The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Category: Uncategorized (Page 278 of 1086)

_Black _Acrylic presents … Art Sex Music: A Cosey Fanni Tutti Day *

* (restored)

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Cosey Fanni Tutti is a multidisciplinary artist whose extraordinary lifetime work I’ve long been in awe of. Back in early 2012, over at this ‘ere blog’s old Google-hosted premises, the mighty Sypha compiled the authoritative Throbbing Gristle Day. Each of those four former TG members has a fascinating story to tell. Today it’s Cosey’s turn in the spotlight and she demands your full attention:

 

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Faber publication due April 2017.

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Fiesta vol 10, no. 6, 1976.


Cosey with Throbbing Gristle at Tramway, Glasgow 2009.

 

Cosey Fanni Tutti (born Christine Newby; 4 November 1951) is a performance artist and musician best known for her time in the avant-garde groups Throbbing Gristle and Chris & Cosey.

She was a performer with COUM Transmissions of which she was a founding member in 1969. Her addition changed the nature of the group, which, when she joined, was still mostly a musical venture. From that point on, COUM performances became events or, in 1960s parlance, happen-ings, involving props, costumes, dance, improvisation and street theatre. As an installation artist, she was selected in 1975 to represent Britain at the IXth Biennale de Paris.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosey_Fanni_Tutti

 


COUM: ca 1972.

 

ALTERNATIVE BIOGRAPHY:

But who was this ‘flower girl’ and where had she come from? Christine Carol Newby was born on 4 November 1951 in the Hedon Road Maternity Hospital in Hull, just before midnight. Tutti had al-ways hated the name Christine and preferred people to call her Carol. After meeting Genesis P-Orridge she changed her name again, first to Cosmosis, then to Cosey. The lengthening of the name to Cosey Fanni Tutti took place in 1973, when mail artist Robin Klassnik suggested it via a postcard. When Tutti joined COUM they were still a predominantly musically orientated group, playing instruments such as broken violins, prepared pianos, guitars, bongos, and talking drums. Tutti began to take part in performances in 1971, before then she would help build props and de-sign costumes. “I became more involved as the direction started to change,” Tutti told David Bour-goin, “COUM was musically based and took the form of acoustic improvisations, just anywhere, then more abstract scenarios started creeping in and we made entire environments for enjoyment.”

Simon Ford – WRECKERS OF CIVILISATION: THE STORY OF COUM TRANSMISSIONS AND THROBBING GRISTLE Published by Black Dog 1999
http://www.coseyfannitutti.com/content/biog.html

 

ART

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Studio Of Lust, Nuffield Gallery, Southampton, 1975


Woman’s Roll, 1976

 

THE FOLLOWING TEXT CONTAINS EDITED HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE COSEY FANNI TUTTI / TIME TO TELL INTERVIEW ON THE PUGZINE (Zine of the Underground):

I was brought up in a “working class” area of a large fishing port up North. My father was a fire fighter and my mother a wages clerk. I suppose they were professional people as opposed to “un-skilled” etc. The North of England is very nationalistic (The Wars of the Roses and all that). North versus South divide still persists today. Their attitude is so bigoted it’s frightening. Either way, the area was rough. Still I was the youngest of two daughters, never conformed and subsequently got “punished. ” My father was very strict. In the end he threw me out, and there began my journey into discovery. I’d obviously been pushing for it all along. I did well at school though, for some reason I was always a conscientious pupil. I loved school, people can’t understand that. It was the place I had most fun, but I knew it wouldn’t last; home wasn’t happy when my father was around, he was too severe and dominating to allow laughter to crack his face too often.

I realised at an early age that once you “grew up” all the freedom from responsibilities you had as a child would disappear, the freedom to “play” and act out fantasy situations in public is accepted in a child but not in adults. I made a conscious decision to delay the adult stage as long as possible. I knew there would be no way of recapturing my childhood. I fought a lot physically, it was that type of neighbourhood (still is). I can remember thinking as a teenager that I just didn’t fit in and I could-n’t get excited about boyfriends and engagement rings. The disco was a bore. Then I met someone who smoked dope and I met a whole set of people I could feel affinity with. I didn’t take dope for long, l saw my friends just sitting round condemning those who got drunk and did fuck all, and here they were smashed out of their skulls doing fuck all as well. It was another drug but the same ef-fect. I started drifting away from them then. It was all so clichéd and the “‘fitting in” syndrome domi-nated the so called “alternative” scene. I think kicking against all the conformity that dominated the city I was born in shaped my future activities. It turned out a lot of very creative people indeed. I hated being told what to be. I got into the “art performance/cum street theatre” after that and there we are. I was free to do what I wanted. Seriously, when your parents are out of the picture, it’s a load off your mind. That old fear of your parents finding out and having to answer for what you’ve done isn’t there any more. I hated upsetting my mother by what I did and that guilt was removed for me. That had a great effect on my feelings of freedom. It gave me a license to explore without hav-ing to justify my actions to any emotionally motivated authority.
http://www.coseyfannitutti.com/content/texts/pugzine.html

 

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Dirt 3, December 1978
Interview with Cosey Fanni Tutti

DIRT. Since you’ve been a part of COUM, have you worked outside of it at all, in the way Sleazy does for Hipgnosis?
COSEY. Sleazy’s different because he had Hipgnosis before he met us and that is his living as an actual job. It’s all official and everything else. I’ve had very few jobs other than like I had two factory jobs and a secretarial job when we first came to London that have been completely separate. Eve-ry other thing I’ve done like modelling, dancing and stripping now, is all connected anyway, it’s all part of the whole thing.

DIRT. How’s it connected?
COSEY. Just in experience, just the fact that we were interested in things like that and it just seemed a bit naïve not to find out what it was actually like. We kept talking about something and making collages of things, just to start proclaiming this, that and the other. I think it’s hypocritical not to experience it. Like when I do the stripping now and when I did the films and the magazine work, I went out as a model and how they’d expect a model to be because to get the jobs that’s how you had to do it. When they found out about the ICA, I got black listed from every tit magazine, ’cause they realised I’d taken them for a ride. They actually all got round and said no more Cosey, right! I had to be how they expected a girl to be in all the different kinds of situations I was gonna get into, but then I had to take out of it what I actually wanted. But it was a really good thing to do, it taught me a lot about people, it really did, and how easy it is for them to fall into it and get absolute-ly destroyed. I mean even stripping now is really bad. You see the girls on the circuit, they get so wrapped up in the guys they see every day they forget that they’ve got their own lives to lead and the whole circuit becomes their life, which is terrible because when they go home after doing a booking they’ve got nothing, it’s really sad. It’s weird because a lot of the girls I’m working with, stripping and dancing, would never do photographic work and a lot of the girls I did modelling with would never do stripping or topless dancing, they’ve both got different sets of values you see and each side has fallen into it along a certain track. Therefore, it’s quite justified for them to be doing that, but to be suddenly switched over they couldn’t see it. For a start a lot of the strippers wouldn’t be able to model and a lot of the models wouldn’t want to strip, because it’s degrading, or only tarts or old bags do it. That’s how they look at it anyway. A lot of the models are no better anyway ’cause they screw to get jobs.
http://www.coseyfannitutti.com/content/texts/dirt.html

 

PROSTITUTION

 

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The COUM Prostitution show, in 1976 at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London in-cluded on display Tutti’s pornographic images from magazines as well as erotic nude photographs. The show featured a stripper, used Tampax in glass, and transvestite guards. Prostitutes, punks, and people in costumes were among those hired to mingle with the gallery audience. The show caused debate in Parliament about the public funding of such events. In the House of Commons, Scottish Conservative MP Sir Nicholas Fairbairn demanded an explanation from Arts Minister Har-old Lever and proclaimed P-Orridge and Tutti as “wreckers of civilisation”.[52] Fleet Street was not slow to pick up the story. The reviews were cut up, framed and put on display for the remainder of the exhibition. This was also reported in newspapers, so cut-ups about the cut-ups were also put on display.

Toward the end of COUM, performances would often consist of only P-Orridge, Cosey and Sleazy, the core group who went on to form Throbbing Gristle.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COUM_Transmissions#The_Prostitution_show:_1976

 

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From the Guardian archive, 18 October 1976: Controversial art plunges in to the rusty hilt at the ICA

In one of the cases is a syringe with a bloodied bandage by its side, a jar of Vaseline, a used Tam-pax, a rusted knife, some wire, a bottle of blood, some chains and a large black wig.

