The Electric Chaircut is an interactive,
electro-sonic, hair cut performance. Volunteers request what they
would like and are taped to my chair. Their eyes and mouth are
taped closed to symbolize our fetishism of appearance. I cut the
hair with various implements, all amplified. Scissors and clippers
wired to effects pedals, slung round my waist, are blasted through
an amplifier strapped to my back. I whack at the hair in a seemingly
random pattern and a cacophony of trance like sounds play to the
audience. When I am finished I peel away the tape and show them
the new look I have created.
Nelson’s Electric Chaircut is an interactive, electro-sonic, hair cut performance.
After a brief consultation and the signing of a release form, Volunteers are
taped to the chair. Their eyes and mouth are also taped to symbolize the fetishism
of appearance. The Volunteer’s hair is then cut by Nelson, the original
master of electro-sonic hair design. His various implements are amplified, scissors
and clippers wired to effects pedals, slung round his waist, and blasted through
an amplifier strapped to his back. The whacking haircutting sounds reverberates
in a trance like cacophony of seemingly random patterns, as the true stylistic
nature of the volunteer is released. Originally conceived in San Francisco Nelson’s
Electric Chaircut has been performed world wide since 1989.
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In my work I am alluding to our willingness
to participate in what Michel Foucault called conditioning of the body.
I am also exploring the dichotomy between image and emotion; how we
look, as opposed to how we feel. Hair is a powerful metaphor
for strength, beauty, potency, faith and even mourning. It is cut,
burned, shorn, braided into jewelry as a keepsake; it is colored, curled
and straightened, manipulated in every conceivable manner to convey
a statement in the culture in which it is presented! This powerful
symbol, which grows from our heads is temporary and regenerative, which
allows us to experiment with it, change it and change who we are. Hair
and identity are closely linked, now just as it has been for thousands
of years. Those who choose to participate in the performance are placing
their trust in a complete stranger, who will physically remove a portion
of their identity.
Nelson’s "Electric Chaircuts," satirizes the notion that we are
all only a haircut away from possessing a sense of authenticity that distances
us from the crowd. He straps a willing accomplice into a chair, and with
a pair of amplified scissors attached by wires to a power-pack on his back, attacks
the unruly mane of hair. By theatricalizing the "performance" of a
haircut, Nelson suggests that the codes of individuality as filtered through
fashion, are just that -- theater. In Nelson's knowing hands, the boundary between
the external and the internal shed their dichotomous nature, becoming a single
route to a reinvestigation of the self. |
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