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(September 6, 1938 – January 21, 2011)
Biography
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He moved to New York in 1966 where he first taught nursery school and then high school art while working toward his first one-person exhibition in New York, held in 1968[3] when he was 30 years old. He lived and worked in New York City until his death from liver cancer on January 21, 2011, aged 72.[1][3]
Work
Also in 1968, Oppenheim became friends with Vito Acconci and he began producing body art,[4], such as "Reading Position for Second Degree Burn" (1970), for which he lay in the sun for five hours with an open book on his chest.[3] In the early 1970s, he was in the vanguard of artists using film and video in relation to performance.[3]
In the early 1980s, he began his "machine pieces", complex, space-filling devices, and after the mid-1980s, he worked on the "transformation of everyday objects in art."[3] From the mid-1990s, he created a number of large-scale public art pieces in major cities around the world, some of which proved controversial.[3]
He received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. He was included in both the Venice Biennale and the Johannesburg Biennale in 1997. In 2007, he was recognized for Lifetime Achievement at the Vancouver Sculpture Biennale.[7]
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