“The knife and wire I use to garrott myself – almost but not quite – in my performances. The wig is just to wipe up the blood.” Mr Genesis P. Orridge (he changed his name by deed pull several years ago from Neil Andrew Megson) is describing the exhibition, entitled Prostitution, which his group, Coum Transmissions, is presenting at the Institute of Contemporary Arts from tonight.

Coum is a well-known “performance art” group. It has represented Britain at the Paris Biennale at the invitation of the British Council, and has been funded by the Arts Council.

Its new exhibition is on the theme of how the group is perceived by other people and how other people and the media distort it.

The exhibition, Mr P. Orridge says, is also about how the artist, and particularly the performance artist, has to sell himself and his works – which is why the group is selling the material they have used in earlier shows. “One is debasing oneself by selling.”

Why were they debasing themselves? “Because we wanted to and we needed the money. To sell yourself is somewhat debasing and everyone is selling something.”

Another section of the exhibition, also concerned with the selling and exploitation theme, shows photographs of another member of the group called Cosi (christened Comosis) posing for forty pornographic magazines over a three-year period.

“The photographers aren’t just creepy blokes doing it for kicks,” she says. “But the main thing was that I was doing it for reasons which they didn’t know about – for the exhibition.”

Mr P. Orridge thinks that another element in the exhibition is that it works satirically and in parody form. “A lot of the conceptualists and the prestige galleries are debasing themselves in presenta-tions which have little else to them but the presentation. Our exhibition is about presentation itself, so banal information objects are presented beautifully, and the object looks as if it’s important when it’s not.”

A rock group called Death Rock will be taking part at the opening. They will be singing songs about mass murder and about the child murderer Ian Brady. “They offer reflections on the way TV pro-grammes and the other media work,” Mr P. Orridge says.

The Arts Council, which in this financial year has given the ICA a grant of £90,000 for its exhibition, film and theatre centres, have had anxieties about the Prostitution exhibition.

The ICA’s arts centre director, Mr Ted Little, was called to the Council and interviewed last week. “They said that our grant situation would be reviewed in the light of the show,” he said yesterday. “Their attitude is totally unjustified – to talk of our grant being jeopardised for eight days’ work. The ICA’s policy is to present new and innovative work of British artists. I never say what the quality is like. The public must pass comment.”

He thought that the ICA was the least funded of all British art centres. While its grant was £90,000, its annual turnover was £330,000.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/oct/18/genesis-p-orridge-ica-exhibition-1976

 

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Original screenprinted full colour poster for the ‘Prostitution’ retrospective held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 1976.

 

The ‘PROSTITUTION’ exhibition at the ICA was a retrospective show of the work of Coum includ-ing the ‘girlie’ magazines Cosey had appeared in as well as ‘objects used in Coum performances.

The show as a whole was a representation of how Coum, Genesis and Cosey had been perceived by various forms of the media, from the tabloids to fine art analysis and interpretation of Coum’s work. Ironic when the press response proved so great that it became part of the exhibition day by day, echoing the sentiments on all levels, of the work already on show. Daily press cuttings about press cuttings. The irony and humour of this was never even realised by the press in their frenzy for gossip to fill their front pages. Questions were asked in the Houses of Parliament, Arts Council grants came under scrutiny because Coum had been funded for shows abroad, to represent Britain in major exhibitions. Indeed Coum were to perform in the U.S.A. and Canada immediately after the ICA exhibition, but were refused entry to Canada on the grounds that they were considered ‘unde-sirable’. All this press coverage instigated by Coum, turned to the exploits of Throbbing Gristle. A wonderful promotional ploy could never have been planned to work so well.

The opening night of the ‘PROSTITUTION’ show was to be least like an ‘art’ opening as possible. The band L.S.D. played live they later became known as Generation X. Cherry, a stripper was booked to perform after TG had appeared. which she duly did, writhing in the fake blood left on the floor after TG’s show. Throbbing Gristle performed their first official gig to a mixed audience of art critics, punks, politicians, musicians and artists. That evening like many TG gigs was marred by violence. All the press attention acquired unwittingly by TG was a bonus for the launch for their project. During this explosive time, Punk arrived on the scene via the marketing skills of two clothes shops down the Kings Road, owned by associates of members of TG. BOY boutique was fronted by ‘Generation X’ and SEDITIONARIES fronted by ‘The Sex Pistols’. Punk and Industrial music initially ran parallel to one another, often becoming confused until definitions became clear-er.

Cosey Fanni Tutti 1990
http://userpages.umbc.edu/~vijay/TG/texts/text4.html

 

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Throbbing Gristle / Chelsea – ICA

“But darling, mutilation is so passe . . .”

“IT’S A SICKENING OUTRAGE! Sadistic! Obscene! Evil! The Arts Council must be scrapped after this!” So spoke Tory MP Nicholas Fairbairn of this gig. The Daily Mirror enjoyed it, too: “Porn-pop art show! Distasteful and unartistic! Hare-brained schemes of a few trendy elitists!” That’s from the Mirror Comment, and the outraged Tory MP quote is from the national press.

Fairbairn also wants an explanation from Arts Minister Harold Lever in the House of Commons to tell the rulers of our fair land just how the Institute of Contemporary Arts, with its grant of £80,000 a year, was permitted to put on a show of such decadence that the whole of our pious national press were up in arms . . .

Betcha dying to know what happened, ain’tcha? Okay, here’s what . . .

Some pornographic, photographs stuck on the wall , a few used tampax in glass cases, a great stripper and a lot of music is the gist of it. Seems like everybody in the audience was an artist, a painter, an actor or a writer. “Oh, daaah-ling how are you?” was the battle cry around the makeshift bar. Still, the drinks were cheap and the conversation was amusing and by the time a party load of kids decked out in latest punk fashion wear arrived, closely followed by the national press, things were starting to warm up.

Throbbing Gristle, music from the Death Factory, were the first band to appear. The lead singer and bass player, Genesis P. Orridge, had ratty shoulder length hair that was shaved bald up the middle of his head, as if he had been run over by a crazed lawnmower. While he went into a rap about the decay of humanity Peter Christopherson took his place behind his tape machine, Chris Carter got behind his keyboards and Cosey Fanni Tutti settled himself on a wooden chair to handle lead guitar.

After Genesis finished his opening speech of doom and destruction the band went into their, uh, music which consisted of lots of weird sub-psychedelic taped sounds rolling around random key-boards played plonk-plonk style, lead guitar that Patti Smith would have been ashamed of and mo-ronic bass on a superb Rickenbacker by old Genesis P. Orridge himself.

I went to get a screwdriver from the bar and came back just in time to see the band start mutilating itself. Genesis seemed to be really enjoying himself but most of the audience were bored. “Oh, daaaaaaahling! So passe! Nigel said at the party it would be interesting and artistically fulfilling!”
Backstage Genesis talked about his obscenity bust over a bottle of Scotch and told me he was soon off to the States to see his hero and main influence – William Burroughs.

“He’s living in an old people’s home now,” Genesis said. He’s had contact with us for a long time now … the obscenity charge was because we want to give the people information … we want to stop the decay of civilisation through our music.”

Leaving Genesis backstage with his bloody face, his shaved head and his-plans to save the cos-mos I went back to the audience to check out why so many kids decked out in punk outfits had come along to the ICA tonight. Surely they weren’t interested in all this, uh, culture?

“NAH, MATE,” one of them told me while adjusting the safety pin in his carefully ripped tee-shirt. “We’ve come to see Chelsea. They’re on after the stripper.”
But LSD are on after the stripper.

“Yeah, they’re billed as LSD but their real name’s Chelsea. Got a great guitarist, they have. Good as Wilko, he is.”

Alright, thanks squire. Shelley the stripper comes on decked out in full Cherry Bomb outfit and she
is GREAT! While looking a few years older than the fourteen summers that the MC had announced (ah, if only that were true) she is a true artiste and takes about four records to slowly get out of her ensemble. She really stretches it out. The crowd love her.

Chelsea come on and by the end of their first number it’s evident that they’re coming from the same direction as the Pistols, Damned and the Clash, but at the moment their act suffers from the problem of the band not having played enough live gigs together.

But what the four of them lack in polish they more than make up for in committed energy. They’re aggressive, but through their music, not their actions. Meaning that they want attention from the audience but they want it because of their music and not because they’re spitting over the people in the front rows. A good set of 1977 dole queue rock, only two of the numbers not written by the band.

