Asemie or the Inability of Expressing Oneself Through Facial Expressions, 1973

Betacam numérique PAL, noir et blanc, son


VALIE EXPORT intervenes.



VALIE EXPORT ties up a bird that can no longer fly. 



She pours hot wax on the bird, and then on her own feet and hands.



She is crouched above the bird. Neither of them can move anymore.



Asemia is a medical condition – the loss of a gestural language, i.e. the gradual weakening of gestures to the point of losing all forms of body language. For a patient with asemia, movement is almost non-existent, and muteness and prostration are the two positions that the patient adopts.



VALIE EXPORT chooses an active and direct confrontation. She develops aesthetic conceptual strategies for perception and analyses the role of women and women artists in society. This performance takes on the appearance of a ritual based on a theme – the incapacity and inability to express oneself through gestures, or to understand them. VALIE EXPORT stages symbolic elements such as a dead bird, hot wax, and a knife. Expression is impossible. The artist then acts, literally, with a knife to cut herself free, distancing herself from this corporal muteness. The conceptual aesthetic of VALIE EXPORT explores the power and scope of reality: the same reality that produces different realities.



VALIE EXPORT intervenes in the realm of power. She affirms it from head to toe.




Lou Svahn