Dear Don, et.al.
If you could not read the link I forwarded, I did a cut and paste of it
(sans photos) below...
> 
> >I couldn't get your message. Our screens are filtered. -Don
> ----------
> 
> >>Well - part of the proverb has already come to fruition:
> http://www.poopreport.com/Intellectual/Content/Art/art.html
> > 
> >> When shit is worth money, the poor will be born without assholes - 
> >> Brazilian Proverb 
> 

Merda d'Artista, or, You Call That Shit Art?
Posted 4.11.02002 by Sarah 

Digestion and excretion. Elimination of solid waste. Making number two.
Taking a big ol' dump. The names for this natural bodily process are many,
and for eons upon eons, humans have taken an inordinate amount of interest
in their own shit production. Heck, even primates at the zoo are frequently
seen flinging or consuming their own feces, so there's a long evolutionary
tradition at work. But to what end? 
Piero Manzoni: Merda d'Artista (1961).  
 
The culmination of the evolutionary process, some might say, is the human
desire to create. The human creative impulse takes form across a broad
spectrum, ranging from the profane to the sacred -- from one end we create
shit, and from the other, art. 

Thus is seems only fitting (that is, if you follow my dubious line of
reasoning) that the two would merge to form the ultimate in human creation. 

It is precisely this merger which Italian artist Piero Manzoni depicted in
his 1961 piece "Merda d'Artista," or "Artist's Shit": He sealed his crap in
a bunch of cans, signed and mounted them, and sold them as art. 

There are also two relatively well-known modern artists who have chosen to
explore this line of imagery, to better our understanding of the human
condition. Or maybe they were all just trying to come up with creative ways
of getting shit into a museum setting. In either case, I think they did
their duty (hahahaha! oh, I kill me) admirably. 
Chris Ofili: The Holy Virgin Mary (1996)  
 

Take the British artist Chris Ofili. You may recall his painting depicting
the Virgin Mary with a breast sculpted from elephant dung, which created a
huge ruckus a few years ago when displayed in a New York museum. But this is
not his only work incorporating huge clumps of shit. In fact, he often uses
elephant dung to prop up his paintings in shows. 

Ofili is quoted in Salon.com as saying, "Somehow it makes the painting feel
more relaxed, instead of being pinned upon the wall like it's being
crucified ... [The painting can] stand in its own shit and watch the other
paintings being crucified on the wall." Yeah! 

The titles of some of Ofili's other pieces speak for themselves: there's
"Bag of Shit," "Shithead," and he even held a Shit Sale in 1993 in London.
However, this is still all in the realm of the familiar and "earthy." 

Yet another artist, Belgian Wim Delvoye, elevated the production of shit to
an inhuman, impersonal level in his conceptual artwork "Cloaca." This
installation piece consisted of a huge machine of glass, tubes, wires, and
pumps that, when fed a meal on one end, would "digest" it using a blender
and jars of enzymes. 
Wim Delvoye: Cloaca (2000)  
 

According to the Artnet review (which was highly entertaining reading in
itself), in a couple of days "the food came out of a filtering unit as
something close to genuine, human shit." A process which, apparently, made
grown men blanch and little girls cry. What more could you ask from a piece
of art? The turds were subsequently signed and sold � la Piero Manzoni.
(Delvoye is currently at work on his ongoing project: tattooing a herd of
pigs.) 

Art and shit: a confluence which these artists see as oh-so-natural, but a
conjunction that remains disturbing to the average museum-goer. Yet why
should that be so? Why should we not embrace humanity in all its shitty
glory? Perhaps this is a question for art critics of future ages to answer,
when they find petrified lumps of crap in the museum storage room. 

 



 

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