They’re all from the London area, Billy the bass player tells me after the gig: “We’ve known the Pistols for years, we could be that big if they gave us a chance. We’ve been turning up at venues with our gear and asking them if we can get up on stage and play but most of them tell us to piss off.

“We’ve been rehearsing in an office. There’s a lot of people like that bird you just mentioned who are trying to ride on the bandwagon of all the kids that are playing in high energy bands at the mo-ment. We want to play music we believe in, we don’t want no thirty year-old manager telling us what to do.”

That’s Chelsea. You’ll be hearing that name again. Okay, promoters – book ’em.

Tony Parsons, NME, 30 October 1976
http://www.brainwashed.com/tg/live/ica.htm

 

Venus Mound (from Tampax Romana) 1976 by Genesis P-Orridge born 1950
Genesis P-Orridge ‘Venus Mound (from Tampax Romana)’, 1976

 

SEX

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Fiesta V.10 No.6 Cover

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Fiesta V.10 No 6 Next Issue Preview


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Park Lane No.12 Pictorial p1

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Playbirds No 25

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Playbirds Vol 1 No 5 06

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Lovebirds

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What follows is Cosey’s response to the Compulsion online questions derived and pertaining to Time To Tell and specific to her experience in the sex industry. Special thanks to Cosey Fanni Tutti for taking the time.

i) When and how did you get involved in modelling / stripping? Did you initially do it for money, art or personal reasons? At the time did you have any preconceptions, fears or prior knowledge of the sex industry?

I got involved with modelling for sex magazines first because of my fascination with the sex indus-try and the images in the mags which I was using for collage material in my mail art. It seemed my collages would be more ‘complete’ and honest if the images included me in the real sex situation I was pillaging for my own art. From then on that whole art is life/life is art took a real hold because it was a different world to the art scene we were part of at the time. So I guess the reasons I entered the sex industry was for both art and personal reasons. To be perfectly honest I didn’t consider the money aspect. My interest was purely in the ‘doing’ experience of it all. I had contact (through my mail art) with a girl in London who was already a model for sex mags and films. We nick-named her Nanny Rigby as she’d previously been a nanny. I got my contacts through her when we moved to Martello Street in Hackney.

I had no real preconceptions of what it would be like other than seedy because that was the preva-lent notion of the sex industry at the time. Nanny gave me advice as to what to expect, accept and reject. Then I forged my way through the various scenes within the underground/overground sex world. I never had any fears as such, just the nervousness everyone gets when they start a new job. I was just so excited about getting the first mag with me in.

It took so long that by then I’d moved on from mail art to performance art so the initial motivation had been displaced by events. But that was fine because it didn’t feel wrong. I was happy for the sex work and art to cross over as and how it did.

I had a very different introduction to striptease. Inevitable really when I put together the links of the chain involved. I had met a couple when doing magazine and soft core work. She also did strip-tease and we talked about it, I went to see her act and got interested in the very different world of stripping. Later I met Lynn and her boyfriend who wrote for Forum and their own books. Lynn did striptease in pubs as opposed to stag nights. I saw another side to stripping that also appealed to me so I auditioned for the Gemini stripping agency. That was nerve racking! I had to do two topless dances on the stage of the Chelsea Drug Store in the Kings Road. Anyway I got the job. This was 1977 as I remember, post ICA.

ii) In the Time To Tell booklet you mention that stripping was the most satisfying, as striptease fea-tured your own personality and allowed a degree of artistic freedom. Which out of – modelling, strip-tease, topless dancing, porn films, stag nights – was the least satisfying, and why? Which was the most exploitative for the female and for the male punter?

Without a doubt the least satisfying was the stag nights. I think you need to be in the position of the stripper to appreciate fully what it is to be the focus of such baseness. On occasions even the DJs, compares and comedians derided the girls. The worst were the police stag night gigs. In fact most of the girls would try and avoid doing them. I would say stag nights were dangerous even if we never openly said that to one another, it was an unwritten code that we never left one another alone at any time and we left the venue together. I have remained in the room while the other girl/s provided ‘extra services’ and maintained some sort of order as the men wait their turn. Such are the scenes behind the scene.

I was lucky that I’d done soft and hard core films because it was a safer environment in which to take of the experiences that I did. There’s a difference between being paid to have sex for a film and between the sex for sale involved in the stripping world which was more like prostitution. Your choices and options are limited to the demands of the ‘client’. In the film and magazine work I learnt how to do what I wanted, even if it was from a previous bad experience. I wasn’t forced to repeat it. That brings me neatly to your next question.

The issue of exploitation in the sex industry over all would take me forever to discuss properly be-cause I think it’s very complex. When I was working it was women who were the most exploited, but things have changed somewhat since then. I absolutely detest the word ‘punter’. I can’t tell you. It makes me gnash my teeth. It’s so unreasonably derogatory.

iii) Knowing it was a personal investigation, did that provide a barrier so that you could say no, or at least suggest alternative options, whereas other girls who worked solely for the money perhaps found it harder to say no and under the circumstances were more accepting? How did it make you feel seeing girls being coerced into acts or working with girls that seemed to lack any self worth? How did you deal with that? Was there a sense of camaraderie between the girls?

I obviously had a different attitude and approach to the stripping and modelling than the other girls. That was bound to be because I went into it with a defined and very different agenda to them. I can’t think of any one girl who wasn’t motivated by the money first and foremost. Admittedly as time went on they got dependent on the attention too. I think the girls who worked solely for the money were more accepting and some had a very practical attitude to what they had to do. Maggie would say she never paid any bills that could be paid in kind, even the fitted wardrobes in her bed-room. When one of the girls got her house safe robbed, she referred to the loss in terms of the number of blow jobs it represented, and how she’d have to do them all again.

I thought that epitomised the difference between me and her as strippers. There were about 6 hard core girls with my stripping agency and each of them would request that I be the second girl for a stag night purely because I never did hard core with the guys, only lesbian acts with the other stripper. That way they could earn BIG money and they could take centre stage as the blue act. In the end I got request bookings for stag nights on the grounds that they wanted a ‘class’ act. How ironic is that? To refuse to play the game gains you status (of some kind) with both the guys and girls. So yeah, I suppose my motive for being there gave me options that paid off.

There was great camaraderie between the girls in stripping and modelling. I guess it stemmed from an unconscious feeling of vulnerability and willing yet unwilling subordination. If you stick together you don’t feel quite so bad about doing something that not only doesn’t feel right but also fuels the fantasy of someone you wouldn’t normally give the time of day. But we all talked about it and had a great laugh at the guys expense sometimes. Is that bad too? It was another defence mechanism.

There was an instance during a stag night when a girl really didn’t want to do any extra sex ser-vices. She was almost crying. There were 4 girls there including myself and the other 2 girls were writing up a ‘shopping list’ of who would give what to which guys. I just told her she could actually make the decision to say no, she had a choice like me. She refused and never did it again. In fact we would work together and do lesbian acts instead. A similar situation arose during a couple of hard core films actually. It’s weird watching it all because I empathise with the girl yet I see the film director coercing her, her looking around for support or help. In those situations I and some girls would work out a compromise as to what we wanted to to to and with each other or the guys and present it in such a way that the director was happy to swap his request for what we wanted to do.

I have worked with girls (and a transexual) who had no self worth at all. It becomes a self preserva-tion situation at times because their attitude can be falsely taken as yours too, so I would often distance myself from them. In some of the London pubs it was really dangerous for girls like that because there were guys who would (and did) take full advantage. Some girls you could approach and steer them away from such destructive actions and we always tried. It was accepted that we all had trouble dealing with what we did and we supported one another in different ways. Them against us, even us against our own agency and some of the other girls too.

It was a strange thing coming home to someone after all that has happened and they don’t have a clue about what you have had to do to survive. The drives home late at night helped me assimilate things but the cocoon of ‘home’was so welcome at times as was the fact that it was totally sepa-rate. I was lucky I had that, some of the girls didn’t. They worked 7 days and 7 nights a week.

iv) I understand you ceased your activities in the sex industry in 1984, after ten years or so. That’s a long time. When did it cease to be an investigation and actually become enjoyable? Why did you decide to stop? What did your explorations in the sex industry teach you about yourself?

