Modern Angels: a documentary exploration of transdermal, body art and body modification in the Kingdom of Belgium [Video Essay]

In this video, I will examine aspects of ‘body ritual’ as a means of expression and resistance to prevailing dominant cultural and how ancient ritualistic practices have evolved into mainstream art forms and anti-religious symbolic resistance at the second millennium of Christ. The work will explore issues of identity and religious/spiritual belief associated with such body art practices and their symbolic meaning across different ritualistic activities including, tattoo, piercing, branding, scarification, performance and within these particular elements to further explore the nuance of practi... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Wallace, Roy
Dokumenttyp: other
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Verlag/Hrsg.: Fulgur Press
Schlagwörter: body art / Body Hanging / body manipulation / Body Piercing / tattooing / Modern Angels / modern primatives / subcultures / Neo-Paganism / All Tribe
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26604877
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://pure.northampton.ac.uk/en/publications/8569769b-467c-423a-b947-5c2b3ae1df99

In this video, I will examine aspects of ‘body ritual’ as a means of expression and resistance to prevailing dominant cultural and how ancient ritualistic practices have evolved into mainstream art forms and anti-religious symbolic resistance at the second millennium of Christ. The work will explore issues of identity and religious/spiritual belief associated with such body art practices and their symbolic meaning across different ritualistic activities including, tattoo, piercing, branding, scarification, performance and within these particular elements to further explore the nuance of practice between different approaches. The implicit theme underlying this work embraces occult practice as performance as seen through the eyes of a number of key participants active in the Belgian Underground scenes which cross-over and interconnect with a range of complimentary subcultural movements including, punk, goth, rockabilly and various sexually explicit transdermal groups who engage in ‘performance’ as both ritual and practice involving the ‘spectator’ and in my case the ‘documenter’ which poses a range of ethical and moral considerations when documenting and recording such activities, as acknowledged or unacknowledged participant. The work focuses on three main strands, tattooing, body art performance and body piercing, although at times these practices interweave there is a clear distinction between the ritual and practice. Sasson-Levy and Rapoport (2003: 379) suggest “although the human body is a vehicle of all social protest, analytical questions raised by the ‘protesting body’… have been mostly neglected.” My work in some way seeks to explore the analytical potential of the audio/visual medium to more effectively communicate the ‘personal protest’ involved in my chosen area of study through which individuals claim and re-claim their bodies in ways which best fit their personal spiritual and collective practices often drawn and re-worked from ancient or modern tribal and occult histories. Such individual tapestries ...