Chris Burden, Trans-Fixed, 1974 |
Joe the lion, went to the bar
A couple of drinks on the house
An' he said, "Tell you who you are
If you nail me to my car"
A couple of drinks on the house
An' he said, "Tell you who you are
If you nail me to my car"
Bowie's song alludes to Chris Burden's 1974 Body Art event, Trans-Fixed:
Through the Night Softly (1973) in which he crawled through a 50-foot-long pile of broken glass in his underwear, with his hands tied behind his back: watch the video. (This was featured as one of Burden's TV Commercials.)
TRANS-FIXED, Venice, California, April 23, 1974. Inside a small garage on Speedway Avenue, I stood on the rear bumper of a Volkswagen. I lay on my back over the rear section of the car, stretching my arms onto the roof. Nails were driven through the palms into the roof of my car. The garage door was opened and the car was pushed halfway out into Speedway. Screaming for me, the engine was run at full speed for two minutes. After two minutes the engine was turned off, and the car pushed back into the garage. The door was closed.
Other performances included:
Shoot (1971) in which he was shot in the arm by a friend with a .22 rifle. Watch a video of the event.
Chris Burden, Shoot, 1971 |
Chris Burden, Through the Night Softly, 1973 |
By the end of the 1970s, after 54 performance events, Burden abandoned performance art and turned to sculpture. Works include:
All the Submarines of the United States of America (1987)
The Other Vietnam Memorial (1991) which lists the names of 3 million Vietnamese killed during the Vietnam War.
Urban Light (2008) comprising 202 vintage streetlights installed in the plaza at the LA County Museum of Art.
All the Submarines of the United States of America (1987)
Chris Burden, All the Submarines of the United States of America, 1987 |
Chris Burden, The Other Vietnam Memorial, 1991 |
Chris Burden, Urban Light, 2008 |
See more examples of Burden's work at Everything You Need to Know About Chris Burden's Art Through His Greatest Works; watch a video tour of Burden's retrospective Extreme Measures at The New Museum in 2013. Read obituaries by Jon Bewley and Jonty Tarbuck in The Guardian and by Christopher Knight in Los Angeles Times. Read a 1975 feature by Roger Ebert: Chris Burden: "My God, are they going toleave me here to die?"