
Extended-Body: Interview with Stelarc
Paolo Atzori and Kirk Woolford
Academy of Media Arts, Cologne, Germany
Stelarc is an Australian performance artist, born in
Limassol, island of Cyprus. Stelarc moved to Australia, where he studied
Arts and Craft at T.S.T.C., Art and Technology at CAUTECH and M.R.I.T.,
Melbourne University. He taught Art and Sociology at Yokohama International
School and Sculpture and Drawing at Ballarat University College.
Stelarc has been extending his body through performances
since the late 1960s. His performances include attaching a "Third Hand"
to his body, extending himself into virtual space with a "Virtual Hand",
and over 25 "suspension" events where he hung his entire body
from hooks piercing his skin. Stelarc's artistic strategy revolves around
the idea of "enhancing the body" both in a physical and technical
manner. It originates as a polarism between the "primal desire"
to defeat the force of gravity with primitive rituals and a low- tech and
the hi-tech performance with the third arm and the related cybersystem.
His intention in both cases is to "express an idea with his direct
experience."
Through Stelarc's work, we reach a second level of existence
where the body becomes the object for physical and technical experiments
in order to discover its limitations. When Stelarc speaks of the "obsolete
body" he means that the body must overcome centuries of prejudices
and begin to be considered as an extendible evolutionary structure enhanced
with the most disparate technologies, which are more precise, accurate and
powerful: "the body lacks of modular design," "Technology
is what defines the meaning of being human, it's part of being human."
Especially living in the information age, "the body is biologically
inadequate."
For Stelarc, "Electronic space becomes a medium
of action rather than information".
CTHEORY: When did you first decide to hang yourself
between two different worlds - to place your body between two levels of
existence...
Stelarc: Well you have to remember the suspension events weren't
the initial, sort of primitive and physically difficult events and the technology
ones were the more recent, more sophisticated ones. In fact, the third hand
project begins a year after the first suspension event. These things were
happening simultaneously. On the one hand you were discovering the psychological
and physical limitations of the body. On the other you were developing strategies
for extending and enhancing it through technology. I've always used technology
in my performances. The very first things I made in art school were helmets
and goggles that altered your binocular perception which stylistically has
this connection with virtual reality head-mounted displays and compartments
which were whole body pods that you sort of plugged you whole body into,
and that was assaulted by electronic sounds and lights.
CTHEORY: When people see your suspension events, they immediately
think of Hindu, American Indian, or other rituals. Which of these practices
did you come into contact with first?
Stelarc: It was the Hindu Indian ones that I knew about, but one
has to put this into the context that for 5 years I was doing suspension
events with ropes and harnesses, with a lot of technology. Laser eyes were
first used when the body was suspended, oh, '70, '71 that sort of time scale,
but one of the sort of visual disadvantages of all this paraphernalia was
that there was all this visual clutter: all the ropes and harnesses were
seen more to support the body than to suspend it, so when I first came across
the notion of piercing the skin, I thought, if you could suspend the body
using techniques like these, then you would have a minimum of support, you'd
have just the insertion and single cable. Mind you, I never hid, there was
no desire to make the suspension a kind of image of levitation. For me the
cables were lines of tension which were part of the visual design of the
suspended body, and the stretched skin was a kind of gravitational landscape.
This is what it took for a body to be suspended in a 1-G gravitational field.
The other context is the primal desire for floating and flying. A lot of
primal rituals have to do with suspending the body, but in the 20th century
we have the reality of astronauts floating in zero-G. So the suspension
event is between those sort of primal yearnings, and the contemporary reality.
Of course, suspension means between two states, so I think there is an interesting
linguistic meaning that fits in with the idea of suspending the body. For
me there was no religious context, no shamanistic yearnings, no yogic conditioning
that had to do with these performances. In fact, they occurred in the same
kind of stream of consciousness. In mean, I don't take any anaesthetics,
I don't chant or get into altered states. I think metaphysically, in the
past, we've considered the skin as surface, as interface. The skin has been
a boundary for the soul, for the self, and simultaneously, a beginning to
the world. Once technology stretches and pierces the skin, the skin as a
barrier is erased.
CTHEORY: Do you follow a very strict discipline to train your
body for your performances?
Stelarc: In fact, there's never really been any discipline and
when I start feeling the performances have become, in a sense predictable,
because the techniques assume more importance than the creative impulses,
then I stop doing them. I stopped doing the suspension events 4 years ago
because having done 27 of them in various locations and different situations
there seemed to be no more raison d'etre to continue doing them. The interest
was really coupling the expression of an idea with the direct experience
of it. That applies to all of these performances whether the suspension
events, the stomach sculpture, the third hand performances, or the virtual
arm event. These are all situations where the body is plugged into for direct
experience. So it's not interesting for me to talk academically or theoretically
about ideas of interface, the important thing for me is to plug in, extend
the body with cyber-systems and see what it can actually do.
