(1) Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman, 1978
Artist/Maker
Dara Birnbaum
(American, 1946–2025)
Date1978–80
Medium3/4 inch color stereo videocassette tape
DimensionsDuration: 5.50 minutes
Credit LineSpecial Exhibitions Fund
Object number1984.35.1
Status
Not on viewAs televisions became increasingly common in American living rooms in the 1970s, Birnbaum was among the earliest artists to use television content as source material. Altering, glitching, cutting, and splicing it without seeking legal permission, she claimed she was manipulating “a medium which is itself highly manipulative.”
Here, Birnbaum isolates and repeats ad nauseum passages from the show Wonder Woman in which secretary Diana Prince transforms into a superhero. Highlighting the deceptive portrayal of women as either heroic or trivial, Birnbaum stated, “the in-between is the reality we need to live in.”
Provenance(Video Data Bank, Chicago); purchased 1984 by Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OHHere, Birnbaum isolates and repeats ad nauseum passages from the show Wonder Woman in which secretary Diana Prince transforms into a superhero. Highlighting the deceptive portrayal of women as either heroic or trivial, Birnbaum stated, “the in-between is the reality we need to live in.”
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We welcome additional information and suggestions for improvement. Please email us at AMAMcurator@oberlin.edu.
We welcome additional information and suggestions for improvement. Please email us at AMAMcurator@oberlin.edu.
postmarked July 4, 1958
postmarked February 24, 1957