-
Bayern stun Arsenal, Man Utd sink PSG in Women's Champions League
-
New Epstein emails claim Trump 'knew about the girls'
-
Brazil tribal chief ready to give Lula a 'talking-to'
-
Clippers' Beal to have season-ending surgery - report
-
Dow ends at record on hopes US government will reopen
-
Portugal's Ronaldo hoping Ireland fans boo him
-
England set for Etihad start to Euro 2028 tournament campaign
-
Sinner cruises past Zverev and into last four of ATP Finals
-
US presses final penny after more than 230 years
-
Baxter says England must be 'selfless' to see off All Blacks
-
Pardoned French-Algerian writer Sansal arrives in Germany
-
Bayern battle back to shock Arsenal in Women's Champions League
-
China hopes US will 'some day' return to climate fold, official tells AFP
-
Trump 'knew about the girls,' new Epstein emails claim
-
Scotland 'optimistic' Russell will be fit to face Argentina
-
Big platforms chart gradual path to self-driving at Web Summit
-
Jane Goodall honored in Washington by conservationists including DiCaprio
-
Tuberculosis killed 1.23 million last year: WHO
-
New Zealand coach Robertson says Twickenham visit is 'why I'm doing the job'
-
Hopes of US shutdown deal fail to sustain market rally
-
US military personnel do not risk prosecution for drug strikes: Justice Dept
-
Jailed writer Sansal on way to Germany after Algeria pardon
-
Ukraine ministers resign over major corruption scandals
-
Record-breaking US shutdown to end as political fallout begins
-
Wallets, not warming, make voters care about climate: California governor
-
Astronomers spot storm on another star for first time
-
G7 foreign ministers seek to boost Ukraine war effort
-
Released Epstein emails allege Trump 'knew about the girls'
-
Rees-Zammit back in Wales 'happy place' after Test return
-
Chelsea winger Sterling's house burgled
-
Auger-Aliassime beats Shelton to get off mark at ATP Finals
-
Argentina's Milei to follow Trump in skipping S.Africa G20: spokesperson
-
Back on track: Belgian-Dutch firm rescues Berlin to Paris sleeper train
-
Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games schedule revealed
-
Wolves appoint Edwards as manager in bid to avoid relegation
-
UK music industry warns growth threatened by AI, Brexit
-
Epstein alleged Trump 'knew about the girls': Democrats
-
German experts slam spending plans, cut GDP forecast
-
S.Africa's Ramaphosa says US skipping G20 'their loss'
-
Algeria pardons writer Boualem Sansal
-
Tuchel warns Bellingham must fight for England berth at World Cup
-
Mbappe says France football team 'to remember' Paris terror victims
-
Joshua decision on 2025 bout imminent - promoter
-
Cambodia says Thai troops kill one in fresh border clashes
-
UK holidaymakers told to shout, not get in a flap over seagulls
-
Pope Leo reels off four favourite films
-
Lebanese say Israel preventing post-war reconstruction
-
Stocks mostly rise on hopes of US shutdown deal, rate cut
-
Bayer beats forecasts but weedkiller woes still weigh
-
42 feared dead in migrant shipwreck off Libya: UN
Austria celebrates last surviving shock 'actionist' artist
Several shows are recognising Guenter Brus, the last surviving key member of Vienna's famed "actionists", who turned 85 this week and whose radical movement broke new ground using the body to make art.
Brus, together with three others, founded the "Vienna Actionism" movement which emerged in the 1960s.
The actionists did not shy away from using blood, urine and excrement as they defied the confines of traditional painting.
Of the group, only Brus is still alive, with retrospectives in Vienna and the city of Graz showing prints from his key performances, his pictorial poems and other important pieces to mark his 85th birthday.
"From an Austrian perspective, Guenter Brus is certainly one of the few who have outstanding international significance. It is impossible to imagine art history without him," said Roman Grabner, who runs a museum dedicated to Brus in Graz, where the artist now lives.
Born on September 27, 1938, in the village of Ardning in central Austria, Brus studied art in Graz before moving to Vienna where he worked with Otto Muehl, Hermann Nitsch and Rudolf Schwarzkogler -- the other actionists.
One of Brus's most notable and first performances was in 1965 when he crisscrossed Vienna with his body painted white and bisected by a jagged black line before being arrested by police.
Grabner said the "legendary" act demonstrated "the rift in Austrian post-war society, including of course that of the individual who suffered from this situation".
-'Contaminated by aging Nazis'-
Austria -- the birthplace of Adolf Hitler -- was annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938 and long cast itself as a victim before, in the 1980s, beginning to face up to its role in the Holocaust.
Brus openly spoke up about the country's dark past, saying in a 2018 interview with the Belvedere Museum that "Vienna, as all of Austria, was contaminated by aging Nazis".
The movement at times took a heavy toll on the artist.
Brus, with his wife Anna and their young daughter, fled Vienna in 1969 after he was sentenced to six months in jail for degrading Austrian state symbols.
He had taken part in a performance that involved stripping naked in a university lecture hall, defecating and masturbating while chanting the national anthem.
"In Austria nothing more would have been possible. We were shadowed by the judiciary as rioters, and rebels... We were stared at on the tramway," said Brus, who settled in Berlin with his family before eventually moving back.
Brus held his last live performance in Munich in 1970, in which he appeared nude and cut himself with a razor blade.
According to Anna Brus, who also featured in some of his acts, his performances had become life-threatening.
"I couldn't continue with the performances... I had to realise that I couldn't continue like this," he said in 2018.
H.E.Young--AMWN