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Contemporary Art

‘Stephen Prina: A Lick and