Bob Flanagan

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The New York Times
Saturday, January 6, 1996

Bob Flanagan, 43, Performer Who Fashioned Art From His Pain

By Roberta Smith

Bob Flanagan, a performance artist and poet whose writing and bizarre, sadomasochistic performances centered on his lifelong battle with an incurable illness, died on Thursday at Long Beach Memorial Hospital in Long Beach. He was 43 and lived in Los Angeles.

The cause was cystic fibrosis, said his companion and collaborator, Sheree Rose. Mr. Flanagan was said by doctors to be one of the longest-living survivors of cystic fibrosis, which is genetic and usually kills before adulthood. An older sister, Patricia, died of cystic fibrosis in 1979 at the age of 21.

A former cystic fibrosis poster boy, Mr. Flanagan recalled that he grew up being told that he had only a few years to live. And he attributed his longevity in part to his ability to "fight pain with pain," by which he meant that he took control of his suffering through the ritualized pain of sadomasochism. In time, he made his art out of this proclivity. His work related to the often painful performances of such early 1970's body artists such as Chris Burden, Arnold Schwarzkogler amd Carolee Schneemann. Mr. Flanagan's work was the subject of a disturbing exhibition at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in SoHo in the fall of 1994.

Mr. Flanagan was born in New York City on Dec 26, 1952, and grew up in Glendora, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He had little formal art training but began painting as a teen-ager and then switched to poetry. He studied literature at California State University, Long Beach, and at the University of California at Irvine. After moving to Los Angeles in 1976, he became involved with Beyond Baroque, an alternative literary center in Los Angeles, where he gave readings of autobiographical poems about his illness and his sex life.

In 1978 he published the first of five books of poetry and prose, The Kid is a Man. He also worked as a stand-up comic with the Groundlings, an improvisational theater group that included Pee-Wee Herman. His readings and comedy routine gradually evolved into performances involving masochistic acts in which Ms. Rose, a video artist and dominatrix with whom he worked for the last 15 years, participated.


From: The Dominatrix in Print and Other Media

Prepared by Mistress Blanca and Peter (Green Way)


"Bob Flanagan: Supermasochist" San Francisco, Re/Search Publications, c 1993. 125 B&W photos and illustrations, 128 pages.

< ISBN:0940642255 Buy it from Amazon.com >

Comments: Bob and his Dominant Wife, Mistress Sheree Rose, tell their story. Includes interviews, artwork, poetry, and many photographs of serious SM scenes. Mistress Sheree took all the very graphic documentary photographs used in this book. Their unique loving D/s relationship, Bob's sexual-spiritual transformation within the drama of his very poor health, and their SM artistic creativity make for a memorable book. A book for advanced SM D/s players. Sheree Rose was also interviewed by Andrea Juno in the book "Modern Primitives" (RESearch Pubs., c 1989), pp. 109-113. A (9/94) post to A.S.B cited an upcoming art exhibit in New York by Bob Flanagan. Unfortunately, Bob died on 1/4/96 in Los Angeles. He was 43 when he died of cystic fybrosis.

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