A reexamination of the role of female avant-gardes in the fields of
performance and dance: a comprehensive publication with over 2500 color
illustrations, together with documentary material on Valentine de
Saint-Point, Marinetti, Futurism, Canudo, Russian Ballets, Cubism, Abstraction, German and
American Expressionism (original photographs, manuscript letters,
drawings, woodcuts, manifestos, first editions and ephemera).
“Feminine
Futures”, an exhibition curated by Adrien Sina, was staged for the
Performa Biennial at the Italian Cultural Institute in New York in
2009. It focused on the role of early twentieth-century female
avant-gardes in the field of performance and dance. Structured around a
unique personal collection, it included a significant number of
previously unpublished pieces, some of which subsequently featured in
“Danser sa vie” at the Centre Georges Pompidou in 2011-2012.
Texts by Adrien Sina, Giovanni Dotoli, RoseLee
Goldberg (Performa), Nancy G. Moore, Philippe de Lustrac, Sander L.
Gilman, Frédérique Poissonnier, Maja Durinovic,
Sarah Wilson, Patricia Guinard, Eric-Noël Dyvorne, Barbara
Ballardin.
Feminine Futures. Historical Section, the first half of the twentieth century
Loïe Fuller, Isadora Duncan, Anna Duncan, Ruth St. Denis, Lou
Goodale Bigelow, Mata Hari, Cléo de Mérode, Valentine de
Saint-Point, Sarah Bernhardt, Rose Caron, Cécile Sorel, Natalie
Clifford Barney, Renée Vivien, Liane de Pougy, Colette,
Rachilde, Jane Catulle-Mendès, Hedwig Reicher, Maud Allan,
Lillah McCarthy, Mina Loy, Gertrude Hoffman, Anna Pavlova, Vera
Petrovna Fokina Ida Rubinstein, Tamara Karsavina, Désirée
Lubowska, Sonia Delaunay, Eleonora Duse, Lyda Borelli, Jia Ruskaja,
Giannina Censi, Enif Angelini Robert, Karola Zopegni, Elena Sangro,
Evan Burrows Fontaine, Josephine Baker, Mary Wigman, Charlotte Rudolph,
Gret Palucca, Hedwig Hagemann, Valeska Gert, Anita Berber, Tashamira,
Tilly Losch, Lucia Joyce, Berenice Abbott, Margaret Morris, Loïs
Hutton, Lizica Codreano, Ursula & Gertrude Falke, Edith von
Schrenck, Laura Österreich, Yvonne Georgi Chari-Lindis, Sent
M’ahesa, Niddy Impekoven, Valeria Kratina, Dorothea Albu, Erika
Lindner, Martha Graham, Barbara Morgan, Doris Humphrey, Ruth Page, Myra
Kinch
and their intellectual partners
F.T. Marinetti, Ricciotto Canudo, Vaslav Nijinsky, Mikhail Fokin,
Léon Bakst, Serge de Diaghilev, Enrico Prampolini, Ardengo
Soffici, Luigi Russolo, Umberto Boccioni, Guillaume Apollinaire,
Gabriele d’Annunzio, Morgan Russell, Vivian Postel du Mas,
Auguste Rodin, Gerda Wegener, Gino Baldo, Pablo Picasso, Jean Cocteau,
Anton Giulio Bragaglia, Francesco Balilla Pratella, Mario Castagneri,
Tato, Elio Luxardo, Harold Eugene Edgerton, Nelson Morpurgo, Armando
Mazza, Renato Bertelli, Rudolf von Laban, Harald Kreutzberg, Hugo
Erfurth, Siegfried Enkelmann, Isamu Noguchi, Maurice Seymour, Erick
Hawkins
Some intellectual and artistic filiations after the 1960's
Aube Elléouët, Gina Pane, Michel Journiac, Carolee
Schneemann, Yoko Ono, Hannah Wilke, ORLAN, Marina Abramovic, Ana
Mendieta, Martin Scorsese, Pina Bausch, Joëlle Bouvier +
Régis Obadia, Sonja Dicquemare, Teiji Furuhashi, Franko B., Ron
Athey
The examination of hitherto unknown source material
– photographs, films or manuscripts unknown to art historians or
public collections opens new horizons here. The premises of modernity
are challenged with new material, in particular the documentation of
ephemeral actions which left few traces.
The reader confronts the very origins of performance and the
interdisciplinary practices that have inspired generations of artists
through the twentieth century and up to today. A female history of the
avant-garde is pioneered here, freed from the hegemony of the
“isms”, defined by dominant male artists. A new repertoire
of creations and acts of dissidence may be traced through this
magnificent archive and book.
This publication is depicts as well a history of photography. An
exceptional filed of convergence is opened in the encounter between
dance, movement, body language and photography. Genuine artistic
strategies remain behind technical processes and their specific
pictorial qualities. The photographic pieces of “Feminine
Futures” are also witnesses of the history of photography. Half a
century of imaginative mutation between the years 1890' and 1940'...
From albumen paper, silver or radium bromides to silver prints, a large
chromatic spectrum of chemical experiments are gathered, between
stability and self-destruction of the visible matter.
Peaks of plastic and artistic mastery are reached in the collaboration
between photographers and choreographers such as Isaiah West Taber or
Harry C. Ellis with Loïe Fuller, Hixon-Connelly or Herman Mishkin
with Vera Fokina and Anna Pavlova, Lou Goodale Bigelow or Nickolas
Muray with Ruth St. Denis, Isadora Duncan and Arnold Genthe, Charlotte
Rudolph and Hugo Erfurth with Mary Wigman and Gret Palucca, Barbara
Morgan and Chris Alexander or Isamu Noguchi with Martha Graham, Maurice
Seymour and Siegfried Enkelmann with Ruth Page and Harald Kreutzberg...
