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===''How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare'' (performance, 1965)=== [[File:Joseph Beuys Filtz TV by Lothar Wolleh.jpg|thumb|right|Beuys Felt TV performance by [[Lothar Wolleh]]]] {{Main|How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare}} Beuys's first solo exhibition in a private gallery opened on 26 November 1965 with one of his most famous performances: ''[[How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare]]''. The artist could be viewed through the glass of the gallery's window. His face was covered in honey and gold leaf, and an iron slab was attached to his boot. In his arms he cradled a dead hare, into whose ear he uttered muffled noises as well as explanations of the drawings lining the walls. Such materials and actions had specific symbolic value for Beuys. For example, honey is the product of bees, and for Beuys (following Rudolf Steiner), bees represented an ideal society of warmth and brotherhood. Gold had its importance within alchemical enquiry, and iron, the metal of Mars, stood for a masculine principle of strength and connection to the earth. A photograph from the performance, in which Beuys sits with the hare, has been described "by some critics as a new [[Mona Lisa]] of the 20th century," though Beuys disagreed with the description.<ref name="Marina Abramovic">{{cite web|title=Marina Abramovic |last=Westcott |first=James |publisher=ARTINFO |date=9 November 2005 |url=http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/1537/marina-abramovic/ |access-date=22 April 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081204082357/http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/1537/marina-abramovic/ |archive-date=4 December 2008 }}</ref> Beuys explained his performance this way: <blockquote>"In putting honey on my head I am clearly doing something that has to do with thinking. Human ability is not to produce honey, but to think, to produce ideas. In this way the deathlike character of thinking becomes lifelike again. For honey is undoubtedly a living substance. Human thinking can be lively too. But it can also be intellectualized to a deadly degree, and remain dead, and express its deadliness in, say, the political or pedagogic fields. Gold and honey indicate a transformation of the head, and therefore, naturally and logically, the brain and our understanding of thought, consciousness and all the other levels necessary to explain pictures to a hare: the warm stool insulated with felt ... and the iron sole with the magnet. I had to walk on this sole when I carried the hare round from picture to picture, so along with the strange limp came the clank of iron on the hard stone floor—that was all that broke the silence, since my explanations were mute .... This seems to have been the action that most captured people's imaginations. On one level this must be because everyone consciously or unconsciously recognizes the problem of explaining things, particularly where art and creative work are concerned, or anything that involves a certain mystery or question. The idea of explaining to an animal conveys a sense of the secrecy of the world and of existence that appeals to the imagination. Then, as I said, even a dead animal preserves more powers of intuition than some human beings with their stubborn rationality. The problem lies in the word 'understanding' and its many levels, which cannot be restricted to rational analysis. Imagination, inspiration, and longing all lead people to sense that these other levels also play a part in understanding. This must be the root of reactions to this action, and is why my technique has been to try and seek out the energy points in the human power field, rather than demanding specific knowledge or reactions on the part of the public. I try to bring to light the complexity of creative areas."<ref name="Marina Abramovic" />{{Failed verification|date=December 2022}}</blockquote> Beuys produced many such spectacular, ritualistic performances, and he developed a compelling persona whereby he took on a liminal, shamanistic role, as if to enable passage between different physical and spiritual states. Further examples of such performances include: ''{{Interlanguage link|Eurasienstab|de}}'' (1967), ''Celtic (Kinloch Rannoch) Scottish Symphony'' (1970), and ''[[I Like America and America Likes Me]]'' (1974).<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
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