An artist was ‘ready to die’ after she let spectators do anything to her in an extreme performance.
Serbian-born artist Marina Abramović has never shied away from pushing the boundaries of human endurance and artistic expression.
Over her decades-long career, she has subjected herself to grueling physical and mental challenges, all in the name of art.
From cutting herself on stage to staring silently at strangers for hours, Abramović’s work often leaves audiences stunned, moved, or unsettled.
One of her most harrowing performances took place in 1974, when she invited the public to do anything they wanted to her body for six hours.
The results were disturbing, and the experience left Abramović contemplating her own mortality.
The performance, titled ‘Rhythm 0,’ involved Abramović standing passively in a gallery next to a table filled with 72 objects.
These ranged from harmless items like a feather boa and roses to far more dangerous implements, including scissors, a scalpel, and even a loaded pistol.
Abramović’s instructions were simple yet chilling: spectators could use any of the items on her in any way they desired. She would remain motionless, offering no resistance.
She later recalled, per The Guardian: “I had a pistol with bullets in it, my dear. I was ready to die.”
At first, the crowd was hesitant – Abramović’s stillness was unnerving, and the gravity of the situation seemed to weigh heavily on the audience.
Interactions were gentle and cautious; people handed her flowers, touched her lightly, or posed her body like a mannequin.
But as time went on, the atmosphere in the room shifted.
The sense of anonymity and permission Abramović had granted the spectators slowly brought out darker impulses.
Some tore at her clothes, others used sharp objects to cut her skin, and one person even held the loaded gun to her head.
Abramović recounted: “I still have scars from where people were cutting me. They were taking the thorn from the rose and sticking it in my stomach. The public can kill you. This is what I wanted to see.”
The performance became a grim experiment in human psychology, revealing how quickly societal norms could break down when given the opportunity.
The line between observer and participant blurred, and the crowd’s actions became increasingly aggressive as they fed off one another’s escalating behavior.
After six hours the ordeal ended, and Abramović, covered in blood and tears, began to move.
This sudden shift – from object to person – left the audience horrified by what they had done, and people fled the gallery, unable to reconcile their actions with the vulnerable human figure now standing before them, per the Marina Abramović Institute.
Abramović’s experiment laid bare the darkness that lurks within us all when given the freedom to act without consequence.
This extreme vulnerability has been a hallmark of Abramović’s career, culminating in her 2010 performance at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.
For ‘The Artist is Present,’ Abramović sat silently across from visitors for eight hours a day over the course of three months.
Unlike ‘Rhythm 0,’ this performance offered a stark contrast in public interaction.
People wept, smiled, or simply gazed at her in silence, connecting on an emotional level that transcended words.
The absence of physical harm, replaced by a quiet, shared vulnerability, demonstrated Abramović’s ability to elicit the best and worst from her audience depending on the context she created.
Her willingness to endure both physical and emotional extremes is driven by a desire to explore the limits of the human spirit.
Abramović often says: “The medium is the body,” summarizing her belief that performance art is about more than spectacle; it’s an exploration of endurance, pain, and connection.
The question of why Abramović would subject herself to such risks is as compelling as her art.
In her own words, she believes that only by facing one’s deepest fears can a person grow: “When you’re afraid of something, face it, go for it. You become a better human being.”
The artist’s radical willingness to put herself at risk for her art reached its apex during ‘Rhythm 0’ – faced with the brutality of the audience, she came to a sobering realization: she had been prepared to die for her work.
It was a test not just of her endurance but of humanity’s capacity for compassion or cruelty when left unchecked.