The 2018 publication of a book "<u>The Mediatization of the Artist</u>" written by various writers included a chapter titled "In Bed with Marina Abramovi: Mediatizing Women's Art as Personal Drama" written by Marcel Bleuler.
The recent methods used to mediate popular performance artist Marina Abramovic and the stories built up around her work of arts are covered in this chapter of Bleuler's book. The author argues that Abramovic uses the narrative as part of her image strategy and analyzes paradigmatic projections of a romantic need onto female artists, primarily in film.
Marina Abramovic's famous live performance art during 2010 attracted nearly a million visitors to the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). While Abramovic attempted to rationalize this hysteria by demonstrating the psycho-neurological significance of her "art" through scientific means, Marcel Bleuler contended that the hysteria stemmed from a rhetoric about the performance that was too profound and that spread over time and through various media, following a common pattern in the mediatization of female artists: the ambiguous attention as a remedy for an unmet need to be appreciated.
<em>Image: "Marina Abramović during her "The Artist Is Present" show at the Museum of Modern Art</em>
Learn more about Marina Abramovic: brainly.com/question/10593223
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"The music of ancient Rome was a part of Roman culture from the earliest of times. Songs (carmen) were an integral part of almost every social occasion. ... Music was customary at funerals, and the tibia (Greek aulos), a woodwind instrument, was played at sacrifices to ward off ill influences."
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Romanesque churches designed with heavy wall pointed or round arches, vaults, and piers for columns. Romanesque architecture came to Europe after the crusade when Europeans went for religious war. Crusaders get to know the architectures of Byzantine Empire, built with thick wall, with fortifications. The metalworking also came for the fitting and decoration of buildings.
A stuffed goat is the focal point