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Naked in the train: artist shocks Europe

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  • Naked in the train: artist shocks Europe

    The Local, Germany
    Aug 8 2013



    Naked in the train: artist shocks Europe

    Published: 7 Aug 2013 14:33 CET

    A Berlin-based performance artist is raising eyebrows in European
    capitals with a risque drive to expose the role of advertising in
    every day life - by pulling his trousers down in public.

    Standing in a crowded U-bahn, trousers around your ankles, with just
    an iPad shielding your privates from the gaze of curious strangers
    might not be everyone's idea of art, but for one Berlin-based
    performance artist, it's all in a day's work.

    With his provocative 'live advertising' stunt, Mischa Badasyan says he
    is breaking boundaries - and sometimes local laws - to get people
    thinking about the prevalence of advertising in public spaces.

    Armed only with a blank-screened iPad and a t-shirt declaring `Your
    advert here' in various languages and an arrow pointing to his
    genitals, Badasyan is touring European capitals as a 'walking
    billboard' to see how locals react.

    But the artist was disappointed to find that few onlookers have so far
    taken up his offer to use him as a living, breathing poster boy.

    `I was surprised to get negative reactions or aggressive feedback,'
    Badasyan, 25, told The Local. `Some people shouted at me in Berlin,
    they didn't like my idea at all.'

    The Armenian-born artist, who came to Dresden as a student in 2008,
    said he wants to `break stereotyped thinking' and challenge social
    norms with his art. He aims to take his 'ADbuster' pants-down project
    to every European capital.

    So far he has hit landmarks and public transport in Berlin, Vienna,
    Paris, Bratislava, Sofia, Bucharest and Rome - at times with explosive
    results.

    `In Italy two guys blamed me for disturbing and reckless behaviour
    towards children. One guy screamed at me and violently pulled up my
    trousers,' Badasyan told The Local.

    `In France I got in trouble with the security guards at the Pompidou
    Centre, they tried to call the police but I ran away.'

    Badasyan feels the influence of advertising - particularly what he
    sees as manipulative sexualised adverts - on modern life is often
    ignored.

    `Every step of your life in modern society is influenced by
    advertisement,' the artist writes on his website. `Each commercial
    advertisement can be viewed as an invasion of privacy.'

    But many who spotted the trouser-less Badasyan in a public place did
    not immediately catch the point of his message.

    `Mostly people asked me why I was doing it and what on earth the iPad
    was doing there,' he said. `Some people found it funny.'

    `Some supported my idea that we have to rethink ... billboards with
    sexual ads in the city,' he added. `Just a small number of people
    absolutely supported me and liked my campaign.'

    Yet in the end, Badasyan said it did not matter what people thought,
    as long as his work provoked a reaction.

    `I always have a message but my performances are open [to
    interpretation],' he said. `People should have their own idea about
    what they see in my works.'

    Josie Le Blond

    http://www.thelocal.de/society/20130807-51275.html

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