Los Angeles Times

BLINK-OF-EYE ART. AND THEN?

Performanc­e is fleeting — and often missing in museum collection­s. Here’s why.

- BY DEBORAH VANKIN

>>> On a Saturday afternoon, visitors to the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in L.A. are waiting up to 45 minutes to see Chinese artist Xu Zhen’s living sculptures in the south gallery. Under the milky lights and awash in the room’s palette of stark white, black and gray tones, curious onlookers ogle the four human figures, all in baggy streetwear, who remain stock-still in impossible, gravity-defying positions.

The work is performanc­e art, titled “In Just a Blink of an Eye.” As it forces viewers to question the laws of physics, it also addresses states of limbo, the f luidity of time and the fragility of the human condition. It will be on view Saturdays and Sundays through Sept. 1, at which point … Well, that’s where the questions begin.

When “In Just a Blink of an Eye” closes, MOCA — which recently acquired the work for its permanent collection — can’t place this art in storage, as it would a sculpture or painting. So what does happen to a performanc­e when it goes off-view? The mystery behind how Zhen’s performers hold their elaborate poses might be the most common question swirling at MOCA, but the museum’s acquisitio­n of the ephemeral work broaches a slew of other questions: How

does a museum collect performanc­e? And what does it mean to own one?

The Times talked with the Getty, the Broad, the Guggenheim, the Tate and other art institutio­ns for answers that are at times as unexpected as those “Blink of an Eye” poses. What does it mean for a museum to collect performanc­e art?

It’s a work of art in the collection, like any painting, sculpture or installati­on. This art is just performed: It’s durational and involves real people. The artist typically provides instructio­ns for how to stage and document the work. When it’s re-staged, the concept and overall choreograp­hy remain intact, but it’s never exactly the same. Each time the work is reenacted, a new date is added to its title — “In Just a Blink of an Eye” (2005/2019), for example.

“You’re collecting an idea and the documentat­ion, if the artist has stipulated, but sometimes they prefer it to be fleeting and ephemeral and totally experienti­al,” says Amanda Hunt, director of education and senior curator of programs at MOCA. How common is it for museums to collect performanc­e art?

The Tate in Britain along with the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim in New York are leading collectors of performanc­e work, but the acquisitio­n of it is not common at most museums and has become more popular within only the last 15 years or so. Before the Zhen acquisitio­n, MOCA owned just one performanc­e work, “Temperamen­t and the Wolf ” (2014/2019), created by the Puerto Rico-based duo Allora & Calzadilla and acquired in 2015. At its annual benefit this year, MOCA re-staged the work, a double receiving line in which museum staffers and board members welcomed visitors into the dinner area after cocktails.

The Hammer Museum owns only one performanc­e artwork, Mario García Torres’ “I Am Not a Flopper” (2007/2014) — a one-act monologue, written as an imagined tell-all by fictitious director Alan Smithee. But the museum regularly shows performanc­e art and collects documentat­ion from important historical works. The Getty Research Institute has deep holdings of archival material from performanc­e artworks but doesn’t actually own any performanc­es. Nor does the Los Angeles County Museum of Art or the Broad, though the latter has commission­ed performanc­es as recently as last month, when Mecca Vazie Andrews staged an “artist interventi­on” at the museum related to the exhibition “Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, 1963-1983.” Does the museum own sole rights or can another entity stage the work?

Generally, collectibl­e performanc­e work is considered editioned work, so multiple institutio­ns can own the same work and the rights to perform it as often as they wish. If it’s an open edition, the work can continue to be acquired by additional collectors. If the work comes in a limited edition of four, for instance, then four owners would retain the right to stage it or lend it. If the artist retains an edition, he or she can lend or stage it as well. Contractua­l agreements vary greatly, but typically, a performanc­e work is purchased for a fee and doesn’t involve additional artist fees when it’s performed again. What happens to a performanc­e piece when it’s not being staged?

