FRANK FARIAN
I have been thinking a lot about what happens when a voice is usurped from a body and a new body assumes that voice. My favorite lip-synching scandals are the products of German disco producer Frank Farian, the man behind pop acts Boney M. and Milli Vanilli. Farian capitalized on putting hired voices into hired bodies or, in the case of Boney M., attributing his own studio-enhanced voice to the better-looking dancer Bobby Farrell. The pop-industrial engineering of voices and subjectivities is something my work investigates, most often by subcontracting labor in a bid to transpose performance art’s historical debates around the body and presence into considerations of HR management. But in doing so, I worry I am starting to become more Frank Farian than performance artist.













