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Carolee Schneemann talks about her inspirations, works and stories behind them.
FAAR, 2020
Interview for FAAR with Claudia Schnugg, interviewed by Lee Anderson
2006
RK: This is an interview with Ms. Gina Grimes, January 11, 2006. Thanks a lot for taking the time to speak to me. GG: I"m glad to be here.
The Brooklyn Rail, 2020
Regarding her book "Wages Against Artwork: Decommodified Labor and the Claims of Socially Engaged Art."
Contemporary Theatre Review, 2012
Whereas South African apartheid supplies historical shorthand for national "processes" that assert the state through violent ideological repressionincluding centuries of colonial rule-truth commissions offer another kind of process that again intends to advance the futurity of the state. The logics of truth commissions shift state narratives from the domain of repressive (police, prisons) to affirmative powers (public and state-funded testimony, radio, television). In this important book, Catherine Cole wisely observes that commissions still "grapple with the ultimate failure of traditional jurisprudence in the face of contending demands for justice, reparation, acknowledgement, mourning, healing, reconciliation, and the promulgation of public memory" (x). Truth commissions can only attempt to write the future of the past. Cole examines the transitional justice process in South Africa as a performance practice that treats the lived and felt impossibilities of truth and reconciliation as the ongoing labors of postapartheid time. Cole finds in South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) theatrical and performative protocols of jurisprudence that stage manage court-like arenas of speech and hearing. She shows how the TRC makes use of public testimony and "the popular" for the purposes of reinventing the authority and stability of the state and of society in the complicated and polyglossic processes of "transition." The TRC's deliberately public dramaturgy "embraced performance-that is, embodied enactment before an audience-as a central feature of its operations" (xii). Cole describes the fascinating TRC hearings, which began in April 1996, as an epic production designed to study 34 years of state offenses (1960-1994).
Interview with Barbara Kruger
Interviewed by Tennessee Mynott-Rudland Girls Will Be Girls http://www.girlswillbegirls.org/home/2017/7/17/interview-with-elodie-silberstein Published 18th of July 2017
CE: Okay. I want to start with just your life growing up. Could you just tell me, give me a picture of what that was like? AS: Yes, I had a very pleasant life. We, as I said, had an au pair who lived with us, and I played with her a lot. I had friends. We went to school, we took summer vacations, we went swimming and ice skating-swimming in a pool, of course; Austria's inland. We just had a very pleasant life. I had a lot of friends. Some were Jewish, some were not Jewish, didn't seem to matter. I was not conscious of it at all, the fact that we were Jewish. My mother was more conscious of the fact that we were Jewish. I remember that in particular. We were not religious. We belonged to a synagogue because everybody did. Every Jewish person was registered as Jewish and belonged to some kind of temple or synagogue. But we were very inactive. We would go on occasion, but we did not observe any of the minor holidays. I remember we observed just the two major holidays, Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah. That's when we would go to temple, but beyond that we really did nothing. We didn't have Shabbat candles on Friday night, we didn't have a Seder, we didn't observe Hanukkah. As a matter of fact, we had a Christmas tree. I felt we were very assimilated Austrians who just happened to be Jewish. There was a Jewish section where a lot of Jewish people lived, mostly people who had come in from Poland, and we lived in a totally different area. CE: Did your parents talk about being Jewish to you? AS: Not that much, not that much. And they also had friends who were Jewish and non-Jewish. It was not a major factor in my life at all. CE: So would you say your major identity, then, was being Austrian? AS: Absolutely. CE: And what about school? AS: I went to a public school, grammar school. And as I said, I had friends, Jewish and non-Jewish. We did have a subject called religion. Austria was a Catholic country, and so the Catholic children once a week had Catholic studies and we had once a week Jewish studies. I remember the teacher; none of us wanted to be there, and we gave her a very hard time. CE: (laughs) AS: Her name was Ms. Wolf. I remember it to this day. And I'm so sorry, Ms. Wolf, that I gave you such a hard time, because she tried her best, but we really didn't want to be there and we were not that interested. CE: Were you a good student? AS: Yes. I wouldn't say I was outstanding, but I was a good student. CE: And would you say your parents were upper class? Middle class? AS: Middle class. CE: Middle class. AS: Yeah. My father was very well educated, and my mother went to a private high school, actually, but she didn't go to college. My father had some university-I'm not quite sure-but he was a very, very bright man. CE: And could you talk a little bit more about his profession? AS: Well, he worked in an international bank, which it turned out saved his life, the fact that after the Anschluss they helped some of their middle and top management people get out. 1 It was called Banque des pays de l'Europe centrale; it was based in Paris, and my father spoke fluent French. 1The Anschluss was the annexation of Austria by Germany on March 12, 1938. CE: Could you spell what you just said? AS: Oh, my goodness. CE: Oh, if not-AS: Banque laCE: If you-AS: I'm not sure I can. (laughs) CE: Say it one more time, then. AS: Banque des pays de l'Europe centrale. CE: Okay. AS: And in Austria it was called Länder Bank, which means "a bank of all lands." So, obviously, they had a branch in Vienna. And after the Anschluss, after a while when it became so dangerous, they helped some of their middle and top management people get out. As I said, my father was very well educated. He was a very wonderful man; everybody loved him, including me. (laughs) I had a marvelous relationship with him. And he lived to be eightyfive, and he really wasn't ill; he just one day went to bed and didn't wake up, at age eighty-five. CE: We should all be so lucky. AS: Yes, and he had all his marbles. He was very bright. He was an excellent chess player. In later years, when they moved to Clearwater [Florida] many years later, he was the chess coach at Clearwater High School. CE: Oh, wonderful. AS: And he played correspondence chess. So, he was a very special figure in my life. CE: So you were very close to him as a child. AS: I was very close to him. CE: And what about your mother? As a child, your relationship? AS: As a child-to be quite honest, I was always closer to my father. My mother was very, very protective. My mother is-my parents were married six years before I was born. My mother was told she would never have children. When I was born, I was a little princess, of course, and my mother was very protective of us, too much so. Of course, I will never forget what she did to send us to England; that must have been such a horrendous thing for her to do, because she really watched over us so, so carefully. Of course the doctors were wrong. I was born, and four years later my brother was born. She really thought these two children were a miracle, and she was really going to watch over them. CE: And tell us about your brother as a child.
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