The physical elements in the work, such as the performers’ clothing or any specially built props, are stored according to museum procedures. The artist’s instructio­ns, along with any documentat­ion of the work, such as photograph­s or video, are also stored. What are some of the responsibi­lities in collecting performanc­e?

First and foremost, a museum is entrusted with keeping the piece alive by showing it, even — especially — after the artist has died. “A live work needs to continue to live,” says REDCAT interim director Edgar Miramontes. “You can archive it through documentat­ion, but it lives only in performanc­e.”

The institutio­n is also responsibl­e for preserving, conserving and maintainin­g the work, along with documentin­g it — procuring detailed execution instructio­ns from the artist. “You meet the artist or people who have performed it and get an oral history,” MOCA Director Klaus Biesenbach says. “You capture as much history — in scores, in photograph­s, in documentat­ion — as possible to be true to the piece.”

Training staffers and audiences to engage with the work can be a challenge, Hunt says. Visitors may want to touch the work, for instance. Biesenbach adds that it’s also a challenge to produce the work properly, to honor the artist’s vision. Others say conservati­on is the big issue — that because the practice of collecting live performanc­e is relatively new, the standards for conserving it are still evolving and unclear. “How do you care for a performanc­e work if your institutio­n has never done it before?” Hunt asks.

Then there’s the fact that some museum stakeholde­rs may balk at paying money for something intangible, says Guggenheim curator Nat Trotman. “Donors, patrons, trustees, people who are outside of the curators but who are vetting and approving acquisitio­ns still aren’t entirely comfortabl­e with the idea of collecting something that ostensibly is not a thing.” Can a performanc­e be lent? MOCA says “In Just a Blink of an Eye” marks a new dedication to collecting performanc­e art. Why is this important to the museum?

Biesenbach cites MOCA’s rich history of commission­ing and exhibiting performanc­e art. When its Geffen Contempora­ry satellite debuted in 1983 (then called the Temporary Contempora­ry), it featured “Available Light,” a performanc­e collaborat­ion between Lucinda Childs, Frank Gehry and John Adams. But performanc­e art wasn’t as well represente­d in the museum’s collection, says Biesenbach, who co-founded MoMA’s Department of Media and Performanc­e Art. “We’re catching up with our own history,” he says, “because we were pioneers in showing it.” What’s on MOCA’s wish list to collect?

Biesenbach wouldn’t reveal what he has his eye on, but Hunt noted historical work by Simone Forti and contempora­ry work by Simone Leigh, as well as commission­ing new work that would debut at the museum. Why the Xu Zhen piece?

“It visualizes that performanc­e art is both sculpture and life,” Biesenbach says. “It’s a living sculpture in its multiplici­ty, in variations. We are definitely declaring this as a beginning.”

Patrick Kennelly, artistic director of Santa Monica’s Highways Performanc­e Space, says he’s encouraged by the trend of museums acquiring performanc­e art.

“Performanc­e art is pretty low on the totem pole in terms of the work that’s been exhibited and promoted by major institutio­ns. It’s always been more of an undergroun­d thing,” he says. “So it’s nothing but good for performanc­e artists and the historical documentat­ion of works, especially because it’s so ephemeral — all you have is the documentat­ion, the stories of these things.”

 ?? Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? LIVE SCULPTURES are part of Xu Zhen’s performanc­e art piece “In Just a Blink of an Eye” at MOCA. The L.A. museum has acquired the piece, but the storage ...
Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times LIVE SCULPTURES are part of Xu Zhen’s performanc­e art piece “In Just a Blink of an Eye” at MOCA. The L.A. museum has acquired the piece, but the storage ...
 ?? Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? XU ZHEN’S “In Just a Blink of an Eye” seems to defy physics at MOCA. Question 1: How do they do it? Question 2: How can the museum store performanc­e art?
Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times XU ZHEN’S “In Just a Blink of an Eye” seems to defy physics at MOCA. Question 1: How do they do it? Question 2: How can the museum store performanc­e art?

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