<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<article>
  <abstract>Richard Prince quizzes the legendary architect and installation artist Vito Acconci on everything from pornography to childhood memories to films that make him cry in this fast-paced, in-depth interview from 1991.</abstract>
  <approved type="boolean">true</approved>
  <approved-at type="datetime" nil="true"></approved-at>
  <author>Richard Prince</author>
  <body>p(q). %Richard Prince% Born in the Bronx, 1946?

p(a). %Vito Acconci% 1940; I wish you were right with 1946.

p(q). %RP% And graduated from Holy Cross in 1962?

p(a). %VA% Went to Catholic elementary school, high school, college.
There wasn't a woman in my classroom between kindergarten and
graduate school.

p(q). %RP% When did you come to New York?

p(a). %VA% I thought I was always here; the Bronx, after all. But then
again, in retrospect, it was like the country, a wild country where I
grew up, but at the same time, a kind of Midwest in New York.
Then I went to the real Midwest, graduate school in Iowa City. I
came back to New York in 1964 and saw a lot of movies. I was
writing poetry then; I saw a Jasper Johns for the first time, and
realized that I was at least ten years behind my time.

p(q). %RP% 1971: John Gibson Gallery&#8212;who were some of the artists
around then? Was anybody else doing things like you? What about
minimalism? Robert Smithson?

p(a). %VA% I thought everybody was doing things like I was. I think we all
shared the same general concerns, to break out of, and break, the
gallery system&#8212;to range the way the "Whole Earth Catalogue"
ranged&#8212;to be as articulate as possible about work so that art
wasn't mystified, to see art as just one system in an interrelated
field of systems, to hate the United States, and power, during the
Vietnam War.

p(aa). Minimalism was my father-art. For the first time, I was forced to
recognize an entire space, and the people in it (I had to look at the
light socket on the wall, just in case, I wasn't going to play the fool).
Until minimalism, I had been taught, or I taught myself, to look only
within a frame; with minimalism the frame broke, or at least
stretched.

p(aa). Smithson was probably everybody's conscience. Maybe because
Smithson went outside, I could go inside&#8212;I had to go somewhere
else-inside myself.

p(q). %RP% What about someone like Dennis Oppenheim?

p(a). %VA% He's the art context person I've been personally closest to,
from the beginning. He's the most restless artist I know.

p(q). %RP% Chris Burden was somebody on the other coast who got a lot
of publicity for that gun shot piece. I always thought that was a
major network piece, something the prime timers, ??Life?? or
??People?? magazine, could get, whereas your work was more a
mainstream cult. Your pieces didn't have any hambone or dancing
bear stuff in them. Your work never seemed to have a facelift. What
did you think of that Burden piece&#8212;cheap shot? Good shot? Corn
ball? Did you roll your eyes and say, "Please?"

p(a). %VA% I didn't take Chris seriously enough until later; maybe at first, I
saw him as a competitor&#8212;anything you can do I can do better,
anything you can do, I can do more tortuously. I pay more attention
to him now than ever: he grabs particular situations better than
anyone else&#8212;for that situation, after careful consideration, he
performs a serious prank.

p(q). %RP% I see the media as the Antichrist. How do you view the media?

p(a). %VA% My early work depended on media. An action needed
reportage, it didn't exist unless it was reported. For my work now,
I see the media as a travel guide, it points out places. But the
situation hasn't changed much, most of the public stuff I do doesn't
get built. It remains in model form, the embodiment of the idea. A
model space is a purified space, away from the changes of place and
time and people; media can put it, if not into an actual place, at least
into the news. As long as there are multiple media, I love the
"distortions" of media, because those distortions are multiplied and
contradictory.

p(q). %RP% What about feminism? The difference between the 70s
and now?

p(a). %VA% My early work came out of a context of feminism, and
depended on that context. Performance in the early seventies was
inherently feminist art. I, as a male doing performance, was
probably colonizing it.

p(q). %RP% Pornography&#8212;what do you find pornographic?

p(a). %VA% A conversation in which a man keeps touching a woman's arm, a man on the street looking back at a woman who's just walked by;
a man kissing goodbye a woman he's just met . . . and probably a
woman doing the same. I don't know if these things are
pornographic, but they're probably obscene.

p(q). %RP% What kind of sex do you like?

p(a). %VA% The kind in which two people use every part of their bodies
and every secretion of those bodies and every level of pressure
those bodies can exert.

