CARVING: A Traditional Sculpture

CARVING: A Traditional Sculpture

Eleanor AntinWW-1972-112911
1972·148 gelatin silver prints and text panel·Each photograph: 17.7 × 12.7 cm (7 × 5 in.); Text panel: 39.4 × 26 cm (15 1/2 × 10 1/4 in.); Installed: 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 5/16 × 204 1/16 in.); 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 1/4 × 204 in.)

<p>A landmark early feminist work, Eleanor Antin’s <em>Carving: A Traditional Sculpture</em> comprises 148 black-and-white photographs documenting the artist’s loss of 10 pounds over 37 days. Every morning she was photographed naked in the same four stances to record her barely perceptible self-induced weight loss. (The photographs from each day are arranged vertically, and the entire process can be read horizontally, like a filmstrip.) Antin’s performance purposely toyed with the traditional process of Greek sculptors, who were said to find their ideal form by chipping away at a block of marble and discarding any unnecessary material. The artist’s idea of “carving” her own body was inspired by an invitation from the Whitney Museum of Art for its biennial survey exhibition, which at the time restricted itself to the established categories of painting and sculpture, though this work was considered too conceptual for the exhibition.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1972
Dimensions
Each photograph: 17.7 × 12.7 cm (7 × 5 in.); Text panel: 39.4 × 26 cm (15 1/2 × 10 1/4 in.); Installed: 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 5/16 × 204 1/16 in.); 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 1/4 × 204 in.)

Artist

Eleanor Antin
Eleanor Antin

Photography

Eleanor Antin is an American artist working across performance, video, photography, and installation since the 1970s. Her practice engages narrative and identity through fictional personas and historical reimagining, often positioning herself as the subject. She has created large-scale photographic sequences, video performances, and site-specific installations that interrogate autobiography, authorship, and the boundaries between fact and fiction. Her work draws on conceptual art and feminist strategies to construct alternative histories and personas.

Bronx, NY, USA

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More

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Dance of Death from Femfolio

Dance of Death from Femfolio

2009 · Digital print from a portfolio of nineteen digital prints (twelve with lithograph, one with pochoir, one with hand coloring, and one with gold dusting) and one lithograph

WW-2009-M093245
From the Archives of Modern Art

From the Archives of Modern Art

1987 · Video (black and white, sound)

WW-1987-M084203
The Gentle Muse, from the series "The Angel of Mercy"

The Gentle Muse, from the series "The Angel of Mercy"

1977 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1977-102750
The Adventures of a Nurse

The Adventures of a Nurse

1976 · Video (color, sound)

WW-1976-M087367
War Games, from the series The Angel of Mercy

War Games, from the series The Angel of Mercy

1976 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1976-133695
The King of Solana Beach

The King of Solana Beach

1974 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1974-124129

Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1972
Dimensions
Each photograph: 17.7 × 12.7 cm (7 × 5 in.); Text panel: 39.4 × 26 cm (15 1/2 × 10 1/4 in.); Installed: 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 5/16 × 204 1/16 in.); 79.4 × 518.2 cm (31 1/4 × 204 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1972-112911

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Eleanor Antin

Eleanor Antin

Photography

View artist profile →