Off the Air Coverage of Peanut Campaign 1974-75
Автор: Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
Загружено: 2014-09-02
Просмотров: 12282
Описание:
http://belkin.ubc.ca/peanut
Between 1969 and 1974, Vancouver artist Vincent Trasov assumed the persona of the well-known Planters product logo Mr. Peanut as the framework for an ongoing performance art project. Trasov collected all things peanut and made drawings, photocopies, collages, photographs, videos, sculptures, and ceramics to illustrate how pervasive and potent the image of Mr. Peanut was in popular culture. In his most literal manifestation of Mr. Peanut, Trasov even constructed a human-sized costume that he would wear as he walked through the city, frolicked in nature, or performed on stage playing his violin and tap dancing with the Peanettes. This anthropomorphic animation of Mr. Peanut made its way across Canada, the United States, and into performance art history.
Perhaps his most broadly public project was the Mr. Peanut Campaign for Mayor in 1974 that he devised with fellow artist John Mitchell. Mr. Peanut registered as a candidate for Mayor of Vancouver in the civic elections and attended campaign debates and meetings, interacted with the public, gave press interviews, and was formally endorsed by the notorious author William Burroughs.
In his campaign, Mr. Peanut stood as a symbol for artists and their artistic aspirations, and another fellow artist, Michael Morris, outlined the campaign platform: P for performance, E for elegance, A for art, N for nonsense, U for uniqueness, and T for talent. The campaign motto was “Elect a nut for Mayor,” and Trasov’s performance brought Vancouver to national and international attention and received features in Esquire magazine and Andy Warhol’s Interview magazine.
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