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Kiss the Girls: Make Them Cry

Dara Birnbaum

1979 00:07:00 United StatesEnglishColor

Description

Using selected details of TV’s Hollywood Squares, Birnbaum constructs an analysis of the coded gestures and “looks” of the actors, including Eileen Brennen and Melissa Gilbert. Birnbaum exposes television as an agent of cultural mimicry and instruction. The actors’ expressions are far from valueless; they are the ideological content of such programming.

“As a result of the precision with which Birnbaum employs these allegorical procedures, we discover with unprecedented clarity to what degree the theater of professional close-ups on the television screen has become the new historical site of the domination of human behavior by ideology. Physiognomic detail and its meaning speak off… in the tape Kiss the Girls: Make Them Cry.”

—Benjamin H.B. Buchloh, “Allegorical Procedures: Appropriation and Montage in Contemporary Art,” Artforum 21:1 (September 1982)

About Dara Birnbaum

An architect and urban planner by training, Dara Birnbaum began using video in 1978 while teaching at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, where she worked with Dan Graham. Recognized as one of the first video artists to employ the appropriation of television images as a subversive strategy, Birnbaum recontextualizes pop cultural icons (Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman, 1978-79) and TV genres (Kiss the Girls: Make them Cry, 1979) to reveal their subtexts. Birnbaum describes her tapes as new “ready-mades” for the late 20th Century—works that “manipulate a medium which is itself highly manipulative.”

See also: Dara Birnbaum: An Interview