample from Level Five (2010–11) on Vimeo.

    One wonders exactly what Condon gets out of the whole thing—he is the one instructing people to inhabit a fictional character whose personality is subsequently gutted. Getting to the core self of a fictional person is “the funnest part to me, it’s the most twisted part.” He explained: “You’re attending a seminar that’s meant to push you, to get you to the core of your being, to strip layers of your socially constructed personality—but you’re doing that as a fictional personality.” The idea is twisted indeed, and you wouldn’t get the same results with a film or stage play. At the time of conceiving Level Five, Condon said, “I was interested in the genealogy of New Age culture in the United States.” After thriving in the 1970s, he told us, the human-potential movement was depoliticized and sold it back to the masses via motivational seminars for businesspeople, Silicon Valley entrepreneurial philosophy, and life coaching.

    A work looking beyond the West, Four Sessions (2014), was executed in Seoul, South Korea, for the fourth Anyang Public Arts Project. Condon found four traditional craftspeople—an instrument maker, a mother of pearl inlay master, a mudang shaman, and a slack-line performer (a.k.a. a tightrope walker)—that are Intangible Cultural Treasures in Korea and identified by a number. He instructed them to pick an object from their studio or to collaborate with him to make an object. Number 24 (the lacquer craftsman), for example, brought a bowl he was never able to finish because it was tied to a past trauma, and Condon made a drum with Number 30 (the instrument maker). Again borrowing from gestalt therapy, the artist ordered the participants to converse with these objects, which spoke back. What’s more, the Intangible Cultural Treasures pretended to be an inanimate object themselves that their objects, now alive, talked to. The piece of rope that belonged to Number 58 (the slack-line man) chastised him for failing to practice.

    Brody Condon, sample from Intangible Cultural Treasure No. 58: Traditional Slackline Performance (2014) on Vimeo.

    Four Sessions felt like the weakest of the projects Condon presented, but that’s probably because the video clips he showed lacked English subtitles. (The excerpts on Vimeo are now translated.) I also got the impression that Condon struggled to maintain order—the participants seemed to battle with him directly and indirectly. Though they were instructed to come alone, they brought family members and apprentices. One man’s daughter and her friends played with their cell phones while the sessions took place. The stubborn shaman resisted the academically trained mediator for Four Sessions, a Korean psychotherapist who did PhD research on the history of shamanism. The psychotherapist, in turn, did not bow to Condon’s authority. There was also a certain amount of bickering. Common trait among the four Intangible Cultural Treasures, the artist said, were peer jealousy, worries about money, and complaints about corruption within the Intangible Cultural Treasure system. Perhaps the difficulty was that the four participants did not adopt a persona or role. They were playing themselves going through a somewhat experimental therapy session that was too much like garden-variety psychotherapy.

    In Terms Of count: 6.

  • Disembodied Experiences

    Dennis Oppenheim: Form – Energy – Concept
    Wednesday, May 22, 2013
    Screening and Conversation
    Electronic Arts Intermix, New York

    View of the dual-projection screening (photograph by Christopher Howard)

    For “Dennis Oppenheim: Form – Energy – Concept,” Electronic Arts Intermix offered a special program of films from the early 1970s: selections from the artist’s Aspen Projects (1970–71), the rarely screened Disappear (1972), and two of his 2-Stage Transfer Drawings (both 1971). Transferred to DVD, the films were presented as double projections, as Dennis Oppenheim (1938–2011) was said to have exhibited his films and videos in this way. Though the New York–based Oppenheim was a pioneer of body art at the time, he has been long overshadowed by his friend Vito Acconci, whose pervy performances, along with those by VALIE EXPORT and the duo of Marina Abromović and Ulay, have come to dominate the expanded genre.

    The evening’s moderator, Jenny Jaskey, assistant curator for the Artist’s Institute at Hunter College, prefaced the screening by expressing her interest in “flat ontologies” and “pressure points in contemporary art,” the latter phrase alluding to the air-pressure hose Oppenheim turned on his face and hands for two films. For her, the concepts of subject and object in the artist’s work from this period are entangled.

    After about a half hour of intense filmic imagery—in which Oppenheim dug his thumbnail into wooden floorboards, shook his hands violently, and used a blowtorch to melt a wax peg leg worn by an amputee—Jaskey marshaled three New York–based visual and performing artists to “reflect on Oppenheim’s legacy and discuss the body’s relationship with the inanimate and nonhuman in contemporary practice,” according to the EAI news release. The panelists: A. K. Burns makes videos, coedits the magazine Randy, and helped to found the advocacy group Working Artists for a Greater Economy (W.A.G.E.); Yve Laris Cohen is an interdisciplinary artist whose work involves elements of dance and performance; and Ajay Kurian is an artist, a writer, and the founder for Gresham’s Ghost, a roving curatorial space.

    Yve Laris Cohen speaks (photograph by Christopher Howard)

    During the conversation, it wasn’t clear if the elder artist had directly influenced the younger ones. No one claimed how he or she had encountered Oppenheim’s work as an undergrad, for example, and been blown away by it. In fact, the discussion among the four speakers floated abstractly, lacking a clear narrative or concrete examples of aesthetic insight. Jaskey started off with the duality of subject and object. Burns talked about cyborgs, touch screens, feminist and queer politics, the collapse of language in relation to the body, and webs and networks that eclipse hierarchies. Kurian reframed “performance” as “activity,” observed that a private moment can be a shared sensation, and noted the uncanny relationship to your own body as you touch your face. Laris Cohen was excited about expansiveness without limits or parameters.

    Burns believed that Oppenheim wanted to deny the medium of the camera in favor of the body, noting that “the frame is really heavy in that gesture.” Someone then asked, how does a language develop from the frame? Jaskey had strong feelings about Disappear but didn’t share them: “It’s an open question,” she said. Burns offered incomplete thoughts about YouTube, which Jaskey said is a medium that is weirdly private but also public. Burns grasped that the word “manual” was the root word for “hand,” to which Laris Cohen curiously responded by saying the hand is important to queerness, especially with its use to fuck. For her, Disappear is about amputation, displacement, and shame. Echoing Burns, Kurian claimed that Oppenheim wanted to destroy visual qualities, which Jaskey called a disavowal of representation.

    From left: A. K. Burns and Ajay Kurian discuss the work of Dennis Oppenheim, while Yve Laris Cohen and Jenny Jaskey observe (photograph by Christopher Howard)

    While Jaskey may have recognized qualities of Oppenheim’s work from the early 1970s in the activities of Burns, Laris Cohen, and Kurian, those ideas could be better expressed in an essay or an exhibition, not via a live format in which artists are asked to respond to another artist’s work with which they might not be familiar. I can detect similarities between Oppenheim’s treatment of his body on camera in Nail Sharpening (1970) and Material Interchange (1970) with Burn’s Touch Parade (crush) (2011), in which two feet, clad in white Keds, casually step on and crush three baby carrots, a cucumber, and two chicken eggs. Direct comparisons between the work of Oppenheim and that of the panelists were not made during the conversation, though I acknowledge that the notion—not of influence but of unintended correspondences in approach or process—is a sensitive subject for artists.

    In Terms Of count: 10.