CTHEORY: So you've always been interested in enhancing the body?
Stelarc: Oh, absolutely. And the connection with VR systems is
a very fundamental one with me because, as I said, the very first things
I made at art school were these helmets which split your binocular vision
and compartments which were sensory environments, multi-modal structures
for experience with the body. So that was a primary concern, and really
the suspensions are often taken out of context whereas they are part of
a series of sensory deprivation and physically difficult events which include:
making the 3 films of the inside of the body, where I had to film 3 meters
of internal space, for example. All these actions occurred simultaneously.
The agenda wasn't a stylistic one with a particular technology, it was a
general one. A sort of probing and determining the parameters of physical
and psychological interface.
CTHEORY: You always work with your body. Your body is your form
of representation, your medium. How do you feel being both an artist and
an artwork?
Stelarc: It's interesting you've pointed that out, I've never
felt that I am the artwork. In fact the reason why my performances are focused
on this particular body is that it is difficult for me to convince other
bodies to undergo rather awkward, difficult and sometimes painful experiences.
This body is just merely the convenient access to a body for particular
events and actions. So I've really never been obsessed by the fact that
somehow I am the artwork because I don't critique it in that way.
For me the body is an impersonal, evolutionary, objective structure.
Having spent two thousand years prodding and poking the human psyche without
any real discernible changes in our historical and human outlook, we perhaps
need to take a more fundamental physiological and structural approach, and
consider the fact that it's only through radically redesigning the body
that we will end up having significantly different thoughts and philosophies.
I think our philosophies are fundamentally bounded by our physiology; our
peculiar kind of aesthetic orientation in the world; our peculiar five sensory
modes of processing the world; and our particular kinds of technology that
enhance these perceptions. I think a truly alien intelligence will occur
from an alien body or from a machine structure. I don't think human beings
will come up with fundamentally new philosophies. An alien species may not
have the same notions about the universe at all. The desire for unity may
well be the result of our rather fragmentary sensory system where we observe
the world sensually in packets of discrete and different sensory modes.
So our urge to merge, our urge to unify, that religious, spiritual, coming
together might very well be due to an inadequacy or an incompleteness in
our physiology.
CTHEORY: If such a philosophy is devised, it would not be a human
philosophy. How would it be applicable to the human race?
Stelarc: Well of course one shouldn't consider the body or the
human species as possessing a kind of absolute nature. The desire to locate
the self simply within a particular biological body is no longer meaningful.
What it means to be human is being constantly redefined. For me, this is
not a dilemma at all.
CTHEORY: So a human is not this entity sitting here with these
two arms and two legs, but something more beside?
Stelarc: Yes, of course, if you are sitting there with a heart
pacemaker and an artificial hip and something to augment your liver and
kidney functions, would I consider you less human? To be quite honest, most
of your body might be made of mechanical, silicon, or chip parts and you
behave in a socially acceptable way, you respond to me in a human-like fashion,
to me that would make you a kind of human subject.
CTHEORY: You keep speaking about redesigning the human body. Who
decides and how should it be redesigned ?
Stelarc: (Laughs) There is often misunderstanding about these
notions, partly because they are critiqued with a kind of rear-vision mirror
mentality of a fascist, dictatorial, Orwellian-big-brother scenario.
I don't have a utopian perfect body I'm designing a blueprint for, rather
I'm speculating on ways that individuals are not forced to, but may want
to, redesign their bodies - given that the body has become profoundly obsolete
in the intense information environment it has created. It's had this mad,
Aristotelian urge to accumulate more and more information. An individual
now cannot hope to absorb and creatively process all this information. Humans
have created technologies and machines which are much more precise and powerful
than the body.
How can the body function within this landscape of machines? Technology
has speeded up the body. The body now attains planetary-escape velocity,
has to function in zero-G and in greater time-space continuums. For me this
demonstrates the biological inadequacy of the body. Given that these things
have occurred, perhaps an ergonomic approach is no longer meaningful. In
other words, we can't continue designing technology for the body because
that technology begins to usurp and outperform the body. Perhaps it's now
time to design the body to match it's machines. We somehow have to turbo-drive
the body-implant and augment the brain. We have to provide ways of connecting
it to the cyber-network. At the moment this is not easily done, and it's
done indirectly via keyboards and other devices. There's no way of directly
jacking in. Mind you, I'm not talking here in terms of sci-fi speculation.