I decided to stop because I had my son in 1982 and we had moved out of London to give him a childhood in the country. Besides those personal and practical reasons, there was my music and art. People at the pubs and stag nights began recognising me and booking me as ‘Cosey’ (I was called Scarlet). For different reasons it began to feel uncomfortable.

At that time I was a three way personality, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Scarlet and mother. The time had come when I needed to be just Cosey and whatever that represented. I had exhausted the initial reason for entering the sex industry and I asked myself why I was continuing. If it was the money only then it was time to leave before I got totally dependent on it. I needed to refocus my energies on personal relationships, my music and art. Also I felt uneasy about my dear innocent child and how what I had done would affect him as an adult male. This came from my knowledge of some men’s attitude to women who stripped or modelled for mags and films. Or maybe from a feeling that I was contaminating someone precious to me. Psychoanalyse that one! It’s the reason I stopped stripping as soon as I knew I was pregnant.

I’m still trying to figure out what I learnt about myself from all my exploits. I learnt something really obvious but something I think we tend to overlook. That is, to please someone else is not always the right thing for myself and when I do something that I feel uncomfortable with it can be a valua-ble experience in terms of it being an acknowledgement that the uncomfortable feeling was justi-fied or not. It’s when you repeat it knowing it isn’t right that the damage is done.

I learnt that I was in control of my sexuality and of the power of being a woman. I chose to enter the sex industry with my own agenda and to explore its reality. That entailed submitting, but not necessarily repetitiously, to what went on. How could I have got as near to the actual experience without being the stereotype ‘model’ or ‘stripper’? Being Scarlet was a challenge and experience in itself that taught me so much about the sexual rapport between men and women and women and women. It’s made me a stronger and more confident person. It’s taught me social skills I would never have acquired had I not done it.

v) Your experience within the sex industry was the cornerstone of the Coum Transmissions exhibi-tion, Prostitution. The magazines featuring yourself were sealed in containers and could only be viewed one at a time and by request. Did you feel that such a presentation diluted the impact of the overall piece? Did the furore surrounding Prostitution overshadow the purpose of the exhibition? I believe you are working on a retrospective exhibition, Select Reflection, any news?

I think by default, that the enforced boxed presentation actually enhanced the overall project in some respects. It placed the mags back in their worldly ‘top shelf’ situation and said so much about how the sex industry was regarded at the time. That is, something best not discussed, pushed out of sight. But it was bad in so much as the works weren’t seen as ‘artworks’ and therefore not readi-ly accessible to those who wouldn’t find it easy to ask for access.

The furore added and detracted from the purpose of the exhibition. It was itself a retrospective that had the adverse effect of relaunching COUM in a way. The hysteria rode rough shod over the pur-pose of the show. It wasn’t sensationalist in intent. It was just a presentation of our work and a comment on the artworld and society’s attitude to our bodies, sex and what is acceptable as art, performance. The underlying prostitution.

Select Reflection is ongoing basically because it requires my reflecting and making sense of what I’ve done, who I’ve been and where and who I am now. I don’t know yet! Thank goodness, that would be sooo boring.

vi) What reaction did you get from your fellow Coum Transmission members/ Throbbing Gristle members when you decided to investigate the sex industry? Was it difficult to maintain a separa-tion between the art world and sex world? It’s quite strange that you crossed over from the art world to the sex industry which is the reverse from what others such as Annie Sprinkle, Annabel Chong have done. It must have been quite seedy then what’s your impression of the sex industry today?

I was modelling before TG was formed. At various times and by different people I was asked to stop, after their initial fascination had worn off. I refused because I didn’t feel that I had fulfilled my potential with the project at that time. It had to be my decision to pull out the same as it was to en-ter. I never consciously tried to keep the art and sex world separate. They merged into one really.

What I’ve seen of Annie Sprinkle’s work I’ve really liked because of her warmth and directness.I never knew she came from the sex industry into art. That would explain why I found her work so ‘unarty’ and unpretentious. And apprenticeship in the artworld does tend to result in cold preten-tiousness whereas the sex industry demands some degree of warmth and openess.

The sex industry then was very seedy in some areas. I dare say it still is now but I think it has changed enormously. Now women choose it as their career. It’s more open now. I wouldn’t say it’s less dangerous though. In fact I’d say it was dangerous to assume it’s safe. And I mean safe in all meanings of the word.
http://www.compulsiononline.com/falbum2.htm

 

MUSIC

TIME TO TELL

 

Notes
“On the 19th of May this year Cosey Fanni Tutti gave a lecture to the fine art students of Leeds Polythecnic [sic]. This lecture and the question/answer period that followed are reproduced here as the basis for this special issue of Flowmotion attempting to, within our space limitations, give as thorough and clear a picture as possible of Coseys [sic] work over the last ten years as a perfor-mance artist with Coum Transmissions (including her striptease and modelling [sic] work), and as a musician with Throbbing Gristle and C.T.I.

For Szabo”

A one-sided C60 with a newspaper magazine featuring articles, readings and interviews on Cosey Fanni Tutti, Throbbing Gristle and CTI.
Tracks are mixed together.

Special thanks to Joe Piecuch, Dave Byatt, Chris & Cosey.

 

coseyttt

 

A Special release on the Flowmotion label.
A one-sided C60 with a newspaper magazine featuring articles, readings and interviews on Cosey Fanni Tutti, Throbbing Gristle and CTI.
Cosey’s first solo release, a foray into early dark ambient territory,with sultry spoken word passag-es.Good for flotation tank dwellers.
And as normal with Industrial genre releases, there’s plenty of multi-media content to enter-tain.Especially lovely is the full length shot of the Industrial Queen herself, bedecked only in a pair of wedgey sandals.
This is far more wholesome soft-porn than the relentless Sexual Propaganda we see today from the likes of Miley Cyrus and Rihanna; or should I say the shape-shifting reptilian hybrid psycho-paths behind them. Brain washing our children to be lazy sex obsessed obese morons directly at-tached to a Sony PS3 or X-Box by the cerebral cortex.
The soft porn here is more likely a statement of these facts,and also that a woman can retain her sensuality and be clever?
It also doesn’t harm the sales figures either,but hopefully that is a byproduct.
Basically it satirizes the exploitation of both men and women by the media.

Jonny Zchivago
http://dieordiy2.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/cosey-fanni-tutti-time-to-tell.html

 

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In the 1983 cassette Time to Tell (later rereleased)– a work that Cosey Fanni Tutti used to explore the way the various facets of her life as a model, performance artist and stripper fitted together – the artist layers dreamy vocals, spoken in her soft Yorkshire accent with a slow and steady rhyth-mic delivery over ambient, industrial electronica. Although she has said of her work that the lyrics or even the chords or choruses are not important to her –“certain sounds just hit you in the gut and those are the emotions I’m interested in when I’m making music,” she told the Red Bull Music Academy in 2010 – the words she speaks on Time to Tell are an exercise in self reflection, and include thoughts on how her clothes and actions helped shape her myriad personas. “Working as a topless dancer and striptease artist – this is eroticism presented live and spontaneously,” she says. “It is not choreographed. There is communication taking place in a visual sense; facial expressions, physical gestures and the mood of the music. Projection of one’s personality is the key to success, unlike that of a nude model. Costumes and movement and the music create the atmosphere for the ten minutes one is in focus.” She adds: “However, you are still who the viewer wants to perceive you as.”

Laura Havlin
http://www.notey.com/@anothermag_unofficial/external/5315702/cosey-fanni-tutti-agent-provocateur.html

 

Throbbing Gristle

Cosey on Throbbing Gristle – 20 Jazz Funk Greats @ RBMA

 

The first real industrial group, the founders of Industrial Records and one of the most important electronic music innovators of all time. Growing out of the extreme performance art group COUM Transmissions, TG redefined music and laid a large part of the groundwork for all electronic music that followed.

From their first performances in 1976 to their last gig in San Francisco in 1981 (recorded and re-leased as “Mission Of Dead Souls”), they challenged and threatend so-called “normal”, society – denounced from the floor of the House of Commons as “Wreckers of Civilisation” as the Coum Transmissions “Prostitution” art show in London’s ICA (at which TG played their third show) came close to causing riots and set the stage for the punk revolution.

Musically, they were extreme and uncompromising, using technology to make anti-music, which redefined music for all time. Their experimentation led them to pioneer sampling and looping tech-niques adopted by many of those who came after.