Feminine Futures, curated by
Adrien Sina for Performa 09, displayed at the Italian Cultural
Institute an exceptional collection on early 20th century feminine
performative contributions to the European and American avantgardes.
These critical and radical experiments played the most fundamental role
in the birth of performance as a discipline, establishing for the first
time the artist's body in a conceptual action as a work of art. Over
360 paper-based pieces were presented on two floors in 32 specially
designed plexiglas boxes and show-cases: original photographs, letters,
manuscripts, drawings, manifestos, first editions and ephemera... This
corpus of mostly rare items, not existing in any museum collection or
unknown to art historians, aimed to open new reasearch perspectives for
rethinking Futurism.
Broadening the field of Futurism, Feminine Futures explores the wide
range of possibilities leading to the construction of the futurist
woman, surpassing the only marinettian point of view. Without these
competing tensions between Marinetti and some women artists such as
Valentine de Saint-Point and Enif Angiolini Robert, Futurism would
remain a male fantasy made for men and machines.
The feminine contribution to the avant-garde movements is always
under-evaluated, considering women artists as followers or assistants.
It's forgetting about the strength of their critical and radical,
constructive or destructive positions which played the most important
role in the birth of Performance as a new discipline in the field of
the arts, while men were still experimenting traditional mediums such
as painting and sculpture.
Beyond all the ‘isms' initiated by male artists (Futurism,
Expressionism, etc.) female artists are building their own avantgarde
experiments as a reply to originary forces, mostly rooted in the
psychology of desire and the reconstruction of a feminine mythology
which confer them the political power they have lost since the
industrial revolution, up to the point of having less rights than in
their ancestors centuries before.
Strong historical streams link together feminine performative actions
since the origins of political tragedy in ancient Greece, initiated by
Aspasia, cultural and political muse of Pericles, head of the first
democracy, 3rd century BC. Their performances are political,
eroticized, rooted in the figures of ethical and political resistance
to iniquity such as Antigone, Hecuba, Iphigenia or Medea, up to tragedy
and self-sacrifice...
'La
femme, incitatrice charnelle, immole ou soigne, fait couler le sang ou
l'étanche, est guerrière ou infirmière. Elle est
l'individualité de la foule. Voilà pourquoi aucune
révolution ne doit lui rester étrangère'
Valentine de Saint-Point. Manifeste de la Femme Futuriste, 1912.
The ground level
was structured around the French aristocrat Valentine de Saint- Point,
the first and only woman artist to be part of the executive board of
the Futurist movement, the only futurist who performed in New York
(1917). In her ‘Manifesto of the Futurist Woman' (1912) and
‘Futurist Manifesto of Lust' (1913), she theorized broadened
territories of artistic activities, linking questions of flesh, desire,
gender, war, to political and civilization issues. These ideas were the
components of the ‘Feminine Action' that she initiated as a new
cross-disciplinary field. Her ‘Art of Flesh' was developed with
Ricciotto Canudo, another avant-garde leading challenger for F. T.
Marinetti in this stimulating love triangle.
The ‘flesh-work' encompasses the history of tragedy, dance and
performance, and culminates with her conceptual quest ‘we must
make lust into a work of art'. Following her intellectual partnerships,
the exhibition dedicated a large section to F. T. Marinetti, then moved
to the main figures of Futurism such as Luigi Russolo, Enrico
Prampolini, Ardengo Soffici, Anton Giulio Bragaglia, Mario Castagneri,
Nelson Morpurgo, Armando Mazza, Enif Angiolini Robert, through issues
of theater, performance, war, eroticism and futurist loves.
The second floor
traced a wider scene of radical experiments, with artists responding to
forces rooted in the psychology of desire and in the reconstruction of
feminine mythologies and political power which persisted in performance
art through the 1960s and beyond. Loïe Fuller, Isadora and Anna
Duncan, Ruth St. Denis, Mata Hari, Gertrude Hoffman, Anna Pavlova, Vera
Fokina, Ida Rubinstein, Josephine Baker, Giannina Censi, Mary Wigman,
Gret Palucca, Hedwig Hagemann, Valeska Gert, Ruth Page, Myra Kinch,
Martha Graham... A film program of mostly unseen early performance
films completed this section.
A history of photography
An exceptional convergence filed is opened in the encounter between
dance, movement, body language and photography. Genuine artistic
strategies remain behind technical processes and their specific
pictorial qualities. The photographic pieces of Feminine Futures are
also witnesses of the history of photography. Half a century of
imaginative mutation between the years 1890' and 1940'... From albumen
paper, silver or radium bromides to silver prints, a large chromatic
spectrum of chemical experiments are gathered, between stability and
selfdestruction of the visible matter.
1 Adrien Sina. « Feminine Futures », pp.
230-235. Catalogue de Performa 09, Back to Futurism. Sous la direction
de RoseLee Goldberg. Performa, New York, 2011.
2 Adrien Sina. « Cérémonies Charnelles », pp.
198-201, « Cérémonies Sacrificielles », pp.
382-383. Catalogue de l'exposition Traces du Sacré. Centre
Pompidou. Paris, 2008.
3 Adrien Sina. « Avant-gardes féminines du début
XXe siècle, dans le champ de la performance et de la danse
», pp. 110-117. Catalogue de l'exposition Danser sa vie - Danse
et arts visuels aux XXe et XXIe siècles. Centre Pompidou. Paris,
2011.
4 Adrien Sina. « Action Féminine - Valentine de
Saint-Point », pp. 44-47. Tate etc., n° 16. Publication
associée à l'exposition Futurism, Tate Modern. Londres,
2009.
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