p(q). %RP% Did you have any encounters with the Vietnam War?

p(a). %VA% I was in the usual demonstrations. I was one of the usual
suspects. My early work came out of the context of the Vietnam
War: self-immolation, boundary protection, aggression. The
problem was that the work generalized those themes away from a
particular target. It made them "ideas" and not political action.

p(q). %RP% They always talk about your voice. You really think you would
have been able to fuck anyone without it (using your voice as a
sexual persuasion)?

p(a). %VA% Anyone? Well, that's probably exaggerated. But there are
people I would never have fucked with if I hadn't been an "art
star."

p(aa). It's not that I've used my voice as a sexual persuasion. I hope
I've never tried to persuade anyone to fuck me. My voice probably
has, for some people, a storage of sexual associations (Humphrey
Bogart, Ida Lupino). Also, it seems to come out of some depths, so
it probably promises intimacy, sincerity, integrity, maybe some
deep, dark secret (it ties into biases of Western culture, it seems to
go beyond surfaces).

p(q). %RP% You live in your studio.

p(a). %VA% I can't separate living and working; I like to sleep for an hour,
get up, work, sleep again, etc. I need to have books and records
(tapes, CDs) around me at all times like pets, like walls.

p(q). %RP% You're Catholic. Is that like being...

p(a). %VA% _Was_ Catholic. But you didn't finish the question. The thing that still interests me about Catholicism is the number of saints. There's
no void, no distance between "person" and "God." There are all
those saints in between: every misfit, every problem has a patron
saint attached. So you're always part of a crowd, and there's no
abstraction, everything's tangible.

p(q). %RP% What kind of drugs have you taken? Have they done anything
for you?

p(a). %VA% The usual late sixties drugs: pot, hash, mescaline, not even
LSD. And hardly more than once. I was only a tourist. I get woozy,
I'm afraid of losing control.

p(q). %RP% There's an old joke, "Sex between two people is beautiful. Sex between five people is fantastic." What would be an ideal sex
situation for you?

p(a). %VA% Theoretically, sex with everybody. In fact, sex with one
person I feel inextricably connected with.

!!10155!!
p(q). %RP% What are your favorite TV programs, if you watch it at all?

p(a). %VA% Mainly watch when I'm eating. It could be anything (eat
anything, watch anything). Eat late; so I see news, ??Nightline??,
??Night Heat??, ends of ballgames, commercials.

p(q). %RP% Movies? Which one comes to mind?

p(a). %VA% ??The Searchers??, ??Videodrome??, ??Blade Runner??, ??Detour??, ??Phantom of Paradise??, ??Shock Corridor??, ??Double Indemnity??, ??The Killing of a Chinese Bookie??, ??Last Year at Marienbad?? . . .

p(q). %RP% Do you ever feel like disappearing? Your early pieces had an
appearance/disappearance method to them.

p(a). %VA% The early work applied stress to the body that then had to
adapt, change, open up, because of that stress. Remember, this
was just after the late sixties, the time&#8212;the starting time of gender
other than male, race other than white, culture other than Western;
I wanted to get rid of myself so there could be room for other
selves.

p(q). %RP% You've said a lot of the early work focused on your self so you
started using a camera because one thing you were sure of was that
"I had my own person." Do you see a difference between
personality and person?

p(a). %VA% Personality fixes person, makes it static. That was a flaw of
my early work: it started by being the activity of a person, any
person, like any other&#8212;but once that person became
photographed it became a specialized person, the object of a
personality cult. After a while, anyone who knew work of mine
knew what I looked like; action had become trademark. So I had to
disappear from my work, certainly. And that takes us back to the
question before this: I don't know if I ever feel like disappearing&#8212;spreading out and branching out maybe&#8212;but I'm stuck with old habits: I want to keep working, other people work with me, there's
got to be someone for them to work with, I have to be around
somewhere so work can be around elsewhere.

p(q). %RP% Do you still see yourself as a male cartoon?

p(a). %VA% When I said that, I meant&#8212;I hope I meant&#8212;not "myself" but
"myself-as-performer" in some of the early work, where maleness
was made so blatant that it stood out like a cartoon: so then it could
be targeted, it could be analyzed, it could be pilloried.

p(aa). I still see a lot of my work as cartoon-like: turn a house upside
down, build a miniature Supreme Court that's "ours" and submerge
it in the ground in front of "theirs." I'd like a piece to appear in the
world, on the street, like anything else on the street except that
maybe it's in a dot matrix, maybe the colors are too simplified,
maybe it oozes.

