Marina Abramović
Serbian conceptual and performance artist Marina Abramović talks to John Wilson about her cultural inspirations.
For over more than five decades the Serbian conceptual and performance artist Marina Abramović has used her own body as her artistic medium, exploring the human condition in works that are often feats of endurance, exhaustion and pain. From her earliest works such as Rhythm 0, in which Abramović invited audiences to freely interact with her however they chose, to her long-durational work The Artist is Present, she has put herself in danger at the mercy of audiences all in the name of art.
Abramović talks to John Wilson about her unhappy childhood in the former Yugoslavia with strict parents who had both been war heroes. She recalls how at age 14, a dangerous game of Russian roulette led her to Dostoevsky's novel The Idiot and how the book and its author's life sparked her creative imagination. She also reveals how two films, Alain Resnais' enigmatic 1961 French New Wave classic Last Year at Marienbad, and Pier Paolo Pasolini's 1968 movie Teorema, starring Terence Stamp, have inspired aspects of her work.
Producer: Edwina Pitman
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
Broadcasts
- Thu 26 Sep 2024 11:00Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4
- Sat 28 Sep 2024 19:15Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4
Podcast
-
This Cultural Life
In-depth conversations with some of the world's leading artists and creatives.