It lasted nine minutes.
Yet precisely this obscurity makes the event valuable. In an era when every art gesture is tracked, tokenized, and monetized, the Grandmams created something un-capturable. No merch. No press kit. No follow-up show (they tried to plan one for 2016, but two members moved to Portugal, and one sadly passed away).
The date—October 22, 2015—was chosen for its insignificance. No holiday, no full moon, no biennial. Just a Thursday when the rent was due and the radiators barely worked. One of the most radical choices of “grandmams221015granniesdecadenceartpart” was its refusal to use elderly women as symbols. In contemporary art, older bodies often stand for memory, loss, or wisdom. The Grandmams rejected all three. They were not fragile storytellers or cute anarchists. They chewed hard candies loudly, argued about bingo strategy, and at one point, three of them performed a slow-motion mockery of a mosh pit while holding handbags.
This was not nostalgia. There were no sentimental slideshows of youth. Instead, one installation—simply called The Second Wrinkle —featured a looped projection of a single hand applying cold cream for eighty-three minutes. The audience sat in folding chairs that squeaked every time someone shifted weight. A younger attendee reportedly whispered, “I think I’m supposed to be bored,” to which a Grandmam overheard and replied, “Finally. You’re getting it.” The latter half of the keyword—“artpart”—originally referred to the portion of the evening intended for “active viewing.” After two hours of unstructured murmuring and the occasional recitation of supermarket lists as poetry (delivered with deadpan seriousness by an 84-year-old former librarian named Odile), the art part began.
产品语言版本
LANGUAGE VERSION
15 +全球合作伙伴
GLOBAL PARTNER
1000 +产品畅销全球
SELLING THE WORLD
90 +全球正版用户
GENUINE USERS
140 万+It lasted nine minutes.
Yet precisely this obscurity makes the event valuable. In an era when every art gesture is tracked, tokenized, and monetized, the Grandmams created something un-capturable. No merch. No press kit. No follow-up show (they tried to plan one for 2016, but two members moved to Portugal, and one sadly passed away).
The date—October 22, 2015—was chosen for its insignificance. No holiday, no full moon, no biennial. Just a Thursday when the rent was due and the radiators barely worked. One of the most radical choices of “grandmams221015granniesdecadenceartpart” was its refusal to use elderly women as symbols. In contemporary art, older bodies often stand for memory, loss, or wisdom. The Grandmams rejected all three. They were not fragile storytellers or cute anarchists. They chewed hard candies loudly, argued about bingo strategy, and at one point, three of them performed a slow-motion mockery of a mosh pit while holding handbags.
This was not nostalgia. There were no sentimental slideshows of youth. Instead, one installation—simply called The Second Wrinkle —featured a looped projection of a single hand applying cold cream for eighty-three minutes. The audience sat in folding chairs that squeaked every time someone shifted weight. A younger attendee reportedly whispered, “I think I’m supposed to be bored,” to which a Grandmam overheard and replied, “Finally. You’re getting it.” The latter half of the keyword—“artpart”—originally referred to the portion of the evening intended for “active viewing.” After two hours of unstructured murmuring and the occasional recitation of supermarket lists as poetry (delivered with deadpan seriousness by an 84-year-old former librarian named Odile), the art part began.




微信
咨询
客服
Top
中望软件技术