Skip to content
Magazine
Sunday, August 3, 2025
SUBSCRIBE
  • About Us
  • Belgium News
    • Belgium Police News
    • Brussels News
  • EU Institutions News
    • European Commission News
    • European Parliament News
    • European Council News
  • Europe News
  • World News
  • Belgium Business News
  • Culture and Society News
  • In Depth
    • Ambassador’s Corner
    • The American Angle
    • Sustainable Perspective
    • Europe With Transparency
    • Place de la Bourse
    • The Macro-Economist
    • Southeast Europe
  • About Us
  • Belgium News
    • Belgium Police News
    • Brussels News
  • EU Institutions News
    • European Commission News
    • European Parliament News
    • European Council News
  • Europe News
  • World News
  • Belgium Business News
  • Culture and Society News
  • In Depth
    • Ambassador’s Corner
    • The American Angle
    • Sustainable Perspective
    • Europe With Transparency
    • Place de la Bourse
    • The Macro-Economist
    • Southeast Europe
SUBSCRIBE

Homecoming: Marina Abramović and Her Children. When the artist returns home

Serena Pacchiani by Serena Pacchiani
10 February 2021
in Culture and Society News

Serena Pacchiani reviews Homecoming: Marina Abramović and Her Children, a new documentary dedicated to the Serbian performance artist, by director Boris Miljković.

Rome (Brussels Morning – 2duerighe) “A famous artist returns home, after forty years of work, life and love abroad, after many successes, disappointments, triumphs and failures”. This brief but effective synopsis comes with the release of the documentary Homecoming: Marina Abramović and Her Children, recently shown in several international film festivals, including the Trieste Film Festival (21-30 January 2021). 

The home is in Belgrade, Serbia, and its owner is the celebrated Serbian performance artist Marina Abramović.

The inspiration to make the film came to director Boris Miljković after watching Abramović’s latest performance, The Cleaner, exhibiting at the Museum of Contemporary Arts in Belgrade, which could be described as a vast retrospective of around one hundred works and re-performances. 

The film picks up after one of the most controversial artists of our time returns home after her travelling exhibition relentlessly toured Denmark (Louisiana Museum of Modern Art), Germany (Bundeskunsthalle, Bonn) and Italy (Palazzo Strozzi, Florence). That homecoming, however, is not without logistical and emotional difficulties. It is both historic and symbolic, especially for Abramović, whose relationship with her country and family has always been in conflict. 

Between myth and reality: the meaning of the artists’ legacy 

Abramović is considered a living legend, and an undisputed icon of the artistic jet-set. Since her arrival in Belgrade followed by television cameras, however, she seemed to lose all her strength and charismatic authority, revealing the suffering and fragility of a painful and unforgettable past. 

For those who have followed or studied Abramović’s work and life for years, Miljković’s recent documentary is part of the plethora of films dedicated to the artist. Marina Abramovic: The artist is present, a touching film shot in 2012 and dedicated to one of her latest, intense performances is just one, which may indeed seem repetitive and almost didactic in its mechanical accompaniment of Marina, step-by-step, throug the individual stages of her life. 

Some may have seen the highly intimate and lauded autobiography Walk through walls: A memoir (Penguin, 2016). The latest documentary proves a faithful and authentic transposition of Marina’s stories. From the initial revealing and foreboding encounter with a snake, dreamt of by her pregnant mother to the fights she had with her parents — partisans of the Second World War — severe and absent and who instilled in Abramović a sense of duty and self-discipline. The artist’s journey back to Belgrade meanders through magical memories of her first performances and salient episodes in Tito’s former Federal Socialist Republic. 

The strong, unrequited and disillusioned love affairs and the desire and refusal of maternity that was several times interrupted have almost morally obliged Abramović to carve out the role of “mother”, or as she prefers to define herself, “grandmother”, of performance art. Her peculiar pre-mortem legacy, which in The Cleaner, and especially in its Serbian edition, finds an emblematic closing of the circle, corresponds perfectly to the desire to form a new generation of performers, and consequently a new public.

This idea seems to thwart the historical etymology and ultimate meaning of performance, which is in itself a unique and irreproducible event in time and space. The need for the perpetuity of the artistic inheritance, the anguish of death and oblivion, but also the desire for continuous rebirth and transmission, led the artist to create the M.A.I. (Marina Abramović Institut) the only centre in which the art of performance is studied with a rare and precious “didactic” and subjective methodology. 

When her latest works seem to be lost and shipwrecked in the sea of incomprehension — such as The Seven Deaths of Maria Callas and the latest controversial video The Life for London’s Serpentine Gallery, for which she has even been accused of shamanism — the question remains, as James Westcott asked in When Marina Abramović Dies (The Mit Press, 2010): who will take on her heavy legacy? The answer is perhaps to be found in the collective embrace that symbolically closes Homecoming: Marina Abramović and Her Children, which reconnects the artist to her past, with an encouraging glance towards the future.

Homecoming still-frame (credit: MYmovies)

Homecoming still-frame (credit: The Calvert Journal)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p7WG2X9rw7E&feature=emb_title

Related News:

  • Vatican sued for ‘ripping off’ street artist’s work on official stamp
  • Artist? Forger? Criminal? Patriot? (All of the Above!)
  • Brussels museum pays homage to Brit artist Banksy
  • Maher Naji: A Palestinian artist sends a message of peace to Europe
Tags: between the linesNews
Next Post

French politician on trial for hate speech for posting images

Latest post

EU-elections-UK

EU elections: UK looks on from the “outside”

1 year ago
Galeries-Royales-Saint-Hubert

What Makes Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert an “Institution”?

1 year ago

Most Read

    Follow Brussels Morning
    Facebook Twitter Youtube Linkedin

    Browse Important News

    Belgium News
    Brussels News
    Culture and Society News
    Economy News
    EU Institutions News
    European Commission News
    European Council News
    European Parliament News
    Europe News
    Health And Fitness News
    Southeast Europe News
    Sustainable Perspective
    World News
    Diplomacy News
    US Elections News

    About Us

    Brussels Morning is a daily online newspaper based in Belgium. BM publishes unique and independent coverage on international and European affairs. With a Europe-wide perspective, BM covers policies and politics of the EU, significant Member State developments, and looks at the international agenda with a European perspective.

    More Info

    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Cookies Policy

    Join Our Newsletter

    Brussels Morning Newspaper – All Rights Reserved © 2024

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Belgium News
      • Belgium Police News
      • Brussels News
    • Brussels Bubble
      • European Parliament News
      • European Commission News
      • European Council News
    • Wider Europe
      • Member States
    • World News
    • Business & Society
    • Europe With Transparency
    • Culture & Society
    • Policy Talks
      • Place de la Bourse
      • The Macro-Economist
      • Sustainable Perspective
      • Ambassador’s Corner
      • The American Angle
      • Southeast Europe
    • Print Magazine

    Brussels Morning Newspaper - All Rights Reserved © 2020

    We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies.
    Cookie settingsACCEPT
    Privacy & Cookies Policy

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
    Non-necessary
    Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
    SAVE & ACCEPT