Throbbing Gristle officially began at September 3, 1975 and they officially split on June 23, 1981. After they split, Genesis and Peter formed Psychic TV (and Peter later joining Coil) and Chris and Cosey becoming, well, Chris & Cosey. However, they came back together 23 years later in 2004 to plan an ill-fated weekend festival, which became a one-off recording session in London when the festival fell through, releasing a limited TGNOW album of the recordings.
https://www.discogs.com/artist/12589-Throbbing-Gristle

 

 

Chris & Cosey, now performing as Carter Tutti, are a band formed in 1981, consisting of couple Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti, both previously members of industrial music pioneers Throb-bing Gristle.

When Throbbing Gristle broke up in 1981, Carter and Tutti signed with Rough Trade Records and began recording as Chris & Cosey. They recorded four albums for the label using electronics, sampling, Cosey’s vocals and cornet playing. In 1983, they formed their own independent record label Creative Technology Institute (aka CTI) to release more experimental works and collabora-tions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_%26_Cosey

 

 

To greet the 21st century, Chris & Cosey became Carter Tutti, celebrating the rebirth with a series of concerts which were documented on the live album LEM Festival October 2003. The rebirth was completed by the release of the studio album Cabal later that year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_%26_Cosey

 

 

Carter Tutti, of course, is the name Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti have been using since the turn of the millennium for their 34-year, post-Throbbing Gristle partnership. (Earlier this year, the pair revisited their 20th century selves on Carter Tutti Plays Chris & Cosey.) In May 2011, Carter Tutti invited Nik Colk Void of Factory Floor to join them for a performance at a festival in London celebrating the 30th anniversary of Mute Records. Transverse combined live recordings from that show with a single studio track.
http://dangerousminds.net/comments/a_dangerous_minds_exclusive_carter_tutti_void_talk_about_their_new_album_fx

 


TateShots: Cosey Fanni Tutti – Sound & Vision

 

Eugene Brennan: TG prided themselves on a DIY aesthetic, setting up your own record company, financing and managing yourselves. In contrast COUM Transmissions depended on Arts Council grants to a certain extent. The huge cuts to arts and welfare benefits have had a tangible effect on contemporary culture, with many arguing that music has never been so conservative. Challenging and experimental art and music, with at least some kind of institutional support, and the capacity to reach a large diverse audience, is becoming a more and more difficult to imagine and realise. Do you think a group as experimental and challenging as TG could make it today?

CFT: I’ve stayed fiercely independent. Even when we have signed to a label, it’s been on a condi-tional basis that wouldn’t compromise our work at all. I wouldn’t have it any other way. Chris and I have always managed to increase our skill set to enable us to produce our work on our terms. It’s very difficult and time consuming running a business, accounting, recording, mastering, production and manufacture, but we’ve always been self-sufficient… even down to house repairs, etc. Sleazy thought we were crazy not paying someone to do things for us, but what we saved by doing things ourselves meant more money to buy equipment, to make music and so on.

Regarding arts grants, when COUM received Arts Council grants there was much less administra-tive interference or need for form filling to prove justification of your artistic ideas. Some abused that approach. We didn’t. Since then, there are all kinds of conditions and criteria to be met, and very long application forms to fill in if you want grants. Anyway, after the ICA exhibition in 1976, Arts Council grants were no longer an option. Certainly that’s lead to more ‘safe’ state-funded art works.

Do you think a DIY aesthetic and approach holds the same kind of importance for contemporary music?

CFT: Yes indeed. The time is ripe to take control. It’s tough, though, and I don’t see many bands doing that. It depends how they view their work. My work is my life so I’d never relinquish control of it to someone else. Other people are more interested in a kind of public or financial ‘success’, which doesn’t interest me.
http://thequietus.com/articles/13445-cosey-fanni-tutti-interview

 

 

MADE UP Weekend | Cosey Fanni Tutti in conversation with Andrew Wheatley

STEPHEN SPROTT: Compared with the excessive amount of recordings and documentation of TG, which kind of approximate that experience, part of the beauty of the COUM actions is that they’re gone, that they can’t be reenacted.

CFT: Our initial approach to the performances and actions we did as COUM was a reaction against the documentation of action art. We wanted the actions we did to be shared with the people who were there. And like you said, they’re gone, and they’re living in some other form in people’s mem-ories and by word of mouth. There is a whole society of artists that work for art institutions and therefore get access to equipment. We never had that. We never had access to any kind of film cameras, so we couldn’t document what we were doing. We were working very much on the out-side. It wasn’t until TG came around and we could afford to rent a video camera that we ever doc-umented anything.

SS: When it comes to body art, naked bodies often seem to be used to show that nothing is being hidden and that what you’re seeing is objective and transparent.

CFT: The nakedness in the art actions mainly came about because I felt freer naked. My body gave fewer wrong signals to people. The minute you put clothes on, people start trying to find some symbolism in the clothes, whether it’s the color, the style, or whatever. There were a lot of performance artists who actually made costumes to do their art with. That’s another reason why I stepped away from that, because it was less like theater for me if I did it naked. And also I like the form the body makes. I like watching body forms rather than colors and costumes.

SS: How do you relate your nakedness in the live actions to that in the magazine actions?

CFT: I was laying myself open in a different way when I did the magazine work in that I didn’t have any control over what was done and what I was asked to do. That was a deliberate choice on my part. I went into it because I found the work I did in the gallery spaces had just become quite safe for me. People I’d met who were already in the sex industry said, “Do you want to do something here?” And that presented actions to me that I wouldn’t normally have pursued or even thought of, or I would have just turned around and said, “No, I don’t fancy doing that.”

SS: In the films and magazines, you took on ready-made personas—different names and wigs—giving your body a certain anonymity. Maybe this becomes a sort of mask in contrast to your live actions.

CFT: Exactly. In the gallery and in the live actions, that is 100 percent me. In the magazine work and in the sex films, it isn’t. It’s my body, but it’s being used to make and present something that they want. It’s not me. I’m using that process to learn something about myself, the sex industry, and the people in it. You can’t do a film in the sex industry without being naked, at some point. My nakedness there was basically part of the job description, rather than me in the gallery using my body as an art object.

SS: Much of the tension of these actions seems to come from the pressure of the people watching you.

CFT: When I do actions I go into a particular state of mind. I go inside myself and choose things out, I allow a channel to remain so I can respond to stimuli. I have to be on that plane of receptive-ness and yet be removed.

SS: What do you think of the boundary between your live actions and how you act in your daily life?

CFT: I don’t think there is a boundary, to be honest. Of course I don’t do those things every day, but I don’t think there is a boundary. I don’t go out and do a nine-to-five job. My whole life revolves around my work. And having said that, even when I did do a job to fund my art, it was a functional part of my life, rather than the work and then my life. That’s why the magazine work and the film work came in handy, because they provided income for my other artworks and music, even though it was like a “job.” That was more interesting for me, even more so with the striptease work.
http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/cosey-fanni-tutti-597-v17n11

 


IN THE VITRINES Exhibition by Cosey Fanni Tutti at Van Abbe Museum Library, Eindhoven, Hol-land. May – Aug 2005


IT’S TIME FOR ACTION Migros Museum, Zurich. 2006

 

ART SEX MUSIC

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Cosey Fanni Tutti of Throbbing Gristle, Chris and Cosey, Carter Tutti Void fame has announced a brand new autobiography coming out next April.

As a founder member of COUM Transmissions and Throbbing Gristle, Cosey has been at the fore-front of the art and music world since the late ’60s. Read a full description of the book below:

“Art Sex Music is the autobiography of a musician who, as a founding member of the avant-garde group Throbbing Gristle and electronic pioneers Chris & Cosey, has consistently challenged the boundaries of music over the past four decades.

“It is the account of an artist who, as part of COUM Transmissions, represented Britain at the IXth Biennale de Paris, whose Prostitution show at the ICA in 1976 caused the Conservative MP Nicho-las Fairbairn to declare her, COUM and Throbbing Gristle ‘Wreckers of Civilisation’ . . . shortly be-fore he was arrested for indecent exposure, and whose work continues to be held at the vanguard of contemporary art.

“And it is the story of her work as a pornographic model and striptease artiste which challenged assumptions about morality, erotica and art.

“Art Sex Music is the wise, shocking and elegant autobiography of Cosey Fanni Tutti.”

