On the roof of his Brooklyn studio, artist Oliver Herring photographs Davide Borella during an exhausting performance as Borella spits various colors of water, tinted by food dye, up into the air and onto his face.
Among Oliver Herring’s earliest works were his woven sculptures and performance pieces in which he knitted Mylar, a transparent and reflective material, into human figures, clothing and furniture. Since 1998, Herring has created stop-motion videos, photo-collaged sculptures, and impromtu participatory performances with ‘off-the-street’ strangers, embracing chance and chance-encounters in his work.
I'm very intrigued and I am very curious to see what's going to happen. It's dye and spray, so we'll see.
Try and get as much on your face as possible.
Good. Try and get even more on your face, your hair, whatever.
That’s good. That’s great. It’s amazing. Keep going.
Okay.
Yeah.
There you go.
So by the way what did it taste like?
Some chemicals.
Chemicals?
Yeah, like liquid plastic.
Actually, I want to get your teeth one second, just a normal smile. Ha.Ha.Ha.Ha.
So, what do you think?
Oh I am much more curious about what he thinks.
Well, the red felt a little you know bloody.
Well, you couldn't see yourself.
No, but I could just I could actually see the color that I have on.
Because its runs in your eyes?
Yes, it was right on my eyelashes, so I have like red eyelashes on my eyebrows,
so I see through the color, so.
Did it hurt? I mean I saw so you squinting a lot.
Sometimes just the wind and the sun, but it was basically like I was seeing filter color; you know yellow filters, red filters, green filters, and blue filters.
What do you think you'd look like?
I have no idea. I feel like I look like a mask or something.
You feel like yourself?
Well I feel like myself a little wet and. Ha. Ha. Ha.
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