| In the early 1970s Marc Chaimowicz was interested in ideas of art, which could challenged
 artists to move beyond the Duchampian readymade that had challenged the concept
 of the art object. During the period, Chaimowicz wrote about performance art
 for Studio International, in addition to actively participating in the origins of avant-garde
 artist film and performance in Britain. His early works reflected the artist’s
 close identification with both filmmaking and the visual arts. It is an art
 that is both performance and temporary installation. He is part of a generation
 that vastly expanded the parameters of visual language often fusing
 experimentation and the classics: electronic imagery and thorough explorations
 of process expanded technical and performance possibilities within the visual
 arts. During a period which gave rise to Fluxus, Structuralists and
 Conceptualists, Chaimowicz and his generation of visual artists advocated new
 strategies and new notion about the art object that opened nonrestrictive
 creative vitality and diversity affecting not only the visual arts, but also
 performance and music.
   Similar tomany of the young artists to emerge in the late sixties, Chaimowicz
 re-evaluated the efficacy and morality of the western materialist society
 through art practices. The response by these artists was to reappraise both the
 traditional modes of representation and those of the institutions of
 art—galleries, museums, and the market structure. The objective was to
 investigate how the heterogeneous set of codes that comprised the creative
 process produced meaning and how art could be democratized with the culture as
 a whole.  For these artists, this
 meant rejecting the phenomenological and “permanent” status of the art project
 in favor of more self-critical and discursive practices of time-based
 procedures, involving the spectator as a collaborator in the given meaning and
 completed status to the art work. However, for Chaimowicz, there is an evolving
 attempt to de-emphasize the role of the artist in the performance while at the
 same time retaining the idea of the work as a creative process shared by
 artists and audience.
   Thisoutlook resulted in Chaimowicz’s artistic production moving across disciplines.
 He has continually been intrigued by the exploration of different media and
 situations outside the isolation of the studio. Chaimowicz has over the course
 of his evolution grown closer to the disciplines of applied arts. His interest
 in design is directly related to his desire to create a holistic and
 aesthetically integrated environment. This emphasizes the concept of “place”,
 which is evoked through both the choice and arrangement of its formal elements,
 in addition to the use of lighting and the content itself.
 style="mso-spacerun: yes">  Since his early work “Approach Road”,
 the artist has invented structures filled with decorative elements that
 populate and impact his environmental works and installations.
 style="mso-spacerun: yes">  Most of these constructions play off
 the conventions of two and three dimensionality, in terms of both sculpture and
 architecture. Site and location is important for the site or the context of the
 body, is also the point of exchange with the world.
   During the70’s, when engagement with political and gender issues were the normal for
 those involved with performance, Marc Chaimowicz’s approach was notable for his
 play with ambiguous sexuality. The artist however appeared quite at home with
 Bacjelard’s  notion of the poets of
 space. His performances during that period has been described as investigations
 of the secrets of femininity in the most male of men. His performances were not
 statements but rather points of opportunities for the viewers to negotiate and
 reflect on gender politics.
   MarcCamille Chaimowicz’s outlook is reflective of his transnational identity. His
 father was Polish and studied pure mathematics in Warsaw during the 1930s, and
 also worked with Marie Curie in Paris. The family came to England in 1954 and
 first settled in Stevenage. Chaimowicz received an education between England
 and France. Chaimowicz studied at Camberwell School of Art under Frank Auerbach
 and Michael Andrews, and then went to on to study at the Slade School in the
 early 1970s, where Coldstream sympathized with his critique of painting and
 supported him in his need to find new ways to practice. Chaimowicz presently
 teaches both at the Reading University in England and the Ecoles des Beaux-arts
 in Dijon.
   Chaimociz’sinfluences are vast, with figures like Cocteau and (especially) Proust whose
 concepts of self are close to his own. Proust imagined the self as an “ empty
 apparatus”. Similarly, throughout Chaimowicz’s career, a single pattern
 predominates: the self who requires validation and the support that love can
 offer.  He has talked of his early
 paintings as greatly influenced by Jasper Johns and Arshile Gorky. Adolf Loss,
 later a mentor for Chaimowicz, provided the artist a point of entry for the
 investigation of architecture and sculpture. His fascination with architecture
 is not surprising given that site and space, in terms of pubic and private
 aspects, controls our connections with other people. Union with others is both
 a danger and desired aim in Chaimowicz’s art. In his early work, this takes the
 form of erotic attachment.
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