The book will be published by Faber and Faber in April 2017.
http://louderthanwar.com/news-cosey-fanni-tutti-announces-new-autobiography-art-sex-music/

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. The blog will be on a short vacation tomorrow and Wednesday because I’m flying to Vienna today for an event there occasioned by the publication in German of ‘I Wished’ plus a screening of ‘Permanent Green Light’. If by some chance you’re around there, it’s tomorrow night. Here’s the info. I think it might be sold out, but check. The blog will be back in its usual form on Thursday. Since that leaves you two days with nothing new to see here, I thought I would tide you over by restoring this rich, comprehensive post about the inimitable Cosey Fanni Tutti, put together by d.l. Ben ‘_Black_Acrylic’ Robinson some years ago. Have a great time unfurling it. ** tomk, Hi! I look forward to reading the short piece/excerpt upon my return to the homefront. I obviously hope you never get to the point that you have to freak out. Any university would be starry to have you, and I hope a deserving one takes the bait. ** Jack Skelley, Skelldaddle! Yep, Shelly is a Tetra. Try, man. Dang on the other two Youths’ unavailability. Well, there’s still Kim? Happy to think here fills in that blank, bud. xoxo ** Misanthrope, My schedule is in a TextEdit thing that I always leave open on my desktop just in case. How interesting, ha ha. Someone needs to invent an app that sprinkles one’s partly finished prose and poetry with the writer equivalent of catnip. ** Sypha, Glad you did. Yes, it’s true it’s been ages since I’ve seen you type droolingly about power electronics. I did try à;GRUMH yesterday, and it sounds pretty dated. Curious about this medieval project. ** _Black_Acrylic, First of all, thanks again from the future for making today’s post supreme. Wow, Martin Creed should know that. I’ve still never listened to an audiobook. Strange, really. I hope Big Sam’s relative initial success has legs and very muscular ones. ** Cody Goodnight, Hi, Cody. Yay! Now the real world has you in its maw, and hopefully the true fun begins. And a very happy birthday to you. I’m assuming Italian is your favorite cuisine? I hope you heavily reward yourself today. ** A, Really good games just use ‘winning’ as a kind of lure to keep players moving forward in my opinion. I read the Mastbaum, but not the Leddick. It seems like ages since Blair has published a book, but maybe I’m out of it. XY, wow, flashback. I had no idea it was still in the present tense. One of my ex-bfs was a popular XY sexpot way back. Cool thanks about the feature idea. Yeah, sorry, I’m still in a post-filming daze and massively behind on correspondence. I’ll try to use the Vienna trip as a game changer. * * Kettering, Hi. Sadistic, ha ha. Oh, wow, I wish I’d come across that video for the post. I did actually have that ‘Pigpen’ Saeborg piece in some post here at some point. I can’t remember the context. Yeah, it’s crazy. Oh, thank you so much for the kind, amazing words. That’s extremely heartening. The Philippe section of ‘Closer’ is still one of my favorite things of mine, so, yeah, thank you! I don’t think I’ve read that particular Finbow book, but I do like his writing. Sure, I’m more than happy to talk writing stuff specifically. I’m a bit of a process junkie, you know. The p.s. context isn’t great for lengthiness, but, sure, I’d be happy to. Well, thank you everything too. Sincerely. ** Steve Erickson, Ah, La Tene, okay. I’ll have another look. Ouch! Be easy on your ankle, not that you have a choice, I guess. So sorry to hear that, Steve. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Yeah, he’s pretty amazing: Matsumoto. You can only buy Pop Tarts here in the American food store and in the British/American food store. The latter is just down the street from me, though. I would have to say my favorite Pop Tart is the blueberry one. The frosted cinnamon one isn’t bad either. Not that Pop Tarts aren’t kind of bad in general. Fun bad in tiny doses. I’ll be in your future hometown in about four hours. So curious about it. I weirdly don’t even have a mental image of what it looks like. I’m guessing it looks old like Paris but differently old. My weekend was pretty blah, I think. I saw some friends and ate an amazingly good pizza and went to a reading at a bookstore but the author spoke very quietly and mumbled in French so I didn’t understand a word. I accept the offer to be love’s date! Love giving me a ride to the airport, G. ** alex, Hey, alex! Yeah, right? About the Matsumoto. I will check out that Yellow Swans album. I think I learned a lot about structuring/architecting fiction from listening to and studying Autechre. Yes, I had no idea there are islands in/around Toronto. See, that sounds so exciting, your description of sailing, and since you’re doing it on the relative stillness of a lake, it might even be doable for me. I’ve only sailed on oceans, rough oceans. Sweet! ** Bill, Hi, B. Happy that a couple of the books intrigued. Duval and Rowlands were in a movie together? A not very good movie? Double surprise there. I hope your week has dawned lustrously. ** Right. You already know what you have before you, blog-wise, so do that, and I’ll see you back here on Thursday.

Balloonists

 

Fiona Tan
Jeppe Hein
Poppy Jane Lee
Martin Creed
Jeanne Quinn
COOP HIMMELB(L)AU
Balloon Factory
Todd Robinson
Lee Boroson
Cheryl Pope
Dan Steinhilber
Bina Baitel
Object Design League
Tadao Cern
Tomas Saraceno
Omer Polak and Michal Evyater
Tim Hawkinson
Olivier Grossetête
Spencer Finch
Tom Hillewaere
Torafu Architects
David Colombini
Ahmet Ögüt
Nancy Davidson
Philippe Parreno
General Idea
Vincent Leroy
Me
Otto Piene
Masayoshi Matsumoto
Gordon Matta-Clark
Graham Lee
Lee Bul
Junya Ishigami
Jan Hakon Erichsen
Junya Ishigami
Aliaksei Zholner
Francesc Torres
Kris Martin
Sturtevant

 

_____________
Fiona Tan Tilt, 2002
Tilt is a video by Fiona Tan of a toddler strapped into a harness suspended from a cluster of white helium-filled balloons in a room with wooden floorboards. The gurgling toddler floats gently into the air before descending to the ground, the little feet scrabbling for traction before gently ascending again.’

 

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Jeppe Hein Some see a Balloon, some see a Wish, 2021
Glass fiber reinforced plastic, chrome laquer (dark green, light blue), magnet, string

 

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Jeanne Quinn A Thousand Tiny Deaths (2009)
For A Thousand Tiny Deaths, Jeanne Quinn inflated approximately 50 balloons inside black vases and then suspended them from the ceiling. As the balloons slowly deflated, the vases dropped, crashing into pieces on a platform below.

 

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COOP HIMMELB(L)AU City Soccer, 1971
‘COOP HIMMELB(L)AU was founded by Wolf D. Prix, Helmut Swiczinsky, and Michael Holzer in Vienna, Austria, in 1968, and is active in architecture, urban planning, design, and art. In the project City Soccer in 1971, the practice released four giant inflatable footballs onto the streets of Vienna to bring a sense of creative liberation to the streets.’

 

______________
Poppy Jane Lee Bed Skewer, 2016
plastic rafts, air, metal poles

 

______________
Martin Creed Half the air in a given space (1998 – 2017)
A celebrated suite of pieces made with balloons, the monochromatic and formless sea of spheres offers visitors an opportunity to navigate the work from within—while also challenging them to consider that the location of art can be found somewhere between physical experience and sculptural construct.

 

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Balloon Factory Japan Premium Beef (2012)
Balloon Factory was invited by Sight Unseen to design a window installation for Japan Premium Beef as part of the NoHo Design District, a recurring gathering of off-site design events during the annual International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York each year. For Japan Premium Beef, a selection of uninflated balloons (shaped like sausages and different cuts of steak: porterhouse, flank, filet mignon, and T-bone) were displayed on butcher trays, framed by an installation of hanging sausage balloon links. This iteration carries a strong reference to the intricate fake food prevalent in restaurant windows in Japan. A limited edition run of 40 meat balloons were made available for sale at the BF web shop.

 

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Todd Robinson Oooh… (2014)
Colorful, squishy {yet solid?}, lazy-looking balloons made of hydrocal, polyester filler, and paint.

 

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Bina Baitel Inflatable Fountain, 2022
‘With Inflatable fountain, Bina Baitel merges the industrial universe of inflatable products with the architectural language of urban fountains. In between an industrial production and a traditional structure, a series of superimposed buoys define the shape of a monumental fountain.’

 

_____________
Lee Boroson Uplift (2014)
Uplift comprises an array of inflatable fabric forms molded into stalactites to evoke the architecture of the underworld, providing room for contemplation in a dark, primordial chamber.

