A critical examination of Dara Birnbaum's action-packed and riveting
video of Wonder Woman's transformations.
Opening with a prolonged salvo of fiery explosions accompanied by the
warning cry of a siren, Dara Birnbaum's video Technology/Transformation:
Wonder Woman (1978-79) is a concise, action-packed, and visually
riveting video. During its seven-minute span we see, again and again,
the transformation of the drab secretary Diana Prince into the
super-heroic Wonder Woman. By isolating and repeating the moment of
transformation--spinning figure, arms outstretched--Birnbaum unmasks the
technology at the heart of the metamorphosis. In this illustrated
examination of Birnbaum's video, T. J. Demos situates it in its
historical context--among other developments in postmodernist
appropriation, media analysis, and feminist politics--and explores the
artist's pioneering attempts to open up the transformative abilities of
video as a medium. Demos examines Birnbaum's influence on such artists
as Douglas Gordon, Pierre Huyghe, Philippe Parreno, and Candice Breitz,
and the turn toward "postproduction procedures"--the mobilization of
existing imagery for innovative uses. He also reveals a fascinating
historical shift in the reception of Birnbaum's work: a move from an
emphasis on her deconstruction of mass culture ideology to an
appreciation of her creative use of consumer imagery.