A novel approach to performance art and its history that revisits Viennese Actionism, one of the most controversial episodes of the 1960s.
Viennese Actionism represents a notorious case within art history, often cited but little studied, especially in the United States. By carefully looking at the unsettling performances that define this movement, Caroline Lillian Schopp offers a vital corrective to the narrative. Schopp observes that contrary to the reception of their graphic violence, many performances explore passivity, vulnerability, and dependence in gestures of ""in-action."" Viennese Actionism registers hesitations about the liberatory ethos of the 1960s, amplified by Austria's marginalized postwar social and artistic culture. In dialogue with feminist theory, In-action assembles a vocabulary for performance art without the standards of self-assertion, emancipation, and expressive action that continue to inform how art and politics are understood today.
Decentering the traditional focus on the male protagonists of Viennese Actionism—Günter Brus, Otto Muehl, Hermann Nitsch, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler—Schopp draws attention to women who performed with them, including Anna Brus, Hanel Koeck, and Ingrid Wiener. Doing so brings into view how these performances scrutinize intimate relationships like marriages, partnerships, and friendships, as well as the conventions of traditional artistic media such as painting and tapestry.
By:
Caroline Lillian Schopp
Imprint: University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication: United States
Dimensions:
Height: 254mm,
Width: 178mm,
Weight: 454g
ISBN: 9780226839196
ISBN 10: 0226839192
Pages: 280
Publication Date: 01 December 2025
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Introduction Performance Art Histories: Mistaking Rudolf Schwarzkogler “Individual Mythology” · Aktionen/In-action · The Action Paradigm · Feminist Actionism · Ordinary Action · In-action—Missing, In-sincere, Wedding · Chapters of In-action 1 Objections: Hanel Koeck’s Insult, Anna Brus’s Disinclination The Insulting of Hanel Koeck · Anna Brus’s Look, or, St. Anna · Anthropometries · Transfusion · Maternal Disinclination 2 Incident: On Failing to Perform, Vienna 1968 Rumors, Records, Mediatizations · Media Shitstorm · The Crisis of Austrian Impotence · The Hateful and the Ugly: Politics, Aesthetics, and the Police · The Domestic Kunst und Revolution 3 In-action: Günter Brus’s Bad Form From Painting to Performance—“And to Be Sure, Not in the Sense of Pollock” · Obstruction: Painting in a Labyrinthine Space, Self-Painting, Self-Dismemberment · Bad Form—Figuration After Formlessness · Picasso’s Impasse 4 Weaving: Ingrid Wiener’s Tapestry Collaborations Two Artists (Two Feminists) Weaving Gobelins · Textiling Feminism · Napkin-cum-Gobelin · Extimate Collaborations · Correspondence Tapestry Acknowledgments Notes Index
Caroline Lillian Schopp is assistant professor of the history of art at Johns Hopkins University. She was previously guest professor of art history, art theory, and aesthetics at the Berlin University of the Arts and a faculty member in art history at the University of Vienna.
Reviews for In-action: Viennese Actionism and the Passivities of Performance Art
“Schopp’s extraordinary work provides new tools for addressing performance, pushing back against normative standards that have come to dominate the interpretive landscape in performance studies. In-action gives a thick, heady, intimate sense of the density of these artists’ ways of working, while avoiding the disgust so characteristic of much of the literature on body art. This makes for bracing reading and serves as a major corrective.” -- Judith Rodenbeck, author of ""Radical Prototypes: Allan Kaprow and the Invention of Happenings"" “This book offers a much-needed reconceptualization of Viennese Actionism, a movement usually remembered for the transgressive aesthetics of its protagonists and easily dismissed as an exercise in provocation. Schopp carefully attends to contributions of its previously neglected participants and offers a fresh vision of Actionism that centers on precariousness, vulnerability, and in-abilities to perform. In-action is an important contribution in the fields of postwar European art, the history and theory of performance art, and German/Austrian studies.” -- Philipp Ekardt, author of ""Toward Fewer Images""