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Marina Abramovic The Space Between

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  1. Marina Abramovic The Space In Between full movie, online
  2. Marina Abramovic Website
  3. Marina Abramovic Art
  4. Marina Abramovic The Space In Between online, free

Free online storage and sharing with Screencast.com. 2 GB of storage and 2 GB of bandwidth per month for free. We won't compress, alter or take ownership of your content. The Space in Between is a sincere film, but not without its lighter moments. There is no spirit cooking, but among other things Abramovic provides useful travel advice, should you find yourself, as well, a modern nomad: Eat raw garlic and raw onion, in that order, to kill whatever is inside you that needs killing.

Twelve years ago I arrived back in Palma de Mallorca after a month in Abadiania, Brazil. I had been to see the healer and psychic surgeon John of God for the second time with my then partner. She died on 9 February 2005. I will always believe that whatever John of God did prolonged her life, gave her some sort of peace and helped prepare me for the awful grief that followed.

But I couldn't tell you how. I thought The Space in Between: Marina Abramovic and Brazil, which starts at what we called the Casa, John of God's compound in Abadiania might give me some answers.

The film, described as 'a hardcore journey through spiritual Brazil' showed what John of God does as a psychic surgeon in unflinching detail, bringing back memories of just how bloody and raw things get in Abadiania. He's shown scraping a cornea, ramming a metal rod up someone's nose and jabbing into a woman's abdomen with the kind of knife you'd cut onions with, before sowing her up with what looks like fishing line.

'Contemporary art icon' Abramovic presented this as proof that there's no trickery in what JOG, as we ended up calling him, does. But that's to miss the point entirely.

I think it was the Amazing Randi who attacked JOG for being a fraud who pointed out that there are no nerve endings on the surface of the eye so it is possible to scrape away without causing the person any pain. Sticking a metal rod up the nose is an old circus trick, apparently. As long as you get the angle right it's possible to push it down through the sinus cavity and into the throat. Something like that.

This is why JOG allows himself to be filmed in such gory close-up. It's trickery but it's not. I believe that what JOG does, if it works, triggers his patients to heal themselves.

But then that's still only part of the story. There's something going on in Abadiania that simply can't be explained. On our first visit, an Irish filmmaker showed us a film he was making about JOG and healing. He'd been allowed to film the same stuff as Abramovic and her crew. But the really remarkable thing was when a psychologist from one of the American Ivy League universities, in Abadiania to study healing. started spontaneously to bleed and the Irish guy caught it on camera.

When the bleeding started it looked like the psychologist had been shot in the heart. He lifted up his t-shirt and hadn't a mark on him. Yet still he bled. And bled.

Either the Irish filmmaker had faked this - highly unlikely because the psychologist was a serious researcher and, in any case, he was in the middle of a crowd in broad daylight. Or something really happened.

I still have no idea. But I would say if you or someone you know is seriously physically or mentally ill, go to Abadiania if you can. Go because you have nothing to lose and who knows what might happen. Go also if you want to be in a strange and marvellous place that quite simply brings out the best in people.

Abramovic doesn't mention this aspect of Abadiania at all. She talks in a monotone about the hope in people's faces - duh! But, perhaps because, as she says, she's primarily an artist fascinated with ritual but not especially interested in true faith, she comes across as profoundly unsympathetic to the suffering and ecstasy she's witnessing. Her self-absorbtion and the impossibility of showing what is happening inside her, even on a vile-looking ayahausca trip, also makes this a film of surfaces.

I haven't ruled out the possibility that Abramovic might be acting, sort of satirising spiritual tourism and ragbag faith-hopping. I think it's highly unlikely, though. In which case the reason she gives for going to Abadiania - that she'd had her heart broken by a true love and couldn't move forward - is pretty pathetic. It sounds like the kind of thing you'd invent just to have something to say.

Marina abramovic in brazil the space in between

Going to John of God in Abadiania brings out the best in people who are staring at death, and in the people who love them facing up to the possibility of loss. So I can't help but see what Abramovic was saying about her emotional pain as an insult to those like my partner who suffered terribly through no fault of her own.

But the The Space Between did help me remember how extraordinary the work of John of God and Abadiania are, even if it didn't bring me any closer to understanding what I experienced. One of the reasons we went to Abadiania was because we watched a TV programme that claimed John of God was the real thing. Whatever Abromovic's reasons for making her film, if it inspires you to go to Abadiania, that's great.

Getting to Abadiania

If you do decide to go to Abadiania or want to suggest to someone else that they do, you'll find everything you need to know here.

