Birds of a Feather
The Cage of Guilt: An Anti-History of Performance Art "In the last decades interest in hunger artists has declined considerably." This opening line from Franz Kafka’s A Hunger Artist (1922) serves not merely as a fictional observation, but as a prophetic epitaph for the trajectory of postmodern performance art. Written long before the rise of the current, contemporary "safe space" -or, the era of noncommittal, morally relative artistic statements, Kafka’s story presciently narrates a drama where the spectacle of suffering has lost its power to captivate. The decline Kafka noted was not just a shift in taste, but a fundamental failure of the artist’s contract with the audience. Decades later, his "cage artist"—the performer who utilizes their own confinement and bodily austerity as a medium—is often misread as a protesting martyr. This lecture argues the opposite: the postmodern cage artist is a would-be criminal, incapable of committing an actual crime of...