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Monday, October 30, 2023

Ono and the women of Fluxus

 


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Yoko Ono and the women of Fluxus changed the rules in art and life
A photo by Minoru Niizuma of Yoko Ono in “Cut Piece,” a performance at Carnegie Hall in 1965 during which audience members were invited up to snip off her clothing. The exhibit “Out of Bounds: Japanese Women Artists in Fluxus” at the Japan Society, focuses on four revolutionary female artists: Shigeko Kubota, Takako Saito, Mieko Shiomi and Yoko Ono, who together founded Fluxus in the early 1960s and paved the way for Conceptual art, Minimalism, performance and video. (Minoru Niizuma via The New York Times)

by Martha Schwendener



  
NEW YORK, NY.- Squatting over a large paper surface with a paintbrush dangling between her legs. Sitting onstage at Carnegie Hall while audience members come up to snip her clothing off with scissors. Blowing soap bubbles to make musical sounds. These are some of the actions taken in the name of art in “Out of Bounds: Japanese Women Artists in Fluxus” at the Japan Society, an exhibition that focuses on four revolutionary women, Shigeko Kubota, Takako Saito, Mieko Shiomi and one you’ve probably heard of before, Yoko Ono.

Fluxus was founded in the early 1960s and paved the way for conceptual art, minimalism, performance and video. It saw the future in other words. Rather than create traditional paintings or sculpture, these artists did things such as play games, mail postcards, cook meals and offer instructions inspired by notated musical scores. (Composer John Cage was a central figure.) There was a logic — or anti-logic — to this approach. Serious, “rational” society had produced mass destruction in the 20th century. Maybe novel methods of producing culture could serve as a salvo or blueprint for a new society.

But by focusing on four Japanese women, the show asks: Who stands the test of time? Who doesn’t? Was fluxus really a blueprint for the future? The exhibition, organized by Midori Yoshimoto and Tiffany Lambert, with Ayaka Iida, features around 150 objects, which range from boxes full of curious objects to videos, films and photographs.

One of the things that’s obvious immediately is just how international fluxus was — a portent of today’s much more global art world. Kubota and Shiomi moved to New York in 1964 — partly because they felt their career prospects were limited in Japan — and quickly became involved with fluxus. Kubota focused on everyday activities, preparing meals and making “Flux Napkins” (circa 1967).

Kubota’s infamous “Vagina Painting” (1965) was a performance in which she either attached a paintbrush to her underwear or inserted the brush into her body (the details of this are left a little unclear) and waddled over a large paper surface. The idea of “birthing” a painting and using the body in such a crudely basic way was echoed in feminist art by Ana Mendieta and Marina Abramovic, or Carolee Schneemann’s “Interior Scroll” (1975), which consisted of pulling a written text out of her vagina. In many ways, this serves as a precursor of all the bodily performance you see in the art world today.

Kubota was also a pioneering video artist. (A recent exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art showcased a handful of her video sculptures.) One of her works here, “Video Poem” (1970-75), features a monitor playing close-up images of her face as she nestles inside a sleeping bag. It is a sweet, somewhat sad work (the sleeping bag was her ex-boyfriend’s), but not a blockbuster.

Technology and its relationship with the body was a mainstay of fluxus, as it was for other fluxus artists such as Nam June Paik, in the postwar era. Information theory was burgeoning alongside game theory — and games. These artists seized upon chess, a medieval war and strategy game, approaching it in an absurd, playful way, giving it exalted status.

Saito’s wildly imaginative and beautifully crafted chess sets are among the best works here. Saito’s “Sound Chess” (circa 1977) is an interactive artwork in the form of a series of identical-looking wooden cubes containing different unknown objects (actually buttons, beans and bells). Pick them up and shake them, or attempt to play using hearing, memory and touch.

Saito’s “Grinder Chess” (circa 1964) uses mechanical drill attachments as chess pieces and designs chess sets made with tiny booklets as playing pieces or a glove as a board. What does it mean to remake chess? It means, quite literally, to remake the rules of the game. And yet, chess has become popular again, on the internet and the Netflix miniseries “The Queen’s Gambit” (2020). (For another take on chess in the art world, head downtown to Hamishi Farah’s paintings at Maxwell Graham’s gallery on the Lower East Side, where paintings of traditional black and white chess pieces are explored in a racial context.)

