Parallel Public: Experimental Art in Late East Germany

Parallel Public: Experimental Art in Late East Germany

by Sara Blaylock
Parallel Public: Experimental Art in Late East Germany

Parallel Public: Experimental Art in Late East Germany

by Sara Blaylock

Hardcover

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Overview

How East German artists made their country’s experimental art scene a form of (counter) public life.

Experimental artists in the final years of the German Democratic Republic did not practice their art in the shadows, on the margins, hiding away from the Stasi’s prying eyes. In fact, as Sara Blaylock shows, many cultivated a critical influence over the very bureaucracies meant to keep them in line, undermining state authority through forthright rather than covert projects. In Parallel Public, Blaylock describes how some East German artists made their country’s experimental art scene a form of (counter) public life, creating an alternative to the crumbling collective underpinnings of the state.
Blaylock examines the work of artists who used body-based practices—including performance, film, and photography—to create new vocabularies of representation, sharing their projects through independent networks of dissemination and display. From the collective films and fashion shows of Erfurt's Women Artists Group, which fused art with feminist political action, to Gino Hahnemann, the queer filmmaker and poet who set nudes alight in city parks, these creators were as bold in their ventures as they were indifferent to state power.
Parallel Public is the first work of its kind on experimental art in East Germany to be written in English. Blaylock draws on extensive interviews with artists, art historians, and organizers; artist-made publications; official reports from the Union of Fine Artists; and Stasi surveillance records. As she recounts the role culture played in the GDR’s rapid decline, she reveals East German artists as dissenters and witnesses, citizens and agents, their work both antidote to and diagnosis of a weakening state.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262046633
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 03/01/2022
Pages: 328
Sales rank: 1,143,836
Product dimensions: 7.30(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.12(d)

About the Author

Sara Blaylock is Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Minnesota Duluth.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Born into Socialism (1)
1 "Negative-Hostile Attitudes": Artists Work their Stasi Files (27)
2 The Body in Ruins: Photographs by Thomas Florschuetz and Performances by the Auto-Perforation Artists (53)
3 The Taboo of the Ordinary, the Valor of the Misfit: Photographs by Gundula Schulze Eldowy and Films by Cornelia Schleime (89)
4 Making a Scene: Films by Gino Hahnemann (121)
5 Types, Kinds, and Genres of Art: The Intermedia I Festival in 1985 (155)
6 The Collective Impossible: Erfurt's Women Artists Group (187)
7 DIY Public Sphere: A Counterdiscourse in the Publication Anschlag and the Gallery Eigen+Art (215)
Coda: There is no East German Art without East Germany (247)
Acknowledgments (253)
Notes (257)
Bibliography (287)
Index (307)

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Sara Blaylock’s pioneering book moves beyond the idea that art in the GDR was monolithic, isolated, or secretive. Instead of merely reacting to state power, the performance-based artworks presented in this highly readable study suggest forms of being and working together that echo the ethical and political commitments that once, long ago, accompanied the GDR’s foundation.”
Sven Spieker, University of California, Santa Barbara

 
“The first comprehensive English analysis and reevaluation of late East Germany’s experimental art, drawing on oral histories, official and private discourse, and surveillance records.”
Angelika Richter, weißensee kunsthochschule berlin / weißensee school of art and design; author of The Law of the Scene: Gender Criticism, Performance Art, and the Second Public Sphere in the Late GDR

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