Yet an inchoat
vision, over the next few years
Ren, will be expounded in the givens of
selected industrial sites.
Design Matthew Barney, Jonathan Bepler. Text Louise Neri. Photos Kelly thomas, Chris Winget.
In 2006, after completing Drawing Restraint 9 aboard
a Japanese whaling ship, and a dialogic exhibition with the
work of Joseph Beuys, Matthew Barney declared himself to
be at the end of his foray into feature-length fi lm-making,
and his need to reconsider some of the real-time actions
and performances that had preceded the Cremaster Cycle,
a mind-bending epic of classical mythologies, vernacular
fables, arcane allegory, and psycho-sexual exploration.
Thus begins a new cycle of performances inspired by Ancient
Evenings, the quixotic and highly contested novel by Normal
Mailer, one of Barney’s creative progenitors and an active
collaborator before his recent death. Beginning and ending
in the Egyptian necropolis, Ancient Evenings recounts one
soul’s imagination of its afterlife in a culture fi rmly involved
with its own body, its own excrement, and its own corruption
– a culture that provided Mailer with a representational universe
un-Enlightened by the modern
divisions between physical and metaphysical,
imaginative and real, sexuality
and death, critique and creation.
In transposing Mailer’s mordant
universe from the written word
to live performance and into his own
mythopoetic terms, Barney continues
to display strong affi nities with the
American Renaissance, so vividly embodied in the visions of
those who sought their origins in “the self-dissolving voyage
to the abyss” – Poe, Hawthorne, Melville and others.
No doubt it is this attraction to the abyss that has time and
again led him away from the comfort of the studio, gallery and
theatre towards the marginal realities where to engage in the
cross-mapping of site and extravagant narrative action that
is so central to the process and meaning of his work.
Working with Jonathan Bepler – composer for the
Cremaster series who is known to create scores of a highly
contingent nature – Barney transformed a car yard in remote
southern Los Angeles into the locus for a funeral procession and reincarnation rite involving a 1967 Chrysler Imperial and
its avatar, a gleaming Pontiac Firebird. After being hauled
to its fi nal resting place inside the main showroom by a
team of costaleros and capataz, the Chrysler was atomised
in a display of orgiastic desecration by a huge stump
grinder. Subsequently, the audience was ushered from the
bright searing heat of the day into a vast, yet airless and
fetid chamber lined with car wrecks to witness as best they
could the mysterious and cathartic process of rebirth, before
being plunged into total darkness at its end. Throughout the
evening, Bepler’s aleatory score for scramble bands, soprano
and mariachi converged and dispersed around the site, linking
audience and action.
Barney and Bepler’s conscious embrace of more
extreme settings for their work invites comparison with fellow
visionaries Peter Brooks – with his real-time staging
of the Mahabharata in an Australian
stone quarry – and choreographer
William Forsythe – with his decentring
of action, audience and situation
in Endless House. As well there are the
rituals and procedures of religious and
folkloric liturgy, which Barney began
to explore with musician Arto Lindsay
in the context of Brazilian carnival,
bringing elements of local Candomblé religion together with
issues of environmental destruction and polymorphous sexual
identity. Over the next few years, Barney and Bepler will
expound REN’s as yet inchoate vision in an unprecedented
blend of live performance, environmental art, and experimental
proxemics within the givens of selected industrial sites
around the world. Their hope is to awaken in their audience
some kind of participatory consciousness in a larger picture
– and in doing so imparting metaphysical speculations on
death, art, recollection and representation in relation to a
world buckling under the pressures of spiritual, political and
ecological amnesia.
Civilisation and its discontents
REN, the last visionary work by Barney & Bepler, a preview for Domus.
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- 18 September 2008