He has turned suffering into an art form – but does that make it good?
'We're not trying to do a piece that examines how important he is,' demurs Moore, a former director of the Melbourne International Film Festival. 'We're doing a homage to his career, to his spirit of exploration and curiosity, to his longevity in the Australian art scene – to the fact that here is a guy who's grown up in the western suburbs of Melbourne and gone on to become one of the better-known performing artists on the international circuit. It's a salute to him and his personality and his cultural output over a very long time.'
Moore first encountered a Stelarc performance in 1982, when the artist was suspended, naked (as was his wont) from the limbs of a massive gum tree in Canberra.
For Moore, who was then working in theatre, the sight of Stelarc's body twitching as his limbs froze up was instantly fascinating. 'It was the ritual element of it, the theatrical side of it. These are images that will burn into your retina and never, ever leave you – and I'm grateful to Stelarc for that.'
Decades later, Moore met Doggett Williams, whom he describes as 'an inveterate collector of footage', including of Stelarc's performances over the years. There was an archive at ACMI, too. And Stelarc had 'eight boxes [of footage] in his house, on all these formats known and unknown to man, stuff we've never seen before'. The seeds of a career-spanning filmic survey were in place.
Suspending Disbelief doesn't offer much insight into Stelarc himself. It's far more focused on the work than the man. And, says Moore, that's a deliberate response to what has become standard practice in the endangered realm of the arts documentary.
'We seem to be drifting towards the hagiography mode,' says Moore. 'I look in horror at a program like the ABC's Creative Types... all those personalities are wonderful, they're celebrities. But art is also dirty and painful, it hurts and it's messy and it's chaotic. And we wanted to make a counter to that style of reporting.'
Arguably, no film about Stelarc could ever do differently. His career – which dates back to the late 1960s – has always revolved around the body. There were early experiments in tracking its internal functions, the famous suspensions – embraced by a generation of younger fans today as pioneering efforts in body modification and self-mutilation – and the later (and ongoing) efforts to transcend the limits of the corporeal form through integration of technology, robotics and AI into the physical shell.
There's not a lot of hand-holding in the film, but there are a few signposts that serve as pointers for further research for the curious – the briefly glimpsed reference to the Fluxus art movement, for instance, and the emergence of the body itself as a medium for art.
To that end, there's footage of fellow Australian Mike Parr's infamous performance at the Venice Biennale in 1977, in which he appeared to chop off his own arm (the severed limb was, in fact, a prosthesis packed with meat, and attached to the end of Parr's actual foreshortened arm, with which he was born).
It is remarkable, and appalling, and arrives without warning – and Moore makes no apologies for its inclusion.
'It's incredible footage, and it illustrates a point for us about the European body-art movement,' he says. 'But how do you warn people about it? Do you warn people about it? Do you say, 'oh, the sequence that's going to happen now is actually artificial, it's not a real arm'? But John and I agreed, we wanted the shock value.'
Loading
Scenes like this are meant to be disturbing, both in the film and in the moments captured in it. 'They hark back to images of crucifixion or public hangings,' Moore says of Stelarc's suspensions, as well as the broader body-art movement. 'There's something deep down and slightly nasty and scary about them. It's blood and pain, something subterranean.'
But, many people will ask, is it art?
'Of course it is,' he insists. 'If he'd done it in his bedroom and just kept it there, it probably wouldn't be. Because he's made it so public, shoved it in our faces and made us look at it, it becomes art.
'Whether you like it or not,' he adds, 'is a different question.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
3 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
The unexpected upside to menopause that nobody warned me about
Recently, a trend has been taking place in a particular corner of social media. Founded by American Melani Sanders, it's called the 'We do not care' movement, and it's giving perimenopausal and menopausal women around the world a rallying cry for a common experience. Her videos feature deadpan, joyful announcements of things she no longer gives a toss about, like wearing bras ('they suffocate us'), hiding bloat that makes us look pregnant ('but we're not'), and apologising for the presence of cellulite when we wear shorts ('we've got them, we wear them'). With 1.1 million Instagram followers, Sanders' movement has been joined by the likes of actor Ashley Judd, who proudly confessed to wearing her nightgown past the point of hygiene and using its hem to dry her hands, forgetting her shoes and going barefoot around town, and skipping chin-hair plucking and hair brushing because she doesn't care any more. Presenter Shelly Horton has also joined in, saying Australian women 'don't care about hiding our age … We count it like toddlers now. I'm 51 and 9 months – because we've earned every damn month.' More than just a viral moment, there's a scientific reason behind the phenomenon of women no longer caring about societal norms. As women enter perimenopause our estrogen levels drop, and this decline in the so-called 'caretaker hormone' results in our compulsion to please falling away. The people-pleasing, the emotional labour, the self-policing – all of it starts to fade as the grip it once had loosens. And in its place is something wild and freeing. According to the 2021 Australian census, about 4.3 million Australians are women aged between 45 and 64, while about 2.1 million women are aged 65 and over. This translates to more than 6 million people who are currently navigating, or have previously navigated, menopause. Though perimenopause – the transitional lead-up – can begin as early as 40 and last between four and 10 years, menopause typically occurs between the ages of 45 and 55, with the average age being 51. That's roughly a decade or more of hormonal turbulence, brain fog, sleep disruptions and mood swings, all while still working, parenting or caregiving. No wonder we hit a point where we just stop caring; it's not apathy, it's survival. With 80 per cent of women experiencing symptoms, it's time we stopped whispering and started shouting about what this stage really looks like. We sweat through sheets, cry at commercials, forget the word for 'dishwasher' mid-sentence, and experience anxiety spikes that make us question reality. But in the midst of this chaos, a strange liberation appears. For the first time, we're not hormonally tricked into putting others' needs first.

