Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 1, Winter 2010 | Page 50

46 Popular Culture Review a larger context of Zhang Huan’s artistic repertoire that confronts the cultural confluence and conflicts, I argue that it does not exploit his “Chinese-ness” but problematizes our binary schema of the worldview. The performance is not an exotic tableau of the Asian body in the Euro-centric American continent, but rather a familiar tableau of the hefty American bodybuilder’s body through metamorphosis of a slim Chinese man. Zhang Huan presents a complex saga of the body through an easily recognizable heroic icon that is “a plurality with one sense, a war and a peace” in Friedrich Nietzsche’s term, the powerful and the powerless, and the strong and the weak. This was exactly what the artist noticed in newly transformed post-9/11 New York City where, according to Zhang himself, “many things appear very strong, but in actuality they are very weak.” Like American superheroes who were granted superpowers but underwent psychological traumas and suffered from insecurity, the artist found the very same propensity in the city of New York and made it his subject. Like Batman’s black armor and Spider-Man’s spandex suit, Meat-Man requires a beefy suit as the symbol of his super powers. It aggrandizes the body and bestows the aura of aggressive might and commanding vigor to the person. It makes him super-human. It transforms the ordinary man into a superior creature. Unlike those fictional superheroes’ operative outfits, however, MeatMan’s costume does not facilitate better performance but rather prohibits it since his beef costume was incredibly heavy—over 110 pounds (50 kilograms)—and caused him to struggle while walking.5 This impracticality of the suit makes the process of self-aggrandizing neither pompous nor outlandish but rather burdensome. The use of meat as artistic medium has been explored by other contemporary artists like Jana Sterbak whose Vanitas: Flesh Dress for an Albino Anorectic (1987) presents a dress stitched together from 60 pounds of heavily salted and air-dried raw flank steak and leaves it on the gallery floor to show the natural aging process. Like Vanitas that meditates on the brevity of life and the inevitability of death, My New York exaggerates the stinking, mortal, weighty flesh of the body through the presence of meat that to an extent the medium becomes the very subject matter itself. Unlike Vanitas that differentiates the body of the artist and the meat dress and addresses more exclusively on vanity of fashion and beauty, Zhang’s work does not allow the viewer to see rotting meat for the vanitas lesson, as Meat-Man disappears from our view before meat decomposes. Instead, his work leads us to see gluttony of humanity. He treats the material not only as a marker of the body’s mortality but also as part of the body itself. The meat outfit here is not meant to be construed as a dress but as the excessive body itself formed by a high protein diet. The muscles of the meat body are over-sculpted towards the level of Mr. America’s surreal bodies. As the artist put it himself: In New York I see many body builders who, for long periods of time, do training exercises beyond their bodies’ capabilities.