
Directing
Born August 4, 1945 in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
While still a student, Paul McCarthy threw himself out of a second floor window in a performance/action, emulating Yves Klein's legendary "Leap into the Void." McCarthy was an influential figure in the Southern California art and performance scene for decades before achieving international recognition. His performance work in the late 1970s explored areas of Dionysian and shamanistic initiation rituals, as well as the body and sexuality. The intensity of these performances, which often included the graphic depiction of taboo subjects, eventually led to his use of video and installation as primary media. Mining the depths of the family and childhood via kitsch and pop cultural detritus, the body and sexuality, and an often outrageous theatricality, McCarthy's works inhabit a violent landscape of dysfunction and trauma. In many of his works, he adopts a performance persona that appears crazed, witch-like, or infantile. McCarthy's works often involve liquids, from bodily fluids to paint; one performance involved mixing his own blood with food, an obsessive gesture that is simulated in Family Tyranny. In the late 1980s, McCarthy began using film and television sets as elements in video/performance installations. Often these elaborate fabrications involved the restaging of culturally-charged myths and icons, such as Heidi and Pinocchio, in the context of family psychodramas, Hollywood genres, and mass media.

Becoming Paul McCarthy
Self

Coach Stage Stage Coach

The Art Foundry

Aryan Death Ship

Heidi’s Four Basket Dances

Paul McCarthy: Destruction of the Body

Fresh Acconci

Painter

Pinocchio Pipenose Household Dilemma

Heidi: Midlife Crisis Trauma Center and Negative Media-Engram Abreaction Release Zone

Bossy Burger

Family Tyranny (Modeling and Molding)
Father

Cultural Soup

Rocky

Class Fool
Self

Experimental Dancer

Black and White Tapes

Sailor's Meat (Sailor's Delight)

Basement Clown

Sauce

Red Poster Tapes