For me, these possibilities are already apparent. What do we do when confronted
with the situation where we discover the body is obsolete? We have to start
thinking of strategies for redesigning the body.
CTHEORY: This recombinant body implies a widening of our sensibilities,
of our perception. But our senses are linked to our brains, everything "happens"
in our brain. So it's not enough to have, for example, X-ray vision. We
need to change our synapses, the connections in our brains as well.
Stelarc: We shouldn't start making distinctions between the brain
and the body. This particular biological entity with it's proprioceptive
networks and spinal cord and muscles, it's the total kinesthetic orientation
in the world, it's the body's mobility which contributes towards curiosity.
The desire to isolate the brain is the result of a Cartesian dualism. It's
not really productive any more to think in that sense. We have to think
of the body plugged into a new technological terrain.
CTHEORY: We can see things that were previously invisible. We
can go to the very little through nano-technology, see into infra-red and
ultra violet spectrums, but this is not a direct perception. We get this
through artificial systems...
Stelarc: Yes, and what will be interesting is when we can miniaturize
these technologies and implant them into the body so that the body as total
system becomes subjectively aware again. New technologies tend to generate
new perceptions and paradigms of the world, and in turn, allow us to take
further steps. If we consider technologies as intermediaries to the world,
then, of course, we never have direct experiences. At the moment, we operate
within a very thin electro-magnetic spectrum, and I would imagine that as
we increasing operate in wider spheres of reality, then yes our perceptions
and philosophies alter or adjust.
Technology has always been coupled with the evolutionary development
of the body. Technology is what defines being human. It's not an antagonistic
alien sort of object, it's part of our human nature. It constructs our human
nature. We shouldn't have a Frankensteinian fear of incorporating technology
into the body, and we shouldn't consider our relationship to technology
in a Faustian way - that we're somehow selling our soul because we're using
these forbidden energies. My attitude is that technology is, and always
has been, an appendage of the body.
CTHEORY: Stelarc, your latest work centers around a sculpture
you built for your stomach. What was the impetus for creating a sculpture
to display inside your body?
Stelarc: I've moved beyond the skin as a barrier. Skin no longer
signifies closure. I wanted to rupture the surface of the body, penetrate
the skin. With the stomach sculpture, I position an artwork inside the body.
The body becomes hollow with no meaningful distinction between public, private
and physiological spaces. The hollow body becomes a host, not for a self
or a soul, but simply for a sculpture.
CTHEORY: Funding any artwork is difficult, especially getting
money for high tech equipment. Did you have trouble finding funding for
the sculpture?
Stelarc: Actually no. One of the museums in Australia was preparing
a show and asking for sculptures which explored alternative display spaces.
I told them I had an alternative way and place to display a sculpture.
CTHEORY: Can you describe the stomach sculpture?
Stelarc: It's built of implant quality metals such as titanium,
steel, silver, and gold. It is constructed as a domed capsule shell about
the size of a fist. The shell contains a worm-screw and link mechanism and
has a flexidrive cable connected to a servo motor controlled by a logic
circuit. The capsule extends and retracts opening and closing in three sections.
An embedded instrument array, light and piezo buzzer make the sculpture
self-illuminating and sound-emitting.
CTHEORY: How did you insert it?
Stelarc: Very slowly. The stomach sculpture is actually the most
dangerous performance I've done. We had to be within 5 minutes of a hospital
in case we ruptured any internal organs. To insert the sculpture, the stomach
was first emptied by withholding food for about 8 hours. Then the closed
capsule, with beeping sound and flashing light activated, was swallowed
and guided down tethered to it's flexidrive cable attached to the control
box outside the body. Once inserted into the stomach, we used an endoscope
to inflate the stomach and suck out the excess body fluids. The sculpture
was then arrayed with switches on the control box. We documented the whole
performance using video endoscopy equipment. Even with a stomach pump, we
still had a problem with excess saliva. We had to hastily remove all the
probes on several occasions.
CTHEORY: Now you've penetrated the body. You've hollowed it out,
extended it, expanded it, hung it out a window, mapped out several miles
of its interior. What is the next step?
Stelarc: It is time to recolonise the body with microminaturised
robots to augment out bacterial population, to assist our immunological
system, and to monitor the capillary and internal tracts of the body. We
need to build an internal surveillance system for the body. We have to develop
microbots whose behavior is not pre-programmed, but activated by temperature,
blood chemistry, the softness or hardness of tissue and the presence of
obstacles in tracts. These robots can then work autonomously on the body.
The biocompatibility of technology is not due to its substance, but to its
scale. Speck-sized robots are easily swallowed and may not even be sensed.
At a nanotech level, machines will navigate and inhabit cellular spaces
and manipulate molecular structures to extend the body from within.

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