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Girl Chewing
Gum, 40-minute performance,
Modern Art Oxford, 26 November 2010.
Chewing gum, Marlene Haring greeted
each member of the audience in front
of a curtain at the entrance to the
performance space, an empty gallery.
She guided each person to his or
her place and asked them, for
example, to take a seat, stand just
there, look out the window, take
off their shoes, keep an eye on the
staircase, assembling
little groups and knots. As she brought
more members of the audience into
the gallery, Haring also observed
the activities of the people already
in the room and commented them as
if she was directing them ‘I
want the lady in the grey jacket
to look puzzled’, ‘I want
the man on the staircase, who sneaked
in through the back, to sip his drink
in a nonchalant way’, ‘I
want these two ladies to continue
chatting’, ‘I want the
lady in the corner at the back to
start knitting’, ‘Yes,
very good, keep smiling until the
camera comes around’, and so
on.
In the middle of the room a man methodically
turned a panoramic camera, recording
the scene continuously on video and
rhythmically with flash
photography. After a while,
the room became animated. When a
woman with a baby entered, Marlene
directed her by name to give the
baby to the camera man and take over
the photography. Then she took the
baby (her child) from the former
camera man, and put him back to work.
Haring then put the chewing gum in
the other girl’s mouth, ‘I want you
to be the Girl Chewing Gum’, The
girl chewing gum went to fetch the
rest of the audience waiting outside,
show them in and direct them. When
everybody was inside, she directed
Marlene and the baby to leave, the
camera man to pack up, and before
exiting, asked,
‘Which girl wants the chewing
gum?’ and placed the gum in
the girl's mouth.
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