 

______________
Cheryl Pope Up Against (2010)
One of Cheryl Pope’s performances, Up against, involves the popping of water-filled balloons hanging from the ceiling with only her head. Upon witnessing the performance I realized that it is also an inner struggle that Cheryl is coming to terms with. She explains this as “clearing the air.”

 

_______________
Dan Steinhilber Untitled (2005)
A manly action-painting made from knotted balloons. (As they deflate over days, this pseudo-Jackson Pollock goes limp.)

 

______________
Object Design League Balloon Factory (2012)
Balloons are familiar and loved objects, but few people realize that with some amateur kitchen chemistry techniques, the process for manufacturing them can be replicated on a small scale. Product designers Caroline Linder, Lisa Smith, Michael Savona, Thomas Moran, and Steven Haulenbeek—all members of design collective Object Design League—aimed to demystify and illustrate each step of this process with their Balloon Factory on-site at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago from July 5th through 10th. Freshly-made balloons were available in limited numbers from the MCA Store for the duration of the event.

 

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Tadao Cern Black Balloons (2016)
Born out of Lithuanian architect-cum-artist Tadao Cern’s fixation to connect two balloons and spurred by his “childlike sense of discovery”, the experimentation produced such overwhelming results that he decided to evolve it into a more ambitious project. Using two different gasses, helium and sulfur hexafluoride—the former lighter than air, the other heavier—he managed to create a sculptural equilibrium where two balloons float in space connected with a metallic string in opposition to each other. This motif was then used to create considerably more elaborate configurations, some of which comprised of more than 400 balloons, meticulously arranged with great geometrical precision in rows or grids. Alternatively, they are displayed inside glass tanks where they float without any kind of support, a technique Cern devised especially for the project.

 

______________
Tomas Saraceno On Space Time Foam (2013)
Based on various kinds of knowledge, from quntum physics, art and different kinds of theories of the evolution of the universe, this is the largest inflatable installation EVER made.

 

______________
Omer Polak and Michal Evyater Blow Dough (2014)
Israeli designers Omer Polak and Michal Evyater1 have created an experimental food lab that gives diners the satisfaction of knowing where everything—right down to the aroma—comes from. Blow Dough lab is a peculiar combination of performance art and catering, during which visitors use custom-made, high performance baking tools to cook crispy bread balloons filled with herbal scents. Polak collaborated with Israeli baker and chef Erez Komorovsky, to “do something new with this chef who knows everything about dough,” Polak says. “It sounds very easy, but if you want to make the dough flexible, you have to really understand it.” Blow Dough works like this: Visitors take a small amount of pre-kneaded dough to individual baking tables, which are each rigged with an industrial blower (typically used by industrial designers for heating and bending plastic) and a small compartment for herbs and vegetables. The “baker” puts a slab of the dough over the herb container and the blower, which emits a blast of 1,000-degree heat. This does three things: bakes the dough, inflates the dough into a balloon of bread, and transfers the herb odors inside the bread, creating an aromatic air pocket. Then they bite into them. “It’s very weird,” Polak says, “because it’s crispy, but when you bite it, it’s nothing, just smells.”

 

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Tim Hawkinson Balloon Self-Portrait (1993)
latex, air

 

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Olivier Grossetête Pont de Singe (2012)
French artist Olivier Grossetête used three enormous helium balloons to float a rope bridge over a lake in Tatton Park, a historic estate in north-west England. Located in the park’s Japanese garden, the structure comprised a long rope bridge made of cedar wood held aloft by three helium-filled balloons. The ends of the bridge were left to trail in the water.

 

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Spencer Finch Sky (Over Coney Island, November 26th, 2004, 12:47pm. Southwest view over the Cyclone.) (2004)
Balloons, helium and string

 

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Tom Hillewaere Valse Sentimentale (2006)
As Massumi states: “There are uses of language that can bring that inadequation between language and experience to the fore in a way that can convey the ‘too much’ of the situation – its charge – in a way that actually fosters new experiences.” Belgian artist Tom Hillewaere exemplifies this unique attempt in his installation Valse Sentimentale. Set to the haunting sound of Tchaikovsky’s Valse Sentimentale, interpreted by Clara Rockmore on the Theremin, Hillewaere’s piece offers a white balloon attached to a simple black marker on a string. Surrounded by fans, the balloon oscillates lightly across a large white surface upon which the balloon traces simple lines as it traverses the space.

 

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Brad Adkins Untitled (pink balloon end) (2006)

 

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Torafu Architects Water Balloon Room (2014)
torafu architects have designed the ‘water balloon’, a luminaire that has the same visual properties as a single droplet of liquid. small air bubbles fill the glass bulb, resembling tiny particles of carbonation trapped inside. lit by an LED source hidden at its crown, the light that filters through reflects off both the small spheres accumulated inside and the asymmetrical tear shape.

 

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David Colombini Attachment (2014)
Attachment, a poetic machine connected to a website, allows you to send messages, images, or videos into the air through a biodegradable balloon. The basic idea was to take a stand against the current use of “smart” technologies by creating a poetic concept, using current technology that allows us to communicate differently and rediscover expectation, random and the unexpected. The site allows you, by entering your name and e-mail, to send a message and attach a picture, sound, or video. Once your content is validated, the machine prints the message and a code on an  sheet, slips it into a biopolymer cylinder attached to a balloon, which is released into the air. The balloon then travels haphazardly to a potential recipient.

 

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Ahmet Ögüt Castle of Vooruit (2015)
Ögüt takes the socialist history of Ghent as the starting point for The Castle of Vooruit. He concentrates on the Vooruit, the cooperative where the working-class people of Ghent assembled from the end of the nineteenth century until the early 1970s and which ran both a centre for festive occasions and a newspaper. Making reference to ‘Le Chateau des Pyrénées’ (1961) by the Belgian surrealist painter Rene Magritte, Ögüt is sending up a gigantic helium balloon in the shape of Magritte’s floating rock, launched near the Vooruit Arts Centre. He is replacing the mysterious castle on top with a replica of the Vooruit building.

 

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Nancy Davidson Cowgirl Dustup (2012)
‘Davidson is a sculptor and video artist known for making larger-than-life inflatable sculptures in an ongoing exploration of American icons and Feminist issues. Cowgirl Dustup offers a humorous, absurdist critique of the American cowgirl depicted in popular culture. With this massive inflatable sculpture, suspended in midair and measuring 21 x 16 x 16 feet, Davidson presents the iconic cowgirl as a spectacle to admire, a tall-tale fantasy of western legend.’

 

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Philippe Parreno Anywhen (2016)
French artist Philippe Parreno’s new work – Anywhen – is the latest large-scale commission in the museum’s Turbine Hall. He describes the work as an ever-changing experience “that plays with time and space”. A shoal of helium-filled fish float about the cavernous space to a surreal soundtrack from overhead speakers. Some of the sounds are piped in live from microphones outside Tate Modern – which raises the prospect of a busker on the South Bank being heard inside the hall.

 

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General Idea Magi© Bullet (1992)
Riffing on Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds (1966), General Idea infiltrated this form, turning its inflatables into the shape of pills and branding them like pharmaceuticals with the group’s name and the work’s title. As balloons do, they gradually lose their helium and begin their slow descent to the ground. The life cycle of these objects is part of the work; as the balloons are displaced to the ground, visitors are encouraged to take one with them, participating in the dissemination of the work beyond the Museum’s walls.

 

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Vincent Leroy Boreal Halo, 2022
‘The massive inflatable ring rotates to the beat of a unique soundtrack, created by Jérôme Echenoz, adding an extra dimension to the experience. The audio background features sounds captured from all over the world, combined with infra-bass, and throbbing vibrations.’

 

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Me Ojisora (2014)
No doubt dozens of necks suddenly snapped in a group double-take as residents suddenly realized that’s no moon… it’s the enormous inflated head of one of their neighbors! Give credit to Japanese art trio Me (in collaboration with the Utsunomiya Museum of Art) for the uniquely unusual “Ojisora” project, an artistic effort spanning over two years from conception to realization. Its origin rests with one of the three artists, Haruka Kojin (above, right), who as a junior high school student dreamed of an old man’s grossly enlarged and disembodied head floating over town and country. Upon awakening from her dream, Kojin quickly sketched her recollection and then just as quickly forgot about it. Many years later, she came across her sketch and wondered… was there some way to recreate her dream in real life? After consulting with her two co-artists and with the support of the Utsunomiya Museum of Art, Kojin took the first step towards realizing – and sharing on a mass scale – her odd dream from so many years before.

