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Art, gender, power, and the F word: an interview with Coco Fusco.


by Copeland, Colette
Afterimage • March-April, 2008 •

Coco Fusco is a New York City-based interdisciplinary artist, writer, professor, and cultural critic. For the past twenty years, her work has been presented around the world to much acclaim including in the Whitney Biennial, Sydney Biennale, Johannesburg Biennial, Kwangju Biennale, and Shanghai Biennale. She has published four books and is currently an associate professor at Columbia University's School of the Arts.

Over the past seven years, I have had the privilege of experiencing her work, hearing her lecture, and engaging her in dialogue. The questions posed during this interview originate from a conversation started in Fall 2003, when Fusco was the keynote speaker at the Society for Photographic Education conference in New Jersey (which I co-chaired). She spoke eloquently about her research concerning racial taxonomy in American photography, which resulted in the exhibition and book Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self. Our most recent conversation occurred during her Fall 2007 Fringe Festival performance in Philadelphia and subsequent lecture at the University of Pennsylvania, where she shared her current research on gender and war.

COLETTE COPELAND: In Jean Fisher's essay from your book The Bodies That Were Not Ours: And Other Writings (2001) she writes that your work "employs a whole gamut of subversive tactics, from the scholarly text to parody, satire and 'shape shifting' that frustrate attempts at categorization and assimilation." Your artistic identity spans many dimensions--university professor, cultural theorist, curator, and performance and multi-media visual artist. How do the different facets of your practice inform/complement or compete with each other? Most people would be satisfied succeeding in just one of those fields. Is Fisher's assumption valid? What drives your desire to work across so many disciplines?

COCO FUSCO: The first artists I studied with in the 1970s and early 1980s were interdisciplinary in their approach. The person who I consider my mentor has written novels, run an underground press, made photographs, installations, experimental films, and sculpture. I learned to approach artmaking by starting with ideas and then figuring out what media would be best for the realization of the work. Many artists I admire--Allan Sekula, Mary Kelly, and Dan Graham come to mind--write in addition to making visual art. It is really not so unusual. I write in order to feel like I am thinking clearly, so writing accompanies just about everything I do. Because performance is ephemeral, many practitioners of the medium document their acts with written documents--chronicles, seripts, lists of ideas or actions, instructions, etc.

CC: We've spoken before about the role of research in your work and its importance. During your recent trip to Philadelphia, we briefly discussed how the art world mistrusts research within artistic practice. Perhaps this is due to the residual myth about artists creating in vacuums. Or perhaps this could be attributed to the residue of formalism. Could you address this mistrust and then expand upon how your research becomes synthesized into your practice?

CF: My work explores social and political forces and processes--to be able to understand my material, I have to get out in the world and get into the library from time to time. Art involves thought and engages the mind, not just the senses. However, in the current anti-intellectual arts environment, it is not uncommon for artists and critics to demonize those artists who speak lucidly about their artistic practice. It never ceases to amaze me that many artists and critics continue to mystify creativity, so as to make it seem as though it does not involve the intellect. I am not so sure if there is a mistrust of research or what is perceived as intellectual or scholarly activity. My sense is that many artists see intellectualism as detrimental or even anathema to their imaginative or creative capacities--they have bought into a view of artmaking that is utterly romantic. To a degree, this is attributable to the myths about artistic creation taking place in a vacuum. But I also think that many artists are just plain insecure about their intellectual abilities or their capacity to verbalize their thoughts. Either that, or they are convinced that their public personae will be more attractive if they attribute their creativity to magic, intuition, dreams, or the paranormal. They are often terrified that they will seem less unique, and therefore less marketable as geniuses if their work is explained in relation to other social or cultural phenomena.

I do all kinds of research--sometimes I find myself fishing through archives and special collections, and sometimes I travel somewhere and just sit and listen to people and observe. Sometimes I seek out people to interview because of their experiences or knowledge of a subject. Sometimes I turn myself into a kind of apprentice and study with others. Sometimes I watch a zillion bad movies that I buy in supermarkets and discount stories. The method is determined by the project.

CC: You are a self-proclaimed feminist, and your work explores issues of gender and power, examining the body politic--women as victims of violence and in your current work, women as the perpetrators of violence. When and how did feminism become a dirty word and why are young women so reluctant to associate themselves with the "F" word? I find it extremely frustrating that my students have such skewed notions about feminism.

CF: I think there has always been resistance to feminism. It has never been a dominant discourse among women. However, I do think that there was a period in which more women in academic contexts and arts milieu felt comfortable identifying themselves as feminists. I do remember that when I started teaching full time in the early '90s, I was surprised to find that so many of my female art students were openly hostile to feminist ideas and feminist art, though they knew very little about feminist theory or the history of feminist art in the '70s. What they had absorbed were all the negative stereotypes that were circulating in popular culture. I am not saying that all women students are antifeminist, but I do think that in the '90s it became quite common for young women to believe that in order to be successful professionally, they had to distance themselves from any sort of identity politics. I often tell students that girls and young women do enjoy more equality in the early stages of their lives nowadays (thanks to feminism) and as a result they see less of a need for a feminist politics that is critical of the status quo. But I do think that women over thirty-five continue to experience social and economic inequities that are the result of our operating in what is still a patriarchal society.

CC: Let's talk about your latest work. What struck me about your Fringe Festival performance, "Room of One's Own: Women and Power in the New America" (in Philadelphia in September 2007), was how subversively language is used to rationalize horrific acts. Your monologue really keyed in on this and the "briefing" convinced the audience of the necessity of torture in the name of freedom and security. Could you speak about your choice of language for the monologue?

CF: My character is an active duty soldier and an interrogator. She speaks in the piece as a representative of the military in an official capacity. Therefore, it is her job to rationalize whatever the military does in the name of American interests and patriotic duty. I have followed the various investigations into prisoner abuse at U.S. military prisons since 2004, as well as studying statements and speeches by Pentagon, State Department, and Justice Department officials. I am amazed by their ability to make torture seem necessary, reasonable, and not violent. The semantic games they engage in were what inspired me to write the monologue in the way I did. The liberals who make up my audience generally believe that torture is bad, but they are not likely to have spent time thinking about the arguments that are being used to permit it, or the reasons why we allow it to happen through our passivity.

CC: Another aspect of the performance was how the surveillance cameras created a stage or spectacle, literally a theater of cruelty. I recently read Stephen Eisenman's book, The Abu Ghraib Effect (2007). In his essay entitled, "Theater of Cruelty," Eisenman states that the Abu Ghraib images like the lynching images are rooted in the art historical and mass cultural tradition of theatricality and display. The acts of torture were performed for the camera. The perpetrators consciously performed their roles conscious of the camera as the "audience." In your performance, we (the audience) were implicated as we witnessed the interrogation on the surveillance screens. We watched with enraptured revulsion, unable to intercede. I'm not sure I have a question here--perhaps your thoughts on interrogation as performance.

cf: I have used video in most of my performances in different ways. For this work, I wanted to emulate the ways that the military uses video recordings and other media in interrogations and in briefings. Cameras are present at interrogations in military prisons: to produce as a record, to create documents to be used in training, and as a means of transmission of interrogation proceedings to intelligence analysts who watch via closed circuit television to determine whether sources are providing anything "actionable." PowerPoint presentations are standard in military pedagogy and informational sessions so I combine both of these in my show.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]


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COPYRIGHT 2008 Visual Studies Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.


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