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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
20.04.2008
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

If you hadn’t heard, the senior thesis of Yale art major Aliza Shvarts was going to destroy our civilization. Shvarts told the Yale Daily News Thursday that in the last nine months, she artificially inseminated herself “repeatedly,” terminating each resultant pregnancy using abortifacient drugs. She supposedly documented this process on a film that was to be displayed, alongside the miscarriages themselves, in Yale’s Green Hall next week.

The story was quickly Drudged into a mushroom cloud of American cultural conflict. Look at all of these pissed-off people. The rub, courtesy of Shvarts' patriarchal overlords at Yale:

The entire project is an art piece, a creative fiction designed to draw attention to the ambiguity surrounding form and function of a woman's body.

She is an artist and has the right to express herself through performance art.

Had these acts been real, they would have violated basic ethical standards and raised serious mental and physical health concerns.

Touche, Aliza. Though I must say I’m a little disappointed. Shvartz’s stunt was obviously outside the bounds of conventional discourse on reproductive rights. But after going through the intended stages of grief (suppressing nausea, condemning the act as conceptually lazy, pondering free speech, and the horror of seeing a woman casually exploit privilege), I was still mulling over whether to cast the scarlet A.

As pure provocation, it engages the academic and the aesthetic. But ironically, I felt Shvarts’ proposed performance did not implicate the right to choose at all. A concern for safety and for privacy are key tentpoles of abortion-rights jurisprudence. This act, both unsafe in execution and spectacular in design, had loudly excused itself from the prevailing rationale for the right to have an abortion. I supposed Shvarts’ behavior wouldn’t quell the perception that abortions are for privileged, irreligious women (they’re not), but her flagrant violation of reproductive ethics (and law and logic) could be a convenient defense against the mounted hordes decrying “abortion on demand.”

But as art, it likewise failed. Some people feel that autonomy itself justifies art; I disagree. Compelling 20th century notions of aesthetics also require singularity, and Shvarts’s gambit would have provided none--idly relying on a “talent” shared with half the human population. And her bumbling explanation of the “real” project, released Friday, added nothing to its aesthetic or intellectual worth.

A sculptor friend at Yale once dug a tunnel out of her studio in secret as her own "subversive" final project. It’s a shame that Shvarts’ obvious interest in reproductive freedoms couldn't find an equally wry, yet workable outlet--and that it doesn’t include a respect for the significance of pregnancy, parenthood, or restraint.

--Dayo Olopade

Posted: Sunday, April 20, 2008 6:35 PM with 6 comment(s)

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aeromonas said:

But Dayo, what if Shvarts' piece isn't even ABOUT abortion?  And what if her admission that it was faked, is ITSELF part of the performance?   Talk about mastering the art of po mo tricksterism!  Give that gal an A+!

Back in 1972 German conceptual artist Rudolf Schwarzkogler (Surname with an familiar ring, no?  Both 'Shvartz' and 'Schwarzkogler' have their root in the German word for 'black.') purported to amputate his own penis in stages.  Except that he didn't.  The penis amputated was a clay dummy.  (One wonders whether he made an exact replica of the actual member or took some poetic license.)  What if Shvarts' actual subject is body art itself and the nature of hoaxes and whether Schwarzkogler's "art" was any less valid because it turned to be phony?

My advice to Ms. Shvarts would be to produce some back-dated "notes" outlining her plans for the whole thing, the original hoax and its revelation, along with copies of the Yale Daily News and the NY Sun stories and the list of pissed off people, and display them all along with the blood smeared plastic and display them in one of Yale's galleries.  It'll be hailed as a work of genius.  As things stand, she merely looks like a coward and a tool.

April 20, 2008 8:36 PM

Crock1701 said:

I respond the same way I responded when I saw it in the YDN on Thursday: "Artists, eh (shrugs shoulders)"

April 20, 2008 10:48 PM

AaronBBrown said:

More links to Michelle Malkin, as if she and the ilk who inhabit her hate site are representative of conservative America, and mainstream conservative thought.

Fuck TNR, and all those individuals writers here who think it's OK to link to Malkin's anti-American site.

What, is Michelle sponsoring TNR like BP now, is she paying to get links posted here?

That wouldn't surprise me.

PS Notice how little traffic and comments you're supposed environmental blog sponsored by BP is getting? You can't get a little bit pregnant guys, if you're going to be a whore, then at least have the honor and dignity to stand up and be proud of what you are, otherwise you're a lying deceptive whore, which is significantly worse in my book.

April 20, 2008 11:23 PM

blackton said:

The woman is simply an attention seeking fruitcake and should be treated as such. What next, is she going to start chopping off her own body parts to express the inviolability of the body? Actually, though I wouldn't call it art, it would at least amuse me more than this stunt. (no, not really)

April 21, 2008 10:27 AM

bigfish said:

Shvarts, like many artists, need to realize that "shocking" doesn't equal "artistically valuable."  I could hide inside bushes in suburbia and jump out in the early morning to scare moms going to work, all the while videotaping it, and pretend to be "initiating a dialogue about the meaning of post-industrial suburban normative expectations of safety," but I'd still just be scaring people, and its value to society would be zero.  (And to all you Yale artists who want to steal this idea, I thought of it first!)

It is meaningless publicity stunts like this that cause the Crocks of the world to tune out artists and shrug.

And Aaron, as much as I agree that Malkin is bile, if Dayo asserts that a lot of people are pissed off about this "art," it makes sense to give evidence.  It's better than saying so without backing it up.

April 21, 2008 10:34 AM

blackton said:

aaron, jeez. I think Michelle Malkin is an idiot, but I sure get a good laugh out of her, and when she comes on TV I turn down the volume and just imagine what I would do to that hot minx. She is eye candy nothing more, but don't spit on my candy please.

And I go to the environmental blog, just because I don't comment much doesn't mean I don't read it. Mostly I have nothing to add. Plant more trees ain't something I am going to find the need to concur with or certainly not dispute.

April 21, 2008 10:36 AM