p(q). %RP% Polanski?

p(a). %VA% Except for early stuff, like ??Knife in the Water??, I haven't
thought about his movies much. I think of the person, or the myth
of the person, more than the work, and I don't like that myth; I've
been in relationships with people much younger than I am, and he
makes a relationship like that look ugly, and I don't want to believe
they have to be ugly.

p(q). %RP% Have you ever had someone who you've been close to come to some unspeakable harm?

p(a). %VA% People died, in ordinary ways, probably too unspeakable.

p(q). %RP% What's your relationship to your mother?

p(a). %VA% We speak on the phone every night; I'm an only child; my
father's been dead over twenty-five years. By this time we should
know each other, but neither of us asks the right questions; maybe,
in spite of all the phone time, we leave each other alone too much.

p(q). %RP% Would you consider serving on the Supreme Court?

p(a). %VA% I don't want to make laws and commandments. I do want to
make places that function as models, models for activities, but
models can be tampered with, and added to and subtracted from,
and there's no punishment.

p(q). %RP% What did you mean by "dumb literalness"?

p(a). %VA% I don't remember in which context I said this. What I would
mean now is: I want a thing, a place, to just be there, and not look
as if it's asking for interpretation&#8212;maybe you wonder about it later,
or you wonder about it on the side, but you don't have to talk about
it in order to use it&#8212;something that's so clear you can't believe
your eyes, something without an inside, like a stone.

p(q). %RP% Can insanity be prevented?

p(a). %VA% For me, insanity would be like a vacation, or a belief in god;
out of desperation, you let yourself fall into it.

p(q). %RP% When a person says gloomily, "No one understands me," are
they telling the truth?

p(a). %VA% They're telling the truth in the sense that they're making a
demand: "Don't understand me." (Underneath the imperative is a
subjunctive: "I hope nobody understands me, because if somebody
does, then I'm just like everybody else. Who am I then?")

p(q). %RP% Do you think anyone understands how another person feels?

p(a). %VA% Everybody, in a particular culture, understands the language
other people in that culture use when talking about feelings, and
that's all understanding can do, it can understand language.
Language is the realm of feelings when thought about or talked
about, and that's enough to take us from language to some kind of
action.

p(q). %RP% Did you ever play any sports?

p(a). %VA% When I was a child; all the usual sports, in the usual awkward
way. At the same time, from the early sixties, I've had a make-believe baseball player. I follow his career, think about him when
I'm falling asleep, when I'm drifting around the studio. He's my age,
based on somebody I went to elementary school with (there had to
be a real person to ground this on, though that real person was, as
far as I know, nothing like this make-believe person, the real
person functioned as a man without qualities, only the bones onto
which all my storage could be grafted). The ballplayer's an
outfielder (all alone like an American pioneer), he's batted .500
once, hit 121 home-runs one season, pitched a little toward the end
of his career in the mid-eighties (relief pitcher, came in just when
everybody needed him). He's played other sports off-season (the
thing about this guy is that he has only basic skills, he's taught
himself to be&#8212;willed himself into being&#8212;a superhuman player).
One trouble is, he's been traded a lot, he sticks out like a sore
thumb, he's never been on a World Series-winning team. He has a
personal life: he's gone out with actresses, rock singers. After he
retired, he made a movie, twenty-four hours long, about the real
invention of baseball, around the wagon trains on their way west
(Jodie Foster plays the woman who began the sport). He's making a
comeback now, trying to stretch his career into four decades (he
tried a comeback a few years ago, but he had gotten into trouble
with some kids at The Palladium, and was drummed out of
baseball). Now he's playing with Oakland. After all, people forget.
And anyway, they don't worry about that sort of thing in the
birthplace of the Raiders, so now he has one last chance at a World
Series, one last chance at being a team player on this team of
individuals.

