Conditions Governing Access
Conditions Governing Use
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Scope and Contents
Preferred Citation
Related Materials
Contributing Institution:
Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Title: Carolee Schneemann papers
Creator:
Schneemann, Carolee, 1939-2019
Identifier/Call Number: M1892
Identifier/Call Number: 17361
Physical Description:
128.2 Linear Feet
(245 boxes, 4 oversize folders)
Date (inclusive): circa 1954-2015
Abstract: The papers of Carolee Schneemann chronicle in detail her work as an artist, film maker, writer, art historian, feminist, and
teacher.
Language of Material:
English
.
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use. Audiovisual materials are not available in original format, and must be reformatted to
a digital use copy.
Conditions Governing Use
While Special Collections is the owner of the physical and digital items, permission to examine collection materials is not
an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Any transmission
or reproduction beyond that allowed by fair use requires permission from the owners of rights, heir(s) or assigns.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
A portion of this collection was purchased by Stanford University Libraries in 2012; the remainder was a gift.
Scope and Contents
Artist Carolee Schneemann was born October 12, 1939 in rural Pennsylvania. Her art, which primarily involves performance,
film, painting, and installation, has largely focused on sexuality, gender, and the body, and she is considered part of the
first generation of explicitly feminist artists.
Schneemann's work emerged from the 1950s-60s avant-garde surrounding Fluxus, Judson Hall and New York's dance, poetry, new
music and happening scenes, but it quickly staked out a distinct territory of its own. Schneemann has stated that she considers
what she does as an extension of painting, only freed from the canvas. Using her body as a collage element, she explores themes
including physicality, dimensionality, and kinetics. Among the works most central to the establishment of her reputation for
the uncompromising and iconoclastic are the following three:
Meat Joy (1964) is a performance involving eight partially clothed figures moving in materials including wet paint, sausage, raw fish
and chicken, and scraps of paper. It was first performed in Europe and was later filmed and photographed as performed by Schneemann's
Kinetic Theater group at Judson Memorial Church.
Fuses (1964-1967) was Schneemann's exploration of heterosexual sex from a female perspective, using footage of her lovemaking with
partner James Tenney which was then treated and edited in various ways, superimposing natural scenes and painting in a collage-like
effect.
Interior Scroll (1975) was first performed in East Hampton, New York and Colorado's Telluride, and featured Schneemann solo, first striking
various figure modeling "action poses," then reading from her book
Cézanne, She Was a Great Painter, and finally drawing forth from her vagina a three-foot scroll from which she read aloud.
Although these works have been invoked, recalled, and reinterpreted many times by Schneemann since their creation, this collection
focuses more on her later projects. Her own writing and notes dominate, but there is a significant amount of correspondence,
including printed and annotated email exchanges. One main series is devoted to project files, which begin around 1990. These
have not been physically arranged, and in most cases folder titles were transcribed directly from the original. Printed material
about Schneemann includes exhibit and event publicity as well as reviews and criticism. Of the many photographs and slides,
most document her art and its evolution, as do the audiovisual media. There are also lecture and workshop notes, scrapbooks,
research files, and book preparation material, especially for
Correspondence Course, An Epistolary History of Carolee Schneemann and Her Circle edited by Kristine Stiles. There is even a small number of costume/environments as used in her performances.
Various control numbers assigned to the series and files prior to receipt by Stanford are included in this guide, as are original
titles when present (these are capitalized).
After battling breast cancer for many years, Carolee Schneemann passed away on March 6, 2019.
Preferred Citation
[identification of item], Carolee Schneemann papers (M1892). Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford
University Libraries, Stanford, Calif.
Related Materials
The Getty Research Institute also holds a significant archive of Schneemann material, mostly devoted to her earlier years:
http://archives2.getty.edu:8082/xtf/view?docId=ead/950001/950001.xml
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Art, Modern
Schneemann, Carolee, 1939-2019