
Good Boy Bad Boy
<p>Bruce Nauman is a wildly influential artist whose work has explored the poetics of confusion, anxiety, boredom, entrapment, and failure since the 1960s. Nauman was a key figure in the experimental film and video movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s with such works as <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/184168"><em>Dance or Exercise Around the Perimeter of a Square (Square Dance)</em></a>. After 1973, film and video become conspicuously absent from his work, replaced largely by language-based neon sculptures. He returned to video more than a decade later, with <em>Good Boy Bad Boy</em>. Of this decision, the artist recalled, “I think it’s because I had this information that I didn’t want to put into a neon sign. . . . I had thought about presenting it as a performance, but I have never felt comfortable with performance. And so video seemed to be a way to do it.” Conceived as a didactic moral statement, the installation employs two actors, Joan Lancaster and Tucker Smallwood, who are presented in close-up, like newscasters, on two separate monitors. Each recites a one-hundred-line commentary on the human condition that includes passages such as “I was a good boy/You were a good boy/We were good boys” and “I hate/You hate/We hate/This is hating.” Directly confronting the viewer, they deliver each repetition with increased emotional intensity, shifting in and out of sync with one another.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1985
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Bruce Nauman
Artist

Sculpture
Bruce Nauman is widely regarded as one of the most influential American artists living today. The artist’s radically experimental works defy easy categorization, blending the styles and approaches of Conceptual Art, Performance art, Minimalism and video art. His heterogeneous and thought-provoking oeuvre showcases Nauman’s analytical deconstruction of aesthetic and physical experience through novel engagements with language and the body. Often imbued with satirical and socio-political undertones, his confrontational artworks draw upon various formal strategies, from clever word play to large-scale sculptural arrangements, which disorient viewers’ bodies and perceptual assumptions.
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More by Bruce Nauman
Days
2009 · Stereo audio files, speakers, amplifiers, and additional equipment
Untitled
2008 · Ink on paper
Untitled
2008 · Ink on paper
Layout for Raw Materials
2004 · Ink on papers
Layout for Raw Materials 7 July 2004
2004 · Ink on papers
Layout for Raw Materials 6 April 2004
2004 · Ink on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Bruce Nauman
- Year
- 1985
- Watts ID
- WW-1985-109613
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





