After getting the idea for the title of this blog
post, I realized it reminded me of one of the greatest conceptual artists of
all time, a.k.a. the grandmother of performance art, Marina Abramović. Anyone
not familiar with her work, I warmly invite you to get acquainted with her
through the documentary Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present or if possible, get even closer by going to some of her
exhibitions. For me, seeing her work up close is as you can almost feel her
presence, especially if she is not in the artwork itself. She gets through. She
is direct and loud. This is why she heavily influenced the perception of an
artwork, by using her own body as a form of art instead of repeating the
well-known brush and paint practice.
Marina Abramović's Rhythm 0 Exhibit at the Museum of Parallel Narratives in Barcelona in 2011 (photograph by Rafael Vargas)
By association, I want to use her philosophical approach to try to
explain the idea behind: the body is the puppet in stop-motion. Apparently,
during performances, Marina uses the power of the crowd which gives her
strength to push herself to the limit and by doing this she uncovers an
unleashed potential found in her state of mind as a performer. By this method,
she both affirms her identity through the audience and what is more, she gets
the audience involved who often become an archetypical embodiment of the nature
of humanity.
So, I think therein lies a reason why we enjoy watching and making
films about ourselves (both direct and indirect). Our bodies become an object,
as in Marina’s performances and that context becomes very interesting to
observe because you can project and immerse yourself within another body. Quite
probably it’s what voyeurs do, and if given the opportunity each of us has an
urge to act upon these tendencies, but the fear of getting caught keeps us
docile. So, to a certain point, we all indeed are inherently voyeuristic.
Pornography wouldn’t be such a big hit otherwise. Not to mention Facebook.
Henceforth I am sharing some examples of pixelation animation where the authors used their bodies as puppets in inspiring ways, and I purposely picked recent smart, but underrated works, instead of the well-known legends such as Cohl, Svankmayer, McLaren, etc...
Fundamentally, we go deeper and become more
profound after reviving our past and future via the universal intimate images
of our bodies. Because, actually all we do is mimic nature through ourselves.
Basically, if you ask me it’s what we came here to do: leave a mark, give
something to this world, and in return learn something new about ourselves.
While working on my new animation I realized how
every painstaking effort to animate an object myself is a bad version of
time-lapsing flowers in full growth. Just give it a chance. It will be
worthwhile. I promise.
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