The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
The unexpected upside to menopause that nobody warned me about
Recently, a trend has been taking place in a particular corner of social media. Founded by American Melani Sanders, it's called the 'We do not care' movement, and it's giving perimenopausal and menopausal women around the world a rallying cry for a common experience. Her videos feature deadpan, joyful announcements of things she no longer gives a toss about, like wearing bras ('they suffocate us'), hiding bloat that makes us look pregnant ('but we're not'), and apologising for the presence of cellulite when we wear shorts ('we've got them, we wear them'). With 1.1 million Instagram followers, Sanders' movement has been joined by the likes of actor Ashley Judd, who proudly confessed to wearing her nightgown past the point of hygiene and using its hem to dry her hands, forgetting her shoes and going barefoot around town, and skipping chin-hair plucking and hair brushing because she doesn't care any more. Presenter Shelly Horton has also joined in, saying Australian women 'don't care about hiding our age … We count it like toddlers now. I'm 51 and 9 months – because we've earned every damn month.' More than just a viral moment, there's a scientific reason behind the phenomenon of women no longer caring about societal norms. As women enter perimenopause our estrogen levels drop, and this decline in the so-called 'caretaker hormone' results in our compulsion to please falling away. The people-pleasing, the emotional labour, the self-policing – all of it starts to fade as the grip it once had loosens. And in its place is something wild and freeing. According to the 2021 Australian census, about 4.3 million Australians are women aged between 45 and 64, while about 2.1 million women are aged 65 and over. This translates to more than 6 million people who are currently navigating, or have previously navigated, menopause. Though perimenopause – the transitional lead-up – can begin as early as 40 and last between four and 10 years, menopause typically occurs between the ages of 45 and 55, with the average age being 51. That's roughly a decade or more of hormonal turbulence, brain fog, sleep disruptions and mood swings, all while still working, parenting or caregiving. No wonder we hit a point where we just stop caring; it's not apathy, it's survival. With 80 per cent of women experiencing symptoms, it's time we stopped whispering and started shouting about what this stage really looks like. We sweat through sheets, cry at commercials, forget the word for 'dishwasher' mid-sentence, and experience anxiety spikes that make us question reality. But in the midst of this chaos, a strange liberation appears. For the first time, we're not hormonally tricked into putting others' needs first.

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
John Goodman makes sad confession about Roseanne Barr relationship years after her firing
John Goodman has revealed he hasn't spoken to his former on-screen wife Roseanne Barr in many years and doesn't think he will ever again. 'We haven't talked for about seven or eight years,' the actor, 73, told The Hollywood Reporter, noting that, 'I'd rather doubt if she wants to talk to me.' The two played husband and wife on Roseanne, which ran on ABC from 1988 to 1997 and returned for a 10th season in 2018. Plans for an 11th season were cancelled after Barr, 72, the matriarch of the blue-collar Connor family, compared Valerie Jarrett, a former adviser to US President Barack Obama, to an 'ape'. She also falsely alleged that Chelsea Clinton was married to George Soros' nephew and that Soros was a Nazi sympathiser. 'Roseanne's Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values, and we have decided to cancel her show,' President of ABC Entertainment Channing Dungey said in a statement at the time. Barr still refuses to take accountability for the tweet. 'The way I feel about it is God told me to do what I did, and it was a nuclear bomb,' she claimed in an interview last month. After the show's abrupt cancellation, ABC ordered up a spin-off called The Connors, in which Goodman, Laurie Metcalf, Sara Gilbert and other cast members reprised their roles from the original series. The show explained Barr's absence by having her character die of a drug overdose. Goodman, who also starred in The Righteous Gemstones, admitted that he didn't think The Connors would last as long as it did, finishing after seven seasons. 'I didn't think [the Roseanne reboot] was going to go beyond the initial five or six episodes,' he confessed. 'I thought it'd be a one-off thing, and then we got picked up, and Roseanne got fired. I thought that was it, and as soon as they dismissed the cast, I picked up Righteous Gemstones. 'Then we got to do the show again as The Conners. I didn't know how long it would last, but I sure enjoyed it while I was there.' Despite the frostiness between himself and Barr, Goodman only spoke warmly of the controversial comedian. 'We hit it off from jump street,' he remembered. 'She made me laugh, and I made her laugh, and wow, it was so much fun. We'd get so many viewers for the show back then — 20, 30 million people. Things are so different now, but it was a special time.' Barr has confirmed that she is not in touch with any of her former co-stars. 'No, I'm not friends with none of them. They're all in the past,' Barr told Fox News Digital in June. 'We don't talk.' Despite claiming not to 'hold any bitterness,' she did snipe that 'they f***ed it all up with their greed and ridiculous stupidity to f**k all that up. F**k them, but I wish them well.'