Danny Tisdale is a performance artist from New York City. His performances challenge prevailing ideas of race, assimilation, appropriation and success by offering passers-by the chance to racially change their appearance as a means to achieve greater financial success. The mimicry of museological practices of cataloguing and preservation, display and presentation provides one of a range of rhetorical frameworks upon which Danny Tisdale hangs his practice of social critique. Tisdale creates installations that seem to have as much to do with exposing the chameleon-like nature of politicians as they do with promoting a comprehensive political platform.
A historical interview originally recorded in 1992 and re-edited in 2007.