On Grief, Cortisol, and the Body That Remembers Loss
In 1934, a group of artists performed a funeral procession through the streets of Berlin for the German constitution. They wore black, carried a coffin, and said nothing. Within an hour, several were arrested. The performance lasted less than fifteen minutes and is still discussed by scholars nine decades later.
Art as Risk
Political theatre has always understood something that conventional protest has sometimes forgotten: the power of image over argument. A march communicates volume; a performance communicates meaning. The most enduring political art works because it creates an image that persists in memory long after the chanting has faded.
"The state is afraid of art because art operates at the level of the imagination, which is precisely where political change begins."
The Contemporary Scene
Today's political performance artists face a different context. In the age of social media, the documentation of a performance is often more powerful than the performance itself. Groups like Extinction Rebellion understood this: their actions were designed as images first, events second.
The question of what political art is for โ its target, its community, its theory of change โ has never been more urgent to ask.