 

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Otto Piene The Proliferation of The Sun (1967)
The Proliferation of the Sun, originally conceived in 1967, is a 25-minute multimedia performance, using hundreds of painted slides, sound, and several projectors. Colorful shimmering shapes on hundreds of hand-painted glass slides are projected onto a massive balloon and huge multi-screen array, creating what Piene called a “poetic journey through space.” The visitor is immersed in projections that splay across various surfaces. Piene reminds the viewer of the magic of the projected image, which is even more beguiling when you can immerse yourself in it and become overwhelmed by the scale and light.

 

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Masayoshi Matsumoto various (2015 – 2016)
Japanese artist Masayoshi Matsumoto makes his amazingly detailed balloon animals with no glue or seals – then pops them when he’s done.

 

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Gordon Matta-Clark Sky Hook (Studies for a Balloon Building), 1978
‘In 1978, after his Building Cuts, Gordon Matta-Clark began working on Sky Hooks (Study for a Balloon Building). This project wanted to create a form of vital aerial space attached to buildings without involving the use of urban land and thus avoiding all real estate speculation.’

 

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Junya Ishigami balloon, 2007
‘Junya Ishigami’s “balloon” is a massive reflecting object that floats suspended in the atrium of the museum. Weighing just under a ton, the sculpture, built from light gauge steel trusses and reflective aluminum panels, is filled with an equilibrium of helium that allows it to hover precariously over visitors heads below, and is free from any connections to its surroundings.’

 

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Graham Lee Untitled, 2018
‘Mr. Lee gave up being an electrician after around eight years of doing magic and balloon modelling but it was later that he decided to take his work further. He said: “I was at a magic convention and on a table there was a one-balloon model of a hippo. I tried to figure out how he’d done it and it was then that I got the idea of going further with it so I went to some workshops and lectures and it went from there.’

 

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Lee Bul Willing To Be Vulnerable, 2015-2016
Metalised film, transparent film, blower fan, electronic wiring, 300 x 300 x 1700 cm

 

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Jan Hakon Erichsen Destruction Diary, 2018 –
‘The Norwegian artist is on a mission to destroy every balloon he encounters with an endless array of awkward Rube Goldberg-esque setups.’

 

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Aliaksei Zholner Действующий оргАн из бумаги, 2017
‘Paper engineer Aliaksei Zholner brings his crafty talents to the musical realm with this working paper organ. The tiny organ has 18 functional keys that create tones with the aid of corresponding reeds, and of course a pipe organ can’t function without a steady air flow, a problem Zholner solves with a large balloon.’

 

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Francesc Torres Inflatable Structure Containing Fog, 1969
‘In the mid-sixties, before his work turned towards installation and a critical reflection on power and the collective memory, Francesc Torres made a series of inflatable structures belong in this context. On one occasion, he submitted a bubble full of air that had turned slightly green to the effects of the waves. On another, he filled a large inflatable structure with fog.’

 

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Kris Martin T.Y.F.F.S.H., 2011
‘The art installment is an actual capsized hot air balloon. It is an interactive piece in which viewers can put booties over their shoes and explore the inside of the hot air balloon. Kris Martin created this installment in 2011 and it was intended to transport the viewer into a fantasy from which the viewer could draw their own conclusions on the meaning or possibilities provided by the piece.’

 

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Sturtevant Sex Dolls, 2012
’15 inflatable sex dolls, all but two of them male, with cartoonish printed chest hair and blank bulges between their legs.’

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** tomk, Hi, Tom! Me too: Zelda’s newest birth comes at my busiest time, urgh. Yes, I bookmarked the link to your piece on ergot. In fact, … Everyone, The amazing writer Thomas Kendall has a new fiction piece up at the ergot. site. Highly recommended. It’s called ‘A Clearing’, and it’s here. Awesome, the arc. I’ll go look for that in my email. Super exciting, thank you. Best of luck getting swiftly to the other side of the joblessness onset. Any interesting prospects or ideals therewith? ** A, Little AC here in Paris too, although I assume they’re preparing for the new world. Yes, I liked Boards of Canada, sure. I … don’t remember when I read ‘Paradoxia’, time wise. I have no qualms whatsoever using online cheats when playing games. I don’t give the slightest shit whether I can beat the bosses. I just want to skip them or get by them so I can keep wandering around. ** Jack Skelley, Jackerino. Squrls, wow. Mum’s the word. If you’re going to go that route, what about Bush Tetras? Steve Shelley’s their drummer now. Exciting shit, buddy. ** Dominik, My pleasure re: the book suggestions, of course. Love can never make things involving refined sugar healthy too often. I’ve been craving a Pop Tart the last couple of days, so maybe I’ll test out love’s powers. Any fun things coming up or having happened this weekend? Love making King Charles’s coronation the most shocking thing anyone in the world has ever seen in their entire lives, G. ** Misanthrope, Write things down. Keep a little calendar/planning chart. I do that. It, you know, helps. I think you’re right about Bernard. Eileen seems to be reading in every city in North America right now. As a workaholic of sorts, your procrastination almost sounds utopian. ** _Black_Acrylic, LKS’s new book is lovely. I don’t know that Sade book. Huh, Tempting. Especially as an audio experience for some reason. Enjoy, if that’s the word. ** Sypha, Wow, Front Line Assembly. I totally forgot about them. You’re on an industrial mission there. You make me want to go listen to à;GRUMH again and see what happens. I’m like the opposite, I originally only played PC games, but then I got a console and was so happy to find a way to do things away from my computer that I only rarely went back. Is the research on medieval history for a writing project? ** Darbs, Hi. I hope your weekend is good too. Well, I don’t know if mine’ll be good yet, so I just hope yours is good whatever mine ends up being. The LA punk scene was pretty small and tight, so you pretty much knew or at least bumped into everybody else regularly. How’s your roommate? I hope you see your best friend. The things you mention don’t seem weird or unnatural to me in the slightest, but I’m fairly weird myself, so … I played the first ‘Animal Crossing’, and I got so addicted to it — like I couldn’t stop playing it even after I finished the through-line — that I had to force myself to stop playing it, and I made a vow never to play an ‘Animal Crossing’ game again. But I’m tempted. Those artists sound interesting, obviously. Did you manage a blast or many blasts over your weekend, I hope, I hope? Love back from me! ** Steve Erickson, I know people here with VPN who claim it works perfectly, but mine doesn’t, at least when streaming is involved, that’s for sure. I don’t know La Tenee, and I just looked and couldn’t a single thing about them. Huh. ** Philip Hopbell, Hey, Philip. ‘The Counterfeiters’ was a huge book for me when I was still a young wanna be novelist. I can imagine his diaries are something, from what I know re: him. I just found out that Guyotat is buried in Paris, and in fact I have tentative plans to go find and visit his grave this weekend. ** alex, Hi, alex. Cool that the book suggestions mattered. I don’t know that Yellow Swans album, no. I’ll check it out. When I put on music while I’m writing, which I haven’t done in quite a while weirdly, I think I listen to the same realm of music that you do. I used to write to Autechre quite a bit for a while. Very inspiring. A sailboat, wow. That’s interesting. So then you’ll sail around in it? That’s a dumb question, I guess. I had a friend in LA with a sailboat, but I get seasick at the tiniest drop of the tiniest hat, so I only went out with him once and borderline vomited the whole time. Fun! ** Travis (fka Cal), Well, yeah, the hopping around. You do have to end up choosing one project as the #1 eventually. Are any of yours especially compelling-meets -doable? I obviously think finishing your novel sounds like a keeper of an idea, but of course I would. ** analrapist, Baseball’s rules are super complicated. They’re multilayered, which is why I’m drawn to it. It’s highly structured and kind of experimental too in a weird way. I’ll look for the SecretBase doc, thanks. Football aka soccer is massive here, of course. And I do like it. I’ve only been to one game live, I don’t know why. No one I know goes to games, although a lot of people I know watch the games onscreen in bars and cafes. Pretty sweet game, yeah. The French (at least) call football ‘the beautiful game’, and I get that. ** Okay. I decided to give you a weekend full of balloons for whatever reason. There you go. See you on Monday.

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