
Born Arlene Hannah Butter in New York City, Hannah Wilke was a controversial figure of Feminist Art in the 1970s. She began her career sculpting with some success, creating vulval forms out of latex and ceramic, but she is best known for her performance-based work wherein she uses her own image and obvious beauty to set up the ideal of the pinup. In her best known work, S.O.S - Starification Object Series, 1974, Wilke is seen topless in a variety of archetypal feminine guises: the housewife, the fashion model, etc., but she has covered her body with vaginal objects made of chewing gum. Wilke's critics at the time charged her with narcissism and argued that she was complicit in such objectification as much as she was challenging it. Her work was rethought when Wilke showed "Intra Venus" some twenty years later, a project documenting, often with the same sense of humor as S.O.S., her battle with cancer. The criticism never seemed to hurt her career; her work is part of the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, The Jewish Museum in New York, and the Brooklyn Museum.
Gestures is a series of performance-based works in which Wilke faces the camera in extreme close-up and performs repetitive or durational physical actions. At times she kneads and pulls her skin as if it were sculptural material. Often her gestures - rubbing her hands over her face, smiling so hard that she appears to be grimacing, sticking out her tongue - take on a loaded significance when seen in the context of gender performance

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