The Singing Sculpture

The Singing Sculpture by the art duo Gilbert & George is well known, though I just discovered it recently. Info from wikipedia:

Whilst still students, Gilbert & George made The Singing Sculpture, which was performed at the National Jazz and Blues Festival in 1969 and at the Nigel Greenwood Gallery in 1970. For this performance they covered their heads and hands in multi-coloured metalised powders, stood on a table, and sang along and moved to a recording of Flanagan and Allen's song "Underneath the Arches", sometimes for a day at a time. The suits they wore for this became a uniform for them. They rarely appear in public without wearing them.

It is also unusual for one of the pair to be seen without the other. The pair regard themselves as "living sculptures". They refuse to dissociate their art from their everyday lives, insisting that everything they do is art. They were listed as among the fifty best-dressed over-50s by The Guardian in March 2013.



It's now become common to see street performers painted in metallic paint. They pretend to be unmoving statues until someone gives them some money, and then they may move abruptly. You can find them in the downtown areas of many big cities, wherever there are a lot of tourists.

I wonder if Gilbert & George's Singing Sculpture was the original inspiration for this form of performance art? I haven't been able to find any direct confirmation of this, but nor have I been able to find any examples of 'Bronze Man' performers before 1969.

More info: "Gilbert & George's Singing sculpture"
     Posted By: Alex - Fri Aug 30, 2024
     Category: Performance Art | 1960s





Comments
Made it to 1 min, then bailed.
Posted by Virtual in Carnate on 08/30/24 at 08:39 AM









Rules for posting: 1) No spam. 2) Don't be a jerk.