!!10161!!
p(q). %RP% Do you think women are more easily satisfied with their
portraits than men?

p(a). %VA% More easily satisfied with (painted) portraits, less with
photographs. (I don't have any idea what you're talking about, I'm
just playing your game.)

p(q). %RP% I was wondering, do you think you can break a bad habit by
practicing it to excess?

p(a). %VA% By practicing it to excess, you can break the habit of calling it a "bad habit." It just becomes ordinary life.

p(q). %RP% Do you think it is possible to reason with people who are in
love?

p(a). %VA% When I'm in love, I think I can be reasoned with most easily.
On one hand, I'm always eager to find reasons to question my love,
break that love; on the other hand, I'm determined to be in this
love-state, love-event. But, in order to be really determined and
adamant, I have to know all the reasons against it, and do it anyway.

p(q). %RP% Is there one sure sign that you're not an emotional grown-up?

p(a). %VA% When I'm stuck on a piece, or when I hate my work, and I
complain about this to people around me, I'm making the
assumption that other people would be interested in what are, after
all, ordinary troubles, and just mine, and of no concern to them.

p(q). %RP% What's the best way to conquer fear?

p(a). %VA% My early pieces were based on stage-fright. In every early
performance, I spent the first few minutes having second thoughts,
"This is the worst piece I've ever done. The only honest thing is to
admit this and get out of here." But then, after a while, since the
pieces usually involved some kind of talk, both to myself and to
others, after a while I talked myself into it. I was hypnotized and
the piece went on. (But, if I conquered anything, it was only the
fear of performing. In everyday life, I'd be as afraid as I always
was.)

p(q). %RP% How would you cure an inferiority complex?

p(a). %VA% Remind myself of some kernel of something in some piece I've done, tell myself that this could&#8212;just possibly&#8212;improve and
range in the future. That might be illusory, of course, but so might
the inferiority complex. I'd be fighting it at its own level.

p(q). %RP% Under what circumstances would you murder someone?

p(a). %VA% I could see myself murdering the Fascists in ??Salo??, the rapists in ??Ms 45??.

p(q). %RP% Don't you think it's a little pessimistic to believe you can read a person's character by the way they look?

p(a). %VA% Yes, since it implies direct cause-and-effect. The character
causes the look, and the look causes the character, and there's no
escape. But it might also be said to be optimistic, the belief that
things can be so solvable and handle-able.

p(q). %RP% Is anything worth worrying about?

p(a). %VA% Yes. Falling into old habits, customary modes of working,
already-used solutions. At the same time, I worry about _not_
reusing solutions. I have a tendency, when starting a piece, to act
as if I've never done a piece before, as if I have nothing to fall back
on. I worry about that, so I have to assume it's worth worrying
about. It's worth worrying about because it reveals a
romanticization, a desire to divorce myself from history, from my
own history, a desire to think of myself as a person alone in a vast
unanswering universe&#8212;I hate ideas like that so I'd better worry
about it.

p(q). %RP% What about anxiety, do you have any?

p(a). %VA% Anxiety about exclusion from large group shows, particularly
European shows, anxiety that certain directions aren't clear enough
in my work. (E. g., I think of my work as more political than
apparently a lot of other people think. I think the only way art
should exist is as politics, as a critique of power and an impetus to
change. I'm anxious: either I'm missing something or they're
missing something, and if it's them then I'm missing an opportunity
to change their minds.)

p(aa). My biggest anxiety is that my stuff just isn't good enough, and
sometimes I can't even answer "good enough for what?" That's
what causes the anxiety.

p(q). %RP% Is there some piece you've wanted to put out there but
thought, "Even I couldn't get away with that?"

p(a). %VA% There have been pieces I didn't know how to do, so I never
worked them out far enough to put out. In the early days, there
was an idea of some performance on a floor filled with babies. In the
early 80s, there were some vague ideas of walking houses and
rolling homes.

p(aa). Doing a public space project always means adaptation, and
modification, sometimes because of subject matter (no pricks, no
cunts, no burning American flags), sometimes because of safety
standards (no holes, no heights without railings). But I don't think
I've felt stopped from something I've wanted to do. I don't think I'd
_want_ to do something that didn't fit into the conventions of public
space (the pieces aren't put out _in front of_ people, they already
contain within them at least a general idea of people, actions and
customs). You don't put something out, you infiltrate, you squeeze
something through.

p(q). %RP% What part of women do you like best? I like the voice, I think,
just the way a woman can say your name.

p(a). %VA% The vagina. If the person is someone I'm not involved with,
then the vagina must be the reason that the characteristics/qualities
I'm drawn to in that person are different from those similar
characteristics in a man. If the person is someone I'm involved
with, then the vagina is, literally, my way to get inside that person
and that person's way to envelop me.

p(q). %RP% What do you live for?

p(a). %VA% If I can't change the world, then maybe I can at least change
something about the space in the world, the instruments in the
world.

