And Now, A Year of Recognition

Julie Greicius bio ↓  ·  March 2nd, 2009  ·  filed under art

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After a lifetime of extreme, little-known performances, 58-year-old Tehching Hsieh is suddenly in the spotlight. In 1978, four years after immigrating to the United States from Taiwan, his existential despair at immigrant life inspired his first performance work, “Cage Piece.” Hsieh built a cage in a loft apartment, shaved his head, donned a white uniform and spent the next year alone in captivity. Other year-long performances followed, such as “the year he punched a time-clock hourly, the year he lived on the streets, the year he spent tethered by a rope to a female artist.” Now, Hsieh has a one-man show at the MoMA , an exhibit at the Guggenheim, a forthcoming book Out of Now that chronicles his body of work, and his first grant from the United States Artists. Deborah Sontag’s New York Times profile of Hsieh tells his incredible story.

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Julie Greicius is the senior literary editor and a regular contributor for The Rumpus. She works as ghostwriter by day and a licensed (really) hula hoop instructor by night. She's co-editor of Rumpus Women, Vol I, and has an MFA from Columbia University. She lives in California with her husband and two children. Follow her on Twitter. More from this author →

One Response to “And Now, A Year of Recognition”

  1. Amstutz Says:

    Loved the New York Times article and I haven’t seen the exhibits, but is this really art? People spend years locked in a cage and lifetimes out in the street, and it isn’t art. Sure, he did it voluntarily and pushed it to an extreme form but what he did was more of a demonstration of physical ( and mental) endurance rather than artistic expression, in my opinion. I suppose I’ll have to check out the shows to know.

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