Marina Abramovic and the Symbolism of Suffering

Marina Abramović’s art transcends performance; becoming a mirror of human endurance. Through suffering, she reveals how transformation using her body symbolises our own capacity for empathy, fear, and connection.
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Marina Abramovic is one of the most influential performance artists of the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Her work is fiercely symbolic, using endurance, vulnerability, time, audience, and the body itself as mediums. In this post we’ll explore the key symbolism in her work, delve into her history, and examine two major artworks that reveal her visual-language of performance.

Body of Symbolism

Born in Belgrade (Yugoslavia) in 1946, Abramovic began her artistic career in the early 1970s.

Her early performances were radical in that they placed the artist’s body in front of the audience, in raw, often dangerous situations, testing thresholds of pain, endurance, control and abandonment.

 Over decades, she developed a practice that centres on time-based performance, physical risk, and the interaction between artist and audience. Her retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in 2010 solidified her reputation globally.

In understanding her symbolism, it helps to note a few recurring themes:

  • The body as medium – the artist’s own flesh, presence and exposure become the work.

  • Time and duration – long, minimal, still or extreme performances challenge perception.

  • Audience participation and vulnerability – the viewer becomes complicit, witness or participant.

  • Identity, ritual and transformation – many works draw on references to ritual, the self and the other.

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Two Iconic Works & Their Symbolism

Rhythm 0 (1974)

In this landmark performance, Abramovic stood motionless in a gallery in Naples for six hours. A table beside her presented 72 objects, ranging from harmless to potentially lethal (rose, honey, wine, scissors, scalpel, bullet, gun). The audience was invited to use any of the objects on her body, as they wished.

Symbolism here:

  • The body as passive medium and object.

  • The audience as agent of action , exploring power, vulnerability, ethics.

  • The line between art and real life dissolves.

  • The table of objects becomes a symbol of choice, of danger, of trust and violation.

  • A confrontation with the darker side of human behaviour.

Rest Energy (1980) – with Ulay

In this performance (with her long-time collaborator Ulay), a bow was held tightly between them, the arrow pointed at Abramovic’s heart, and they each held the cords.

Symbolism here:

  • Trust and relational tension: one finger could release the arrow.

  • The heart as symbol of life and risk.

  • The artist-as-object again, but now relational, with duality (artist + partner).

  • Audience feeling the tension becomes part of the symbolic field.

Marina Abramović & Ulay – Rest Energy, 1980, performance for video, 4 minutes, ROSC’ 80, Dublin 1980 Photo: Marina Abramović and Ulay. Courtesy of Marina Abramović and Sean Kelly Gallery, New York. DACS 2016
Marina Abramović & Ulay – Rest Energy, 1980, performance for video, 4 minutes, ROSC’ 80, Dublin 1980 Photo: Marina Abramović and Ulay. Courtesy of Marina Abramović and Sean Kelly Gallery, New York. DACS 2016
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