Michel Journiac (1935–1995) [1] was one of the founders of the 1960s and 1970s Body Art movement in France, called "Art corporel". During these years, many artists started to use the human body as their material. Accordingly, this artist used his own body to perform rituals which he documented through photography or video. His work can be compared to those of Vito Acconci, French artist Gina Pane or Austrian artists of the Viennese Actionism.
It was through his photographic works, his actions and installations, that Michel Journiac, a gay man, attacked society's stereotypes, defended those who existed outside of daily society, and challenged traditional moral values.[2]
His most famous action is probably Messe pour un corps (Mass for a Body) (1969) a parody of catholic liturgy where he officiated as a priest, offering the audience pieces of blood sausage made with his own blood.
Michel Journiac also wrote two poetry books, Le Sang nu (Naked Blood) (1968) and Délit du corps (Crime of the Body) (1978) and many articles, especially in French art journal ArTitudes.
Piège pour un voyeur (Trap for a Voyeur), installation, 1969
Messe pour un corps (Mass for a Body), performance, 1969
Hommage à freud (Tribute to Freude), photographic series, 1972
Piège pour un travesti (Trap for a Transvestite), photographic series, 1972
Contrat de prostitution (Prostitution Contrac), installation, 1973
24 heures de la vie d’une femme ordinaire ( 24 Hours in the Life of an Ordinary Woman), photographic series, 1974
L’inceste (The Incest), photographic series, 1975
Rituel de transmutation (Transmutation Ritual), performance, photography1993
Sarah Wilson, « Michel Journiac's Masquerades, Incest, Drag and the Anti-Oedipus », 2003 in Benthien, Claudia, Stephan, Inge (dir.) Mannlichkeit als Maskerade. Gender Studien mit blick auf ‘den' Mann, Köln, Böhlau Verlag, 2003, p. 128-153. (Article consultable sur le site : http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/people/wilson-sarah/JOURNIAC.pdf)