Mieko Shiomi came out of experimental music and improvisation, and that is her strongest suit. A projected video here shows her performing in 1961 with Group Ongaku, a Japanese noise and sound ensemble, blowing soap bubbles. (The video also includes artist Yasunao Tone, a founding member of the Japanese section of fluxus who will be performing at the Japan Society in conjunction with this show.)



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Shiomi also created “action poems,” including “Event for Late Afternoon” (1963), which consisted of lowering a violin from the top of a building to street level without making a sound. Long before the internet and its instant global connections, her “Spatial Poem” treated communication as a network. Shiomi provided participants with cards and instructions to write something on them, place them somewhere and report back to her. Then, like a social scientist, she would track and map the results. These are nice, poetic gestures, but don’t carry the punch of some of the others.

And then there was Ono. Her famous “Cut Piece” performed in New York in 1965 and filmed by the Maysles Brothers, is on view here. You see Ono sitting onstage at Carnegie Hall while members of the audience come up and cut off her clothing. “Cut Piece” — like her terrific “Grapefruit,” a book of instructions and drawings that invited readers to do things such as laugh, cough or scream for various durations — has been performed by people around the world, taking on a new meaning based on the time and the setting.

Of course, Ono became best known outside the avant-garde art world as the partner of John Lennon — and, for decades, a scapegoat for the breakup of the Beatles, which many consider to be a convenient misogynist and anti-Asian claim. On the other hand, Ono’s infiltrating the Beatles might be among her best, unacknowledged performances ever. (What if Taylor Swift was showing up at art openings instead of football stadiums? That would be a game-changer.)

Peter Jackson’s recent film about the making of the last Beatles album, “Let It Be” (1970), captured Ono sitting in the studio doing fluxus-y things: painting at an easel, eating a pastry, paging through a Lennon fan magazine. As Amanda Hess observed in The New York Times, it’s “as if she is staging a marathon performance piece, and in a way, she is.”

American artist David Horvitz flips this scenario with a T-shirt that reads: “John Lennon Broke Up Fluxus.” This isn’t 100% true: George Maciunas, a Lithuanian-born artist who was a driving force behind fluxus, died in 1978 and the movement foundered after that. After wedding Lennon in 1969, though, Ono did become apprehensive about performing “Cut Piece” — that is, sitting alone onstage as strangers approached her clutching scissors. (Ono’s wild, proto-punk music is now considered by some to be more radical and interesting than Lennon’s solo musical efforts.)

Like the Horvitz T-shirt, “Out of Bounds” offers a new way of thinking about fluxus, placing Japanese women’s contributions at the center, and white European and American men in supporting roles. With a roster of ongoing activities, the exhibition also seems to suggest that maybe fluxus never broke up at all, but continues every time we play “Sound Chess” or follow Ono’s “Grapefruit” instructions; listen to a heartbeat or the sound of Earth turning; step in all the puddles in a city or, as she suggested in “Map Piece” (1964), “Draw a map to get lost.”

The current art world is characterized by biennials, art fairs and the art market. This runs counter to the ethos of fluxus, which focused on more ephemeral gestures and less on objects of value. And yet, the whole contemporary art world runs like a giant, high-stakes game. Who is visible? Who is marketable? Who counts? Maybe, with its emphasis on randomness and chance, fluxus predicted something it didn’t even realize, and Ono & Co. plotted, one canny gesture at a time, the world we live in.

—

‘Out of Bounds: Japanese Women Artists in Fluxus’

Through Jan. 21 at Japan Society, 333 E. 47th St., Manhattan; 212-832-1155, japansociety.org.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


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LADY SNOWBLOOD

 


The Global Psychotronic Film Society

Without LADY SNOWBLOOD, there is no KILL BILL. Halloween Thrillers Continue!

The elegant, ultimate in revenge films stars Meiko Kaji. She is beautiful. And deadly! See both LADY SNOWBLOOD'S here now!

