Little Frank and His Carp

Andrea Fraser American

Not on view

In the guerrilla video-performance Little Frank and His Carp, Andrea Fraser visits the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain designed by the architect Frank Gehry, the "Little Frank" of the work’s title. Five hidden cameras follow her as she wanders the atrium and listens to the museum’s official audio guide, which doubles as the video’s soundtrack. The tour’s inflated rhetoric celebrates Gehry’s revolutionary architectural achievement, inviting the listener to respond to its grandeur and to the new technologies and innovative techniques used to construct it (such as its overlapping titanium panels meant to evoke the scales of a fish). With zealous obedience and faux-naïve wonder, the artist complies with the instructions of the audio guide’s British narrator and submits herself to his insinuations and observations. She looks around with amazement when asked to observe the soaring ceiling, "like a Gothic cathedral," and smiles on cue when told to "relax" in the space. Encouraged to stroke the "powerfully sensual" curves of a limestone-clad pillar, Fraser lifts her dress and rubs her body against the building in mock sexual pleasure as museum visitors look on in curious disbelief. Her exaggerated response to the audio guide’s direction parodies the authority that museums have in influencing our reactions and opinions to works of art, particularly through an impassioned but anonymous institutional "voice." It also burlesques the seduction with male genius, subjecting Gehry’s architecture to an unintended but hilarious physical response.


Fraser’s work is closely associated with institutional critique, an artistic practice that emerged in the 1960s to question the power structures, practices, and ideologies underpinning the display, circulation, and scholarly consideration of art. Her earliest video-performances—such as Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk (1989), in which the artist assumed the role of a museum docent offering a subversive tour of the Philadelphia Museum of Art—saw Fraser inhabit fictional personas based on various art world figures in order to critically analyze their function. With biting humor, the artist has spoofed dealers, collectors, and curators, as well as produced searing takedowns of gallery talks, exhibition openings, and welcome speeches in other video-performances, challenging the elitism and expertise of the art world.


Little Frank and His Carp takes as its target a museum, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, that has been criticized for representing a noxious form of global capitalism since its founding in 1997. Essentially a franchise of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Bilbao branch was conceived as the first of many satellite locations to promote the Guggenheim’s brand abroad. Its showy architectural structure and museum pedigree attracted international tourists to the site, resulting in a cultural and economic enrichment of the region that became known as the "Bilbao effect." Fraser’s fawning obedience to the museum’s audio guide, inviting her to interact with the structure itself, seems to critique the site’s complicated reception.

Little Frank and His Carp, Andrea Fraser (American, born Billings, Montana, 1965), Single-channel video, color, sound, 6 min.

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