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Seroconversion, performance art

Seroconversion
Sonic Mourning / Sonic Resistance, 2019

Artworks that are created through actions performed by the artist or other participants, which may be live or recorded, spontaneous or scripted is called performance art. 

While the terms ‘performance’ and ‘performance art’ only became widely used in the 1970s, the history of performance in the visual arts is often traced back to futurist productions and dada cabarets of the 1910s. Throughout the twentieth century performance was often seen as a non-traditional way of making art. Live-ness, physical movement and impermanence offered artists alternatives to the static permanence of painting and sculpture. In the post-war period performance became aligned with conceptual art, because of its often immaterial nature. Now an accepted part of the visual art world, the term has since been used to also describe film, video, photographic and installation-based artworks through which the actions of artists, performers or the audience are conveyed. More recently, performance has been understood as a way of engaging directly with social reality, the specifics of space and the politics of identity. In 2016, theorist Jonah Westerman remarked ‘performance is not (and never was) a medium, not something that an artwork can be but rather a set of questions and concerns about how art relates to people and the wider social world’.

During the first edition of Gallery Weekend Stockholm Wetterling Gallery hosted a performance with the duo Seroconversion, which was a part of the then ongoing exhibition All Disco Dance Must End In Broken Bones, curated by C-print. A still snapshot of the performance can be seen here to the right.