
Touch
<p>Since the 1990s, New York–based artist Janine Antoni has established an international reputation with labor-intensive projects in a wide range of media. She incorporates both art history and personal exploration, investigating the ways in which contemporary definitions of aesthetics and art making are connected to issues of gender identity and sexuality. Inspired by the feminist artists of the 1970s, she reframes and subverts art-historical and societal conventions surrounding women and beauty.<br>Antoni creates intimate, ritualized encounters between her chosen materials and her own body, which has become her essential tool. In <em>Touch</em>, which was commissioned for SITE Santa Fe in 2002, she balances on a tightrope, a skill she has sought to master. Here, on the beach in front of her childhood home on Grand Bahama Island, the artist walks a line that is parallel to the horizon. Dressed in sky blue, she enters the landscape from outside the frame. When the wire dips under her weight, it appears to touch the horizon, creating the illusion that she is walking on the water. Like many of Antoni’s works, <em>Touch</em> records a relationship—a moment of contact—and reveals the artist’s longing to bridge the gaps between herself and viewers, between her work and art history.<br>Antoni begins with an idea of artistic process that dictates the final result and meaning. The idea of <em>Touch</em> derives from <em>Moor</em> (2001), a work in which the artist created a rope out of her and her friends’ belongings; the artist has said that while she intends to walk it, she also questions the impulse. <em>Touch</em> depicts a literal balancing act in order to suggest the state of perfection that many people strive for, including herself. Antoni has said, “<em>Touch</em> is about that moment or that desire to walk on the horizon,” a location that represents hope and the future. She explained that she wants to walk in “this impossible place, a place that cannot be pinpointed . . . on the line of my vision, or along the edge of my imagination.” Since the viewer’s involvement is a crucial element in her work, Antoni asks us to imagine ourselves in her situation and contemplate the meaning of the horizon when she is absent from the scene. As the artist teeters but never falls, she accepts and almost embraces a state of imbalance.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 2002
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Janine Antoni
Artist

Mixed Media
Janine Antoni is a Bahamian–born American artist, who creates contemporary work in performance art, sculpture, and photography. Antoni's work focuses on process and the transitions between the making and finished product, often portraying feminist ideals. She emphasizes the human body in her pieces, such as her mouth, hair, eyelashes, and, through technological scanning, her brain. Antoni uses her body as a tool of creation or as the subject of her pieces, exploring intimacy between the spectator and the artist. Her work blurs the distinction between performance art and sculpture.
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More by Janine Antoni
Ingrown
2000 · Chromogenic print, edition number eight of eight
Tangent
2000 · Chromogenic print in artist's frame; edition number one of ten
Caryatid
2000 · Chromogenic print, artist's frame and broken vessel (cobalt blue glazed porcelain balustre with gold ceramic ornamentation)
2038
2000 · Chromogenic print, edition number four of ten
Mortar and Pestle
1999 · Chromogenic print
Coddle
1999 · Silver dye-bleach print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Janine Antoni
- Year
- 2002
- Watts ID
- WW-2002-102081
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





