Cuts:

A Traditional Sculpture

2011-2013: Performance + Video + Photography

CUTS: A TRADITIONAL
SCULPTURE  
is a six month durational performance of disciplined body sculpting.

Cassils reinterprets Eleanor Antin’s 1972 Carving: A Traditional Sculpture, in which Antin crash diets for 45 days and documents her body daily through stark full-body photography. Cassils inverts Antin’s process, using their mastery of bodybuilding and nutrition to gain 23 pounds of muscle over 23 weeks. 

In contrast to the feminine act of weight loss in Antin’s Carving, Cassils’s CUTS involves transformation into a traditionally masculine muscular form. Four grids of time lapse photographs of Cassils’s transformation are sorted by vantage point, offering a striking overview of the entire performance that draws out its conceptual clarity.

“The artist’s body is a sculptural index of disciplined practices. Cassils’s cuts are precise and technical, mobilizing intense physical labor and a frenzy of consumption bordering on the abject. This twist on “getting cut” queers the trans body by showcasing the cut of musculature as opposed to the cut of the surgeon’s knife.”

Fast Twitch/Slow Twitch

A two channel video installation contrasts the process that fueled CUTS with its material results. One channel features captivating yet revolting slow-motion images of Cassils swallowing raw eggs, eating meat with animalistic fervor, choking on supplements, and maxing out in near-orgasmic spasms of weightlifting exertion. The second is a time lapse video of the artists body, in which the 23 weeks of intensive bodybuilding are compressed into 23 seconds of muscular growth and physique sculpting.

“In Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, the building of a body is not a triumphant act, but rather a process that is both temporary and risky. A body coheres to come apart, capacities are cultivated only to disintegrate.”

Advertisement: Homage To Benglis

On the 160th day of Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Cassils collaborated with photographer and makeup artist Robin Black to create Advertisement: Homage to Benglis. In this photograph, Cassils stages an homage to Linda Benglis’s historic feminist artwork Advertisement (1974), in which Benglis poses with a double-ended phallus in an advertisement in Artforum. Cassils’s ripped, transmasculine physique substitutes for Benglis’s phallus. Rather than paying for advertising space, Cassils and Black disseminated these images of self-empowered trans representation to gay fashion and art publications, both print and digital. Placing Advertisement: Homage to Benglis within the context of LGBT-specific media signals a shift in American cultural landscape, while also highlighting the role of feminist artists like Benglis in bringing about those changes. 

Image + media credits for this page >>

Cassils
Fast Twitch Slow Twitch, Web Video Clip
Courtesy of the artistArtist: Cassils
Director of Photography: Alison Kelly
Editing: Rhys Ernst
Art Department: Brody Creigton
Lighting: Dean Haysaka
Sound: Barn Owl

Cassils
Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Timelapse Before/After (Detail), 2011
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Timelapse (Back), 2011
Courtesy of the artist


Cassils
Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Timelapse (Front), 2011
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Timelapse (Left), 2011
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture, Timelapse (Right), 2011
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Fast Twitch Slow Twitch, Video Still No. 9
Courtesy of the artist
Artist: Cassils
Director of Photography: Alison Kelly
Editing: Rhys Ernst
Art Department: Brody Creigton
Lighting: Dean Haysaka

Cassils
Fast Twitch Slow Twitch, Video Still No. 7
Courtesy of the artist
Artist: Cassils
Director of Photography: Alison Kelly
Editing: Rhys Ernst
Art Department: Brody Creigton
Lighting: Dean Haysaka

Cassils
Advertisement: Homage to Benglis, 2011
photo: Cassils with Robin Black
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Disfigured Image: Cut Up: Comments from Huffington Post Article, 2013
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Disfigured Image: Anatomically Correct, 2013
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Disfigured Image: The Resilient 20%, 2013
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Pin Up from the Magazine Lady Face Man Body, No. 9, 2011
photo: Cassils with Robin Black
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Pin Up from the Magazine Lady Face Man Body, No. 3, 2011
photo: Cassils with Robin Black
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Pin Up from the Magazine Lady Face Man Body, No. 6, 2011
photo: Cassils with Robin Black
Courtesy of the artist

Cassils
Pin Up from the Magazine Lady Face Man Body, No. 2, 2011
photo: Cassils with Robin Black
Courtesy of the artist