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Mail Artwork Pioneer Anna Banana Dies at 84

ArtsMail Artwork Pioneer Anna Banana Dies at 84

Conceptual artist Anna Banana died on November 29 within the city of Roberts Creek in British Columbia, Canada, on the age of 84. A pioneer in mail artwork, efficiency, and various publishing, Banana left an indelible mark on experimental apply and the worldwide community of artist collaboration.

The artist was born Anne Lee Lengthy on February 24, 1940, in Victoria, British Columbia. It was at Vancouver’s experimental New Faculty, the place she taught elementary-age college students, that she obtained the nickname “Anna Banana” in 1968. She went on to spend two years at Esalen Institute, and after falling right into a field of bananas at a celebration in Large Sur in 1970, she embraced the moniker, legally altering her title in 1985. 

“People aren’t comfortable with my name,” the artist instructed journalist Portia Priegert in 2015. “And, often, it goes to sexual things. Or it’s goofy and childlike.”

Anna Banana, “Mail Art” (1976), photocopies with stamps

In 1984, Banana revealed her essay “Women in Mail Art” in Correspondence Artwork: Supply Guide for the Community of Worldwide Postal Artwork Exercise, highlighting the usually neglected contributions of girls within the area and tailored from her 1978 introduction to a VILE challenge subtitled “Fe-Mail Art.”

Rehfeldt Archiv B98 Scan 1

Rehfeldt Archiv B98 Scan

Anna Banana, “Mail Art to Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt” (1983), photocopy with handwriting and stamps

In 2015, the Artwork Gallery of Higher Victoria offered the retrospective Anna Banana: 45 Years of Fooling Round with A. Banana, throughout which the artist gave away round 1,200 objects from her private correspondence archive to exhibition guests, a mission often known as “Regifting the Bananas.” Final 12 months, Banana was included in Copy Machine Manifestos: Artists  Who Make Zines on the Brooklyn Museum.

Banana’s work didn’t explicitly handle the politics of agriculture or the business’s abuses, however her use of the fruit as an emblem connects to broader conversations about international commerce and cultural iconography. Her performances have been extremely interactive, exemplified by her 1993 mission “Proof Positive Germany is Going Bananas.” The parodic analysis tour of German cities explored what the artist termed the “new German banana consciousness” following reunification, when West Germans greeted residents of the East with once-scarce bananas.

Maurizio Cattelan’s “Comedian” (2019), an art work consisting of a banana duct-taped to the wall, has just lately captured public and market consideration after it offered for $6.2 million at Sotheby’s. However Banana’s decades-long engagement with the fruit as a creative image affords a extra nuanced remedy. Her playful adoption of the motif might be seen as an early instance of how on a regular basis objects can develop into highly effective automobiles for social interplay and anti-market trade. 

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Anna Banana and Vincent Trasov on the Victoria Day Parade, nonetheless from a 16 mm movie, 1972. (picture courtesy Morris and Helen Belkin Artwork Gallery, College of British Columbia, Morris/Trasov Archive)

In January 2025, ChertLüdde in Berlin will exhibit a choice of “Banana Greetings” and different mailings from the Mail Artwork Archive of Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt and Robert Rehfeldt, which is housed on the gallery, alongside works by Wolf-Rehfeldt and Trasov. “Anna’s language is distinguished by intensity, humor, sharp criticism, and directness as few others,” ChertLüdde proprietor Jennifer Chert instructed Hyperallergic. “Her presence in the archive enriches us immensely.”

Banana’s legacy lies in her capability to construct each persona and neighborhood, bodily and conceptually. Her archive is housed on the Morris and Helen Belkin Artwork Gallery on the College of British Columbia.

She is survived by her daughter, Dana Lengthy.

Rehfeldt Archiv B103 Scan 1 1

Anna Banana, “Mail Art” (undated), printRehfeldt Archiv B87 Scan 1.1

Anna Banana, “Mail Art” (1978), newspaper article

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