p(aa). What keeps me living is this: the idea that I might provide some
kind of situation that makes people do a double-take, that nudges
people out of certainty and assumption of power. (Another way of
putting this: some kind of situation that might make people walk
differently.)

p(q). %RP% Do you eat pizza?

p(a). %VA% Yes. There was a time in the seventies when I couldn't walk by a pizza parlour I hadn't tried, I had to go in for a slice. I wanted to
eat every pizza in New York.

p(q). %RP% Who do you think the Pat Boone of the art world is?

p(a). %VA% This might be the question I love most, but I have no idea how
to answer it. (Shit, I suddenly have one or two ideas, but I won't
say a word.)

p(aa). Let me avoid the question. The thing that means most to me
about Pat Boone is that for people of my situation and class, at a
certain time, he made black music available&#8212;distorted certainly&#8212;but enough so that you could go and hunt down the real thing.

!!10167!!
p(q). %RP% What makes you cry? Is there some kind of music, a scene in a movie?

p(a). %VA% Twice, when a person I was in love with left me, I cried. Now,
in love with someone, I cry sometimes when I'm with her and I feel
I'm part of her and she's part of me and that's all there is to that.

p(aa). I cry at the end of ??Last Year at Marienbad??, when the narrator
says (and there's no one left on screen): "You were alone&#8212;together&#8212;with me."

p(aa). I cry when Gloria Swanson comes in for her close-up at the end
of ??Sunset Boulevard?? and she blurs out on the screen.

p(aa). I cry when John Wayne slips down off his rearing horse in ??The
Searchers?? &#8212; the horse is just about to pounce down on Natalie
Wood-and he picks her up in his arms and says, "Let's go home,
Debbie."

p(aa). I cry (or something like it) when Jeremy Irons in ??Dead Ringers??
drifts around his dead brother's body (his dead self) and says/sings,
"El-lie, El-lie, El-lie..."

p(aa). I cry (or something like it) in the middle of the Sex Pistols'
"Bodies" when the music stops for an instant and then starts again,
with Johnny Rotten's voice coming in, "Fuck this and fuck that."

p(aa). I cry (or something like it) when I look up through the
Guggenheim's spiralling ramps, up to the circle of light coming in at
the top.

p(aa). I'd probably cry, or something like it, at the Malaparte House in
Capri, if I were there.

p(q). %RP% Do you think about what you are going to wear before you go
out?

p(a). %VA% A little. If I'm going farther than my immediate neighborhood,
I take off my green pants (indoor pants) and put on my black pants
(outdoor pants). I decide whether to wear a black collared shirt or a
black turtleneck (the old one that's turning blue-gray, or the newer
one still black, or the one with the hole in the sleeve). I choose
between my black jacket (if I care about my image that day) or my
green army jacket, I guess whether it's cold enough to wear my
green army coat.

p(q). %RP% I've heard you referred to as "The Hunger Artist." The hunger
artist supposedly leaves out or forgets about public opinion.

p(a). %VA% I never leave out public opinion, not public _appreciation_ but
public _consideration_, public _response_; people are part of all the
pieces I do. I anticipate a range of responses, or at least actions.

p(q). %RP% Why do you think you're an artist's artist?

p(a). %VA% If I'm an "artist's artist," it's probably because: I don't make
much money; my work seems to change, so it looks as if I must be
trying; I've been with a lot of galleries, so it looks like I'm my own
person, no strings on me.

p(q). %RP% You once told me you've saved a lot of money by not having to go to a shrink. What did you mean?

p(a). %VA% Early work of mine might have been a substitute: I went
through the motions of therapy, I physicalized therapy. (But I don't
think that was the purpose, I thought I was doing art. I was shifting
the focus from art-object to art-doer. To prove I was focusing, I
could target in on that art-doer, myself, physically&#8212;by extension&#8212;I could knock that art-doer out of existence and move out of self and
on to place. So, if therapy is about getting rid of the problem, then
my early work was getting rid of me.)

p(aa). Also, I used to be Catholic, I couldn't make myself go to another
priest.

p(q). %RP% Did you really ever have an orgasm under the ??Seedbed???

p(a). %VA% Yes.

p(q). %RP% Have you ever seen someone murdered or executed? What do you think about capital punishment?

p(a). %VA% No. No use for it, and even if there were use, no justification
for it.

p(q). %RP% Do you really describe yourself as a minimalist, can that be
amended?