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As 21st-century humans, we like to think of ourselves as highly intelligent and morally developed beings. But every so often comes an artist who holds up a mirror so close to our face that we can see the fragile veneer of civilization crackle and slowly come off. Marina Abramović is one such artist, and in her 1974 performance Rhythm 0 she exposed humanity in all its primordial glory.

What was initially just a piece of performance art quickly turned into a dangerous anthropological experiment. In the attempt to understand what happened in Rhythm 0, I find the Freudian concept of emotional ambivalence particularly helpful. Abramović's piece is a great illustration of some of the ideas expressed in Totem and Taboo (1913), and can provide an excellent introduction to Freud's later works.

The performance took place in an art gallery in Naples. For the performance, Abramović simply stood in the gallery space, fully clothed; the only other thing in the room was a table that had 72 objects laid out on its surface. The piece was based on the promise that she would not move for six hours, from 8pm to 2am, and that she would take full responsibility for everything, no matter what happened. As Abramović says, the objects on the table were 'very carefully chosen' and they included a rose, a feather, honey, a whip, a knife, razor, and a loaded pistol. They were objects for pleasure, objects for pain, and objects that could bring about one's death. On the table she also placed the following instructions:

There are 72 objects on the table that one can use on me as desired.

Performance.

I am the object.

During this period I take full responsibility.

In the first few hours, gallery-goers were relatively peaceful. 'Someone turned her around. Someone thrust her arms into the air. Someone touched her somewhat intimately' (Ward 2012, p.120). Then, their gestures turned into slightly more exploratory forms of touch and then proceeded to the removal of her shirt.

From hereon, things escalated quite quickly. Members of the public cut off her clothes with razors. People started writing on her body, poured water over her head, and stuck rose thorns in her stomach. Somebody cut her throat, drinking blood from her neck. Others performed minor sexual assaults on her body. Others wiped her tears away.

At one point someone placed the loaded gun in her hand, put her finger on the trigger, and pointed it to her neck. At this point, another person tore the gun away and a conflict broke out between two factions: those wanting to protect Abramović and those wanting to hurt her even more (Todd, 2015).

When six hours passed, Abramović ended the performance and started walking toward the audience. Reflecting on that moment, she writes:

After six hours, at 2 in the morning, I stopped, because this was exactly my decision: six hours. I started walking to the public and everybody run [sic ] away and never actually confronted with me. The experience I drew from this piece was that in your own performances you can go very far, but if you leave decisions to the public, you can be killed (2009, quoted in Todd, 2015, p. 57).

The gratuitous violence Marina was subjected to might seem difficult to understand, but in the Freudian logic of emotional ambivalence it makes a lot of sense. For Freud, humans are ambivalent beings, capable of fostering feelings of both hatred and love, contempt and admiration, sometimes simultaneously. In Totem and Taboo he explores the roots of this ambivalent structure, and traces it back to our earliest forms of social organization.

Totem and Taboo rests on the premise that there is an equivalence between the behavior of what Freud calls 'primitives' (the earliest, simplest human forms of social organization or contemporary human societies that live under similarly basic rules) and the human psyche (specifically, the mechanisms that may lead to neurosis).

A totem is, widely speaking, a symbol common to a group of people. It serves to strengthen the identity of that group and mark who belongs to it and who's an outsider. Interestingly, Freud suggests, although one would expect such 'primitive' societies to have few or no moral rules, strong taboos are in place against certain actions. In-breeding or murdering members of the same totem, for example, are strongly prohibited. Quoting psychologist W. Wundt (1906), Freud defines the taboo as the 'oldest unwritten code of laws' (p. 22).

Taboos are characterized by the fact that they contain a strong interdiction in themselves, and don't need to resort to an external justification for their efficacy. A taboo carries within itself the moral conviction that something catastrophic will unavoidably happen should the rule be violated.

Freud points out that the ambivalence characterizing the human psyche is present in the very word 'taboo.' It simultaneously refers to the sacredness and extra-ordinariness of the object or person considered 'taboo,' together with the connotation of unclean, impure, dangerous, forbidden.

The prohibition cannot be separated from the the desire that it prohibits. 'There is no need to prohibit something that no one desires to do and a thing that is forbidden with the greatest emphasis must be a thing that is desired' (pp. 80–81). Therefore, Freud goes on to assume, 'the desire to murder is actually present in the unconscious' (p. 82). This idea would later become of historical importance as Freud develops it further in Civilization and Its Discontents. 'Neither taboos nor moral prohibitions' he continues, 'are psychologically superfluous but… on the contrary they are explained and justified by the existence of an ambivalent attitude toward the impulse to murder' (Id.).

