Regrouping; the location of art-making, and a redefinition of Bikini Art
“Hi guys! It’s me, the Bikini Artist! I just got home from another exciting show, and boy, am I pooped! What a crazy night. Sometimes its sooooooo hard to get people to pay attention to art… I’ll do just about anything to get you to look at art! Thanks to everyone who came out to the show! I love sharing how much art excites me, and I hope I can help get you excited about art!”
Ok, there. She spoke. Now it’s me, Ms. Emily Vaughn. The girl behind the bikini. And after almost a year of Bikini-artisting all over
First off; it might appear that the Bikini Artist Project is all about me, gallivanting about the city, half naked, pulling out all the stops to get you “excited” about art. I’ll take for granted that you understand the irony; of an educated young woman, an artist at that, trying to participate in the art world. I’m obviously using sex to sell art, and know that it’s a little sick, and more than a little degrading. If you’ve been to any of my shows, you know that I like to teach you about the political atmosphere at the time of an art movement. I often rely on the sexual overtones of any given masterpiece and teach about the sordid details behind these images that float through our precious art history texts. I hope that it would be obvious that this is, on some level, a joke. There is an artist, a painter, a historian, and a performer behind this bizarre spectacle.
Here’s the kicker; it’s not about me anymore. It’s about you. You’re my little Guinea pigs now, and the
So, I graduated. And fueled by god knows what secrets I won’t divulge here, I decided to take Miss Bikini Girl on the road. I wasn’t well prepared for the gallery scene, nor did I feel that I was well connected enough after 4 years at mica to delve into the networking nessesary to become a “successful artist.” I had to remove the project from the art world in order for it to succeed.
My first show took place at a goth club in DC. This was very weird. However, at this venue, I discovered a few new and exciting things about the bikini artist. I was thrilled when people actually got it. Kids that I never would have associated with were approaching me in a setting that I never would have gone to on my own. I was not in a gallery, I was not in a museum; I was in a setting that really had nothing to do with art. This being my first show, I was still working a few of the kinks out. I used the space more for exhibition than performance. I presented my viewers with my Bikini Artist “merchandise,” pin-up photography (self portraiture as well as portraits of other women), and paintings. I also made my first public appearance as the bikini artist; I went to the bathroom to change, and when I came out I attempted to adopt her persona. For the first time, I was faced with my alter ego in a public setting. I was forced to confront where Emily ended and the Bikini Artist began. I was also able to interact with my audience in a way that took down many of the barriers created in a gallery setting. Before, my audience was watching a video in a sanctioned art-viewing area. Now, they were talking to me, looking at my body, and questioning what I was doing directly. It was far more interesting to me as an artist.
Since that first show, I have appeared as the bikini artist in a number of different venues, ranging from dirty
I always take personal joy in “breakthrough moments,” where my viewer understands the scope of the initial project, and questions me about its background, and where it is headed. During on of my shows, a gentleman came up to me with the common request to buy me a drink. I believe in this case, I declined. (I do sometimes go with it! for art’s sake, honestly…) In the following hour, he and I conversed about the bikini artist, and eventually I felt that I had communicated to him an idea that he might not have come to on his own. After our discussion, he was well aware of the subversive feminist ideas inherent in the piece, the historical significance of Manet’s
While these “breakthroughs” are grand and idyllic, I am defiantly not above appreciating the less forgiving audiences. There have been a number of occasions where people defiantly DID NOT get it. There have been audiences that have not been able to interpret the image and presence of the
Any given audience reaction teaches me more about the space between an art piece and its viewer. Only by occupying that space myself am I able to truly experience this happening.

6 Comments:
>There has to be information behind the fact that I am upset. There has to be a reason they felt it was okay to be disrespectful to me. These are the moment I feel will perhaps be the most informative in the bikini artist project’s processes.
Oh, I've been through enough crap like that to know why you would be so angry.Hell, I would be angry. It's one thing when some one in the audience disagrees with what you are doing. But when that person, (or persons in your case),aren't willing to be respectful and at least take the chance of learning a bit more of the lesson you are trying to teach them during your performance. There remains very little room for any sort of discourse.
An old friend of mine, by the name of Marjorie Conn, (who is a performance artist in Provincetown, MA), has as had confrontations like the one's you were just talking about),happen to her, and she's a Lesbian.
There was a time, during the first few years, after I began performing my work in public when I used to be surprised at just how close minded, some people who claimed to be Liberal,or open-minded, or understanding, really
are.But now, I just see it as part of the environment, and somedays, I just wind up laughing after an ordeal like the one you went through.
Keep your chin up, I pretty much saw through, the implied sexuality and got what you were trying to do.And as far as I am concerned, you have nothing to be ashamed of.
After all it was great Artists, such as Marcel Duchamp and Andy Warhol, who were often chided for the work they created. And to this day, there are still so many people who understand very little about art and the purpose that it serves. Take care of yourself, and don't ever stop what your are doing.
I was in attendance that Night When The Lesbians Accosted You. I also spoke with you very briefly (actually, walked past a conversation you were having with someone else, and attempted to artfully insinuate myself) concerning your reaction to their behaviour. Unfortunately, I have to respectfully disagree with your disapproval.
I hate to sound as though I'm deriding your methods, but what did you expect, really? You willingly encouraged audience participation in a variety of ways; you put paint brushes in an audience member's hands; you began painting your own body. Does this not lead an (admittedly drunken) audience to believe that the traditional barriers between performer and artist no longer apply? In their defense, I thought that their application of paint to your body was part of the show; if I had felt otherwise, I would personally have intervened to stop their actions. In any case, you definitely played it off well (and kudos to you!), and the event staff hadn't intervened, which also led me to believe that things were okay between you and them. I admit this was also the first time I'd seen you in performance, so I had no idea what to expect.
The use of juxtapositions and exploitation to deliver your point are consistently engaging methods of performance and/or entertainment. But I also think it's a matter or course that, when using such techniques, the intended message may not be understood by all parties. Drunk lesbians, however astute and empowered you may think they are as feminists, may fall into that category.
Of course, I'm not the one in the bikini, so perhaps this calls for more subjectivity than I'm offering...Best wishes to you and your artistic endeavors; I hope that troublesome events such as the ones from the other night--and Devil's Advocates like me--don't discourage you from continuing your explorations. Whatever you think of the episode, I still think it was an entertaining, witty portion of the cabaret.
Hey Bikini Artist--
Take a look at this blurb about an upcoming film at the JHU Film Fest...Not saying that it's what you do, but it may be enlightening:
http://www.hopkinsfilmfest.com/schedule/shows.php?year=2005&type=single&id=18
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