p(a). %VA% My early work came out of minimalism (and also out of R. D.
Laing and Erving Goffman and Edward Hall and Kurt Lewin and pop
psychology of the time. . . but that's another question.)

p(aa). If minimalism was my father-art, I had to find something wrong
with it, I had to kill the father. (The flaw in minimalism, as I saw it,
was that it could have come from anywhere, it was there as if from
all time, it was like the black monolith in ??2001??.) Well, if something
just appears out of nowhere, then you never can tell where it might
have come from, all you can do is bow down, kneel down, you'd
better respect it. To get around this, I probably made the decision
that, whatever I did, I would make its source clear: that source was
me, I was the doer, I would present my own person. (When I think
of ??Seedbed??, I think of the room as a prototypical minimal-art
space: nothing on the walls, nothing on the floor, except in this case
there was a worm under the floor.)

p(aa). I still think of my stuff as making minimal moves: it bulges walls
out, digs under floors, it's usually tied into buildings so it's based on
right angles. But I don't know if that has anything to do with
minimal art. It probably has more to do with co-habiting a space and
fitting in, nudging in . . .

p(q). %RP% Would you shoot an animal for sport?

p(a). %VA% No.

p(q). %RP% Who do you do your art for?

p(a). %VA% For myself, to prove I can think. For other people, living
people, to join in a mix of theories that might sooner or later lead to
practices; for future people, to function as a track that might be
renovated and taken from.

p(q). %RP% What kinds of food do you eat?

p(a). %VA% I could probably eat nothing but Chinese food everyday for the
rest of my life. But I don't. What I eat is: if I go out, Indian, Chinese, Thai; if I stay home, which is what I usually do, basic chickens, basic pastas, basic salads.

p(q). %RP% Do you know any good jokes?

p(a). %VA% Best joke I've heard recently is an old Milton Berle routine.

p(aa). A resort in the Catskills. Lots of women around: widows
divorcees, they're searching for men; one of them spots a man she
hasn't seen before.

p(aa). "You're new here," she says.
     
p(aa). "Yeah," he says, "I've been in the can!"
     
p(aa). She's confused, "You've been on the toilet?"
     
p(aa). "No, no, I graduated."
     
p(aa). She's confused again, "You're just out of college? You're that
young?"
     
p(aa). "No, no, when I say I've been in the can, when I say I graduated,
I mean I was doing time."
     
p(aa). She's still confused, "Doing time? What time?"
     
p(aa). "Let me explain. You see, there was my wife. I took an axe, I
chopped my wife into twenty-five pieces."
     
p(aa). "Oh, you're single?"

p(q). %RP% Have you been married, any children?

p(a). %VA% I was married in 1962, just after I graduated from college, we
lived together on and off until 1968, no children.

p(q). %RP% Do you have a good memory? How far back can you recall?

p(a). %VA% I remember scenes from movies well, and lines from books
and movies and songs. I don't remember faces well or, more
precisely, I don't connect names and faces. I don't think I
remember further back than to the age of four and even then, it
might be that I've been helped by photographs.
     
p(aa). What I remember most from childhood, around five or six or
seven, is a recurrent childhood dream. I'm in the bathroom, I'm
standing in front of the toilet, I'm pissing. I'm pissing blood. I draw
back, shocked, scared: as I draw back, my piss shoots all over the
place, all over the walls, over the ceiling. I see what's happening, I
make a sudden decision, I grab my prick and direct my piss more
determinedly over every inch of the walls and ceiling, I'm not
scared anymore, I'm exulting. The color of the room is changing
and it's all because of me.
     
p(aa). The real life incident I remember is: I'm over my father's knee,
he's spanking me, I'm about five. As he spanks me, I throw up, I'm
vomiting spaghetti all around his feet. (The spaghetti I had eaten
had tomato sauce on it, I was sure of that, but as it came back out of
my mouth, it came out all white, as if it was filtered through my
insides).

p(q). %RP% What kinds of men and women do you dislike?

p(a). %VA% I like multi-directedness, and the look of a frightened colt, and
the little engine that could, and grasping at straws: I dislike
smugness and self-satisfaction.

p(q). %RP% Did you find when you were growing up, that people often
frowned upon those who sought out psychiatric help? What about
now?

p(a). %VA% When I was growing up, people had priests, or they assumed
they had themselves. There are no individual bodies now, no skin,
no separation between public and private. (If there was, would I be
so earnestly trying to answer these questions?)