Marina Abramovic The Space In Between full movie, online

Such aggressive impulses define the ambivalent attitude 'primitive peoples' have toward their rulers. The two sides of ambivalence are complementary rather than contradictory, and they are perfectly summed up by J.G. Frazer's words 'a ruler must not only be guarded, he must also be guarded against' (1911b, 132 quoted by Freud, 1913, p. 48). Kings and chiefs spur feelings of envy and jealousy because of their privileges and arouse conflicting feelings of ambivalence in their subjects. The king is seen as a spring of dangerous, contagious power that, if 'caught,' can bring about destruction and catastrophe. Like electricity, this power is transmitted to whoever comes into contact with it, but bears death and destruction on those who are not ready to receive it.

Generally, the tabooed power is attributed to people considered to be either exceptional (kings, priests, or newborn babies) or in exceptional states (menstruation, puberty, or birth) (p. 26). The higher you find yourself on the social scale, the stronger the taboo. Ambivalence persists because

Marina Abramovic Website

Karanavar malayalam movie songs. Both the prohibition and the instinct persist: the instinct because it has only been repressed and not abolished, and the prohibition because, if it ceased, the instinct would force its way through into consciousness and into actual operation (p. 34).

Keeping our destructive instincts at bay is what we need to do if we wish to preserve the fabric of our society, and prohibitions are the price we pay for our civilization.

By projecting her gaze forward, through and above everyone in the room, standing erect and fearless in her complete artistic and human (in)vulnerability, my contention is that Abramović projected an image of one such exceptional, regal figure. Abramović's biographer notes that throughout Rhythm 0, 'she maintained a perfect thousand-yard stare through and beyond anyone in front of her' (Westcott, 2010, p. 76). He goes on to interpret this as one of the main reasons why the audience became violent: 'eye contact would have reminded them of Abramović's humanness and the responsibilities that follow' (id.). But I think her gaze provoked the audience to more extreme acts also due to the superiority implied in such a stare, a look projected perfectly above everyone else. Additionally, the status of the artist and particularly the performance or conceptual artist often elicits feelings of envy and resentment amongst the public, who feel their intelligence is being questioned. The performance artist is often perceived as someone who is illegitimately trying to elevate themselves to a superior social status. This can be seen in laypersons' reactions to performance art in general and Abramović in particular. As the comments to this article show, she is oftentimes dismissed as a 'fraud,' as somebody who's just substituting shock value for real creativity or even 'masquerading bullshit as real art.'

As Freud points out, in the case of people we perceive to be more privileged than us, 'alongside of the veneration, and indeed idolization, felt towards them, there is in the unconscious an opposing current of intense hostility; … in fact, … we are faced by a situation of emotional ambivalence' (1913, p. 57). Indeed the twofold mechanism of ambivalence can be seen in other human manifestations as well, such as fandom, our obsession with fame and the cult(ure) of celebrity.

The intense hostility mentioned by Freud as well as our attempts to atone for it were perfectly captured in the two factions that formed around Abramović. The incident in the performance also serves to illustrate a wider social tendency. The violation of the prohibition, Freud points out, triggers swift and severe reprimands from the other members of society, as violating a taboo is a great social threat. Negative feelings of aggression and envy pervade through the entire community and as soon as one member of the society breaks the rule there is the imminent danger of everyone else following suit. On a deeper level everyone wishes to imitate the aggressive behavior, and it is precisely this desire that triggers the outrage and immediate punishment of the transgressor. 'If the violation were not avenged by the other members they would become aware that they wanted to act in the same way' (1913, p. 39). However, acting in the same way would dissolve our social structures, and so every effort must be made to discourage such behavior.

Marina Abramovic Art

Abramović's performance, read in this Freudian key, poses greater questions about the human psyche, as well as the nature, purpose, and effectiveness of human morality and civilization. At the end of the performance, Abramović might have been left with no clothes on, but it was she who stripped the public bare to its most rudimentary impulses. If at our most basic level what we're left with is ruthless aggression coexisting with love, repentance, and a desire to protect, is civilization doing a good job of softening our violent edges and annihilating our socially destructive tendencies? Or is it just putting a lid on our deeply human instincts, condemning us all to neuroses, ineffective mechanisms of displacement, and imminent violent outbreaks à la Fight Club? Is humanity capable of progress or are we doomed to get stuck in the battle between violence and guilt, caught in a strange space between torturing the other and wiping off their tears? Freud himself attempts to answer some of these questions in his larger and more significant work Civilization and Its Discontents. You can read the book online here and there is an entire PEL podcast episode on it that you can listen to here.

Marina Abramovic The Space In Between online, free

Ana Sandoiu is a writer and researcher living in Brighton, UK. You can follow her on Twitter @annasandoiu.





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