Quirky humour, action galore plus a Batcave packed with 100 costumes. The latest Batman game provides fun for all ages, with everything from a classic couch co-op experience to much tougher challenges.
'There is a limit of bodies getting older, but at the same time I wake up every day with new ideas that I want to do,' says Abramovic, who turns 80 this year.
Photo: Reuters Marina Abramovic’s eyes look much the same as they did in 2010, when they held more than 1,500 people in a silent gaze during her landmark performance ofat New York’s Museum of Modern Art – a work that helped cement her status as a pioneer of performance art. The Serbian-born, New York-based artist, who turns 80 this year, became the first living woman to be honoured with a major exhibition recently at the Gallerie dell’Accademia in Venice, where she won the top prize at the 1997 Biennale Arte.
The new show, which runs until October, invites visitors to interact with a series of “transitory objects,” including crystal structures and minerals, activating what Abramovic describes as “energy transmissions”. It also features a re-enactment by other artists of one of Abramovic’s best-known performances alongside a depiction of her presentation of– staged with her long-time partner Ulay – presented with Titian’s masterpiece of the same name.
At the opening, Abramovic discusses how she tries to shift the focus from artist to audience and the challenge of holding attention in an age of constant distraction. How does it feel to present this exhibition in Venice, a city that has meant so much to you?
Venice is a kind of home that I have revisited so many years in my life, when I was 12 years old, when I first came with my mother from Yugoslavia. She was working with the ministry of culture, and her duty was to come to Venice to see the Biennale. When did you first decide to move away from painting and start working with unconventional media? Later on, I focused on the clouds.
One day there was an absolutely clear sky and I saw something like 12 jets that created these incredible lines and drawings. “Why I have to go to my studio and play something which is two-dimensional when I can actually ask the military to give me some planes to make drawings? ” I can use fire, I can use water, I can use my own body.
So I went to the military base and I asked if they would give me some planes to make drawings. This happened in the early 1970s and was the moment in my life when I didn’t want to go to the studio anymore. I wanted to work with my body. The public has been a constant element of your work.
How has this relationship with the audience evolved throughout your career? In the early stage, I was the subject and object of the work. And I was the one performing in front of the public. And this was happening all the way, untilAfter that performance, I understood a really deep truth: in this century, the public is sick and tired just looking at art.
The public wants to be part of the experience; to participate in a much more active way. This was the only reason why the chair in front of me was never empty. The public was there day and night, even sleeping in front of the museum and waiting for the time to sit with me. The public is the one who has to complete the work by participating and experiencing it.
We are now in a world dominated by people scrolling on their phones, social media, and very short attention spans. Do you think people will be able to give a lot of time to the Venice exhibition? This was exactly the question I was asking myself when the show opened at the Shanghai Museum of Modern Art in 2024. For the Chinese young generation, the phone is a part of the body.
They take a picture, go home, and then look at what they actually were there to see without experiencing at all. But they’re very disciplined. So, we told them no telephone and put on headphones to block sound. There was a door they had to open very slowly and close very slowly.
Why did you ask them to do that? In the beginning, you’re bored. And then you think, “This artist is absolutely crazy. Why should I do this in the first place?
” But then when you say to yourself, “I’m doing it no matter what,” something happens. That becomes the door of opening consciousness, another dimension, another space and time. And there is transformation in doing this. One could think western Europeans may not be so disciplined.
But here at the show we have facilitators who go to you, gently take your hand, bring you to the different installations, ask you to close your eyes, put on headphones to block the sound, and ask you not to take photos.performance, where you relinquished control of your body to the audience for six hours. How has this relationship with pain evolved throughout your career?
If you stage the painful experience in front of the public, and you go through this experience and free yourself from the fear of pain, then you become a good example for the public. If I can do it, you can do it too. Physical pain is always such a big issue. But then you understand that you can control pain, physical pain, and you can deal with that if you’re not afraid.
I still figured out how to deal with . It’s so much more profound and difficult to deal with emotions. What’s the hardest resistance you’ve had to overcome in having performance recognised in the mainstream? There was always saying that the performance was not even a form of art.
If I took that criticism seriously, I would never leave home. But I was absolutely sure from the very beginning of my career that I was right. It is long duration. The public comes and looks and they can’t believe that this is happening.
Then they start bringing their friends. Friends come and bring other friends. So it becomes some kind of a living community, performers supporting artists. I had people who came there many, many times to just sit with me.
Because performance is heavily emotional. If something lasts eight hours a day or 10 hours a day for three months, you show the true self; you show vulnerability. Are you still transforming, or do you feel more in a phase of reflection at this stage in your life? There is a limit of bodies getting older, but at the same time I wake up every day with new ideas that I want to do.
For me, it’s a question of how much time I really have – not to spend in bullsh** but to spend in creative time in my life – and the one thing that I really know is that the public has become a very big focus on my work, because I want them to experience what I went through. – ReutersContemporary artists reframe the traditional embroidery craft of tekatGiant inflatable artworks have taken over The HagueWeekend for the arts: 'Untitled' exhibition, 'Lessons Of Silence', Pangrok Sulap pop-upContemporary artists reframe the traditional embroidery craft of tekat
Marina Abramovic Artist Serbia New York Exhibition Venice Biennale
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Malaysian doctor draws a kolam every day at 4am as a mindful, meaningful ritualMay 22 (Reuters) - Pep Guardiola will leave Manchester City at the end of the season after a decade in charge, the club announced on Friday, bringing an end to one of the most successful eras in English soccer and one of the most influential managerial reigns of all time.
Read more »
La Liga finale: Bernabeu farewells, relegation drama, Euro chase, World Cup worries and battle for thirdBARCELONA, May 22 — La Liga draws to a close this weekend with several matters still to be resolved, even though Hansi Flick’s Barcelona have already been crowned champions.AFP...
Read more »
Penang Mutiara Line: Triple replanting to boost Penang’s urban canopyIn Venice, Marina Abramovic's new work focuses on audience participation, energy, and legacy, featuring immersive installations
Read more »