!!10173!!
p(q). %RP% If fashion is what comes after art, what comes before art?

p(a). %VA% Probably everything. Let me put it this way: when I realized I
wasn't writing anymore, in 1969, what drew me to "art" was that art
was a non-field field, a field that had no inherent characteristics
except for its name, except for the fact that it was called art: so in
order to have substance, art had to import. It imported from every
other field in the world.
     
p(aa). Let me put it another way: for me, what comes before art&#8212;in
the sense of influence&#8212;is architecture, movies, (pop) music. (But
probably literature and or philosophy come first. Books provide,
literally, a text, theory. But of course, a book can provide a text, a
theory, only because it's a storage of what really comes first:
history, science . . .)

p(q). %RP% Do you write letters? To whom?

p(a). %VA% Three times in my life I've written a lot of letters, each time to
a person whom I was in love with and who was, either physically or
some other way, very far away.

p(q). %RP% What makes you really angry?

p(a). %VA% Being cheated, being tricked, being slighted in stores or at
business offices because of the way I'm dressed. Right now what's
making me angry is that I'm spending so much more time
answering these questions than you spent writing them. (I work so
much more slowly than other artists seem to work: that makes me
angry.)

p(q). %RP% Do you ever hang out at topless bars?

p(a). %VA% No.

p(q). %RP% What sort of porn should be banned?

p(a). %VA% On the one hand, I believe that porn influences crime; if I
didn't believe that, then there'd be no reason at all to do art, since
art couldn't affect a real-life situation. On the other hand, I don't
believe that porn should be banned. You can only ban the crime, not
the influence. (All you can do is hope that other influences, colliding
influences, might act as a buffer. That's what the electronic age is
all about.)

p(q). %RP% Do you think art is one of the places in the world where
something perfect can happen?

p(a). %VA% Visual art, architectural models, (concert) music, books . . . all
those situations where there's a viewer, an audience, where there's
a separation between person and thing: something perfect can
happen only where there's visual distance.

p(aa). Which is why I resent the visual: the visual means you don't
touch it, the visual means somebody owns it and that somebody
isn't you.
     
p(aa). I prefer the perfect to come down to earth and be imperfected:
the architectural model become architecture, the architecture
become renovated, music become pop music, blasting out of some
radio while some other pop music blares out of the speaker in front
of some store . . .

p(q). %RP% How many pairs of shoes do you own?

p(a). %VA% One pair for going out, another pair that used to be for going
out but then wore out and now functions as house shoes, and a pair
of all purpose sneakers, sort of on reserve in case one of the two
majors breaks down and I need a quick replacement.

p(q). %RP% What artists do you like: old, peers, new?

p(a). %VA% Peers (we can commiserate and maybe my position can be
buttressed); new (I can try not to be left behind).

p(q). %RP% Did you do your homework when you were in school?

p(a). %VA% Yes. All my life, I've never had particular skills, particular
talents; I've just had will, and I've worked hard. I see myself as a
drudgerer. (As for school homework, it wasn't pure academics, I
knew I couldn't keep going to school unless I got scholarships, so I
did what I had to do).

p(q). %RP% Do you wear underwear?

p(a). %VA% No.

p(q). %RP% Do you eat meat?

p(a). %VA% Yes.

p(q). %RP% I don't like it when men whistle at women on the street. What
about you?

p(a). %VA% I hate it, too. At the same time, walking down the street, in
the city of the 90s, means putting yourself out in public,
subjecting yourself to the public, you're up for grabs. This applies
to men as well as to women, men realize they can be victimized,
too. You don't have to accept this situation, you just have to guard
against it. And I don't mean carry weapons, but I might mean wear
armor: this is what late capitalism is all about. (At the same time,
it's apparent that women are subjected to whistling and men aren't,
except in specialized situations: women-whistling, therefore,
should be a punishable crime.)

p(q). %RP% Has anyone ever tied you up?

p(a). %VA% Yes.

p(q). %RP% I heard that Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis bought brand new
Cadillacs with their first money. Have you ever gone out and blown
a couple of inches of cash on something you really didn't need?

p(a). %VA% Just on books and records/tapes/CDs, and I always need them. And, at various times, on presents for a person I was in love with.
And that person needed them, or _we_ needed them in order to be a
couple.

p(q). %RP% Would you ever trade places with a woman?