MICHAEL FLORES
30/10/2023
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Meiko Kaji

See LADY SNOWBLOOD 1 here click this link

See Lady Snowblood 2 here by clicking this link

From MESSY NESSY:

Jetting back to 1970s Japan, let’s get to know sultry film icon, actress, singer, and all-round badass Meiko Kaji. She rose to fame during the seventies at the height of what was known as the “pinky violence” Japanese film genre, which were essentially sexed up, bad girl action films produced by Toei, one of the leading studios in the country. You might not have seen one of her most iconic roles in Lady Snowblood, but this 1973 B-movie performance was the primary inspiration for Quentin Tarrantino’s Kill Bill. And without a doubt, warrior-muse Meiko Kaji left a profound impression on Quentin Tarantino and shaped his creative choices, storytelling, and aesthetic sensibilities in the Kill Bill series. So let’s get to know Tarantino’s secret Japanese muse a little better…

Meiko Kaji was born Masako Ota in Toyko, Japan in 1947 to a working-class family. In her adolescence, she fell in love with music and acting and after graduating from high school began working in film under her real name (then Masako Ota) at Nikkatsu Studio. Her first supporting role was in Retaliation in 1968 and at the time, she also pursued a career as a pop singer.

As Nikkatsu Studio moved towards producing more overtly sexual exploitation films featuring gratuitous nudity, Kaji decided to make a transition and found her way to the Toei Company where she would star in the female-empowered four-part film series, “Female Prisoner Scorpion 701”.

In an effort to lure audiences away from their television sets, studios at the time were expected to churn out new films every fortnight; cheap and quick-to-produce B movies with plots following sukeban girl gangs on the fringes of society. Japan in the 1960s had seen the rise of political freedoms and feminism, and in portraying beautiful women who seek revenge on men who have wronged her, Kaji quickly gained national fame as a prominent actress in the Japanese genre of exploitation cinema. She became known for her signature “meiko stare”, a piercing look she used for all of her strong characters – her own “blue steel”, if you will!

In the 1973-1974 “Lady Snowblood” film series, she portrayed the lead character Yuki Kashima, a lethal a 19th-century swordswoman and assassin seeking revenge for the murder of her family. The stoic, intense presence of Yuki in Lady Snowblood made a lasting impact on a young American director Quentin Tarantino.

Both Yuki in Snowblood and Beatrix Kiddo (played by Uma Thurman) in Kill Bill possess deadly skills in martial arts and are driven by deep-seated revenge. Strong female characters are a well-known hallmark in homage-filled filmmaking style, and he has often incorporated elements of the Japanese “pinky violence” genre throughout his career (see revenge narratives like Shoshanna Dreyfus’ story in Inglorious Basterds).

Kill Bill‘s final fight scene in the snow is a crystal clear reference to Lady Snowblood. “It would be easy to dismiss him as an unoriginal film-maker, stealing from better films that nobody else is likely to see,” notes film and culture journalist Steve Rose, “but Tarantino wouldn’t be the first person to make a film without formulating a brand new cinematic language … Tarantino leaves his references on the surface for all to see, or obsessively list and put on a fansite, if they’re so inclined.”

Tarantino also included music from Kaji’s films in the soundtracks of the “Kill Bill” movies. Her famous song “The Flower of Carnage” plays during the scene where Beatrix Kiddo (played by Uma Thurman) battles against the Crazy 88 gang in the House of Blue Leaves. Another Meiko Kaji song, “Urami Bushi” which means “My Grudge Blues”, plays during the anime sequence recounting O-Ren Ishii’s backstory (played by Lucy Liu).

Meiko Kaji retired from the entertainment industry in 1984, at the peak of her career, and has maintained a relatively private life with limited public appearances since, but she remains a highly respected figure in Japanese cinema. Her contributions to Japanese cinema, particularly her iconic roles, and musical hits, have integrated her into a Japanese cinematic history and cult films. In 2020, Kaji created her Youtube channel which shares her filmography and musical career, keeping them alive and accessible to new generations. - MESSY NESSY

Watch LADY SNOWBLOOD 1 by clicking this link

Watch LADY SNOWBLOOD 2 by clicking this link

If you enjoy the world of psychotronic movies and music, join us on Facebook. That’s psycho as in horror and tronic as in electronic or science fiction. We also cover the realm of pop culture others consider trash. Join the film society on Facebook by clicking the underlined link.

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