In 1974, Marina Abramović performed 'Rhythm 0', a performance art piece in which she remained motionless for six hours, allowing the audience to do anything to her without resistance.
On a table beside her were 72 objects. Some were harmless, like a rose and grapes. Others were dangerous, like scissors, a scalpel, and a loaded gun.
Here's what happened to her... (thread) 🧵
The audience was invited to use the objects however they wanted. Abramović gave simple instructions:
“I am the object.
You can do anything to me.
I take full responsibility.”
At first, the audience was gentle. They handed her flowers, kissed her cheek, or touched her lightly.
The atmosphere was calm.
But as time passed, the mood changed.
Someone moved her body and raised her hands in the air. Another participant used sharp blades to cut her clothes off.
She stood naked, exposed, and vulnerable...
The audience began to test the limits of her stillness.
By the third hour, the performance turned violent.
Abramović endured sexual assaults from those who wanted to harm her.
A blade was pressed to her skin. Her neck was cut so someone could suck her blood.
The atmosphere grew darker and more aggressive.
In the fourth hour, her life was threatened.
A loaded gun was picked up from the table. A participant pressed it to her head and wrapped her finger around the trigger.
The audience watched, some horrified, others curious to see what would happen next.
A fight broke out among the spectators.
Some tried to stop the violence and protect her. Others encouraged the harm, pushing the performance further.
The room became a battlefield of human nature—care against cruelty.
When the six hours ended, Abramović began to move.
The audience scattered, avoiding her gaze. They had treated her as an object for hours but could not face her as a person.
The performance was over, but the impact remained.
Abramović later said, “If you leave it up to the audience, they can kill you.”
The performance revealed the best and worst of human nature.
It tested the boundaries of morality and showed how far people might go when there are no consequences for their actions.
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1. Heart attack gun: In 1975, the CIA unveiled a gun that fired a dart made from a frozen mixture of water and a toxin. Powered by electricity, it had an effective range of up to 100 meters. The only indicator of being shot was a small red dot at the point of entry. The official cause of death in such cases would be listed as a heart attack, making the murders appear natural.
2. Miniature 35-mm Tessina film camera: This compact camera, hidden in a pack of Parliaments, was one of the smallest and quietest options available during the 1960s for undercover operations.
3. WWII pigeon cameras: During WWII, operatives would strap these lightweight cameras to pigeons. As the bird flew over a target, the camera took hundreds of photos. These images were more detailed than those from airplanes, because pigeons can fly hundreds of feet lower. Unfortunately, the pigeon photos are still classified.
Chilling and disturbing movie facts that will haunt you forever 🧵
1. Isla Fisher almost drowned for real while filming “Now You See Me” (2013). In the water tank scene, her chains got stuck, and she couldn’t get out. She started panicking and screaming for help, but the crew thought she was just acting.
2. The jaw-snapping ‘reverse bear trap’ in “Saw” (2004) was completely real and fully functional. Luckily, it was never actually triggered on an actor, but if it had been… well, it would’ve worked exactly like in the movie.
3. While filming “Twilight Zone: The Movie” (1983), a helicopter crashed and killed actor Vic Morrow and two child actors, Myca Dinh Le and Renee Shin-Yi Chen. It was one of the worst accidents in movie history, and it changed Hollywood safety rules forever.