p(a). %VA% Yes. Except that, as in your previous trading-places question,
I don't understand what it means: would I know I'd traded places,
or do I "become" that person? Do I keep doing "my" work, only
doing it as a different person? Who am I anyway?

p(q). %RP% Have you changed your bedroom situation since I last visited
you?

p(a). %VA% It's still the same. So that others can know what we're talking
about: all the implements for living&#8212;bathroom, sink, stove,
refrigerator, table and chairs, bed, clothes closet&#8212;are squeezed
into what's probably less than 10% of a 3500 foot loft space.

p(q). %RP% What's the best place you've been to? I mean, do you ever see yourself away from New York?

p(a). %VA% L.A., maybe Paris. New York follows an old model of a city: it
maintains the idea of a center, it keeps vestiges of piazzas and
town-meetings. The new city would be more like a blob, like ooze,
like L. A.; the new city would be a ground for floating privacies,
floating capsules; the new city would have more to do with the
curves of a highway than with the grid of streets.

p(q). %RP% Have you ever walked into a bar and picked somebody up or
been picked up?

p(a). %VA% I've been in situations, not bars, where I've met someone, we
talked, and then within a few hours we fucked. I assumed we were
picking each other up (I don't think the word "pick up" came up in
anybody's mind: I assumed we were, simply, meeting each other).

p(q). %RP% Do you have call waiting?

p(a). %VA% No. I never answer my phone directly, always have my
answering machine on; don't like to be surprised and at a loss for
excuses; call-waiting would be asking to be put on the spot; I want
to avoid calls, not be in the middle of more.

p(q). %RP% What is the connection between the bras and ??Seedbed??? It
seems like you've come full circle, from masturbation to nursing (a
kind of regression).

p(a). %VA% It's hard for me to pinpoint the meaning of a piece; I'd want the
reference, the connotations, to free-float. I want to make a
situation where a passer-by says: "It's a wall! No, it's a bra! No, it's
a room-divider! No, it's the attack of the 50-foot woman!" Then you
could go on from there, and possibly have fleeting thoughts about
sex and comfort and power and regression, etc., but by this time
you'd be inside the space, and the space would be part of your
everyday life.
     
p(aa). I'm afraid people pay attention to my stuff only when it has
something to do with sex: that's my art role, and I'd better live up
to it.

p(aa). ??Seedbed?? started by taking architecture, something assumed as
neutral and apart from person, and filling it with person: I'd be part
of the floor, the wall would breathe. ??Adjustable Wall Bras?? started
with taking a wall, the wall in front of you, and bringing it out to
you, making it bulge. Now that it bulged physically, it could bulge
with a person inside it, it could bulge with metaphor. (Seeing the
world the way a baby might see the world, the breast as the baby's
wall.)
    
p(aa). I hope the piece brings up other ideas besides nursing, I hope it
brings them up all at the same time.

p(q). %RP% Having to follow your show with mine, I feel like the Rolling
Stones having to follow James Brown.

p(a). %VA% Doing this interview, I feel like Eddie Constantine in
??Alphaville??, answering the questions of Alpha 60. (One comment:
the Rolling Stones sell a lot more albums than James Brown.)</body>
  <category-id type="integer">10</category-id>
  <created-at type="datetime">2007-07-07T21:37:46-04:00</created-at>
  <created-by>Admin</created-by>
  <editors-suggestion type="integer" nil="true"></editors-suggestion>
  <homepage-category-id type="integer">22</homepage-category-id>
  <homepage-position type="integer">0</homepage-position>
  <id type="integer">1443</id>
  <image-id type="integer">10179</image-id>
  <in-feed type="boolean">false</in-feed>
  <indexed-author>Prince, Richard</indexed-author>
  <indexed-title>Acconci, Vito</indexed-title>
  <intro>&amp;nbsp;

!!10149!!
I met Vito in Vienna in 1986. We've been following each other around, in a way, ever since: we both showed at International with Monument and now we both show with Barbara Gladstone. He just had a show, and my show followed his: I told him I felt like the Rolling Stones following James Brown at the Tammy Awards in 1964. I wanted to talk to him about mainstream cults.</intro>
  <issue-id type="integer">36</issue-id>
  <no-banner type="boolean" nil="true"></no-banner>
  <status type="integer">0</status>
  <teaser></teaser>
  <title>Vito Acconci</title>
  <update-reason></update-reason>
  <updated-at type="datetime">2009-01-23T12:02:15-05:00</updated-at>
  <updated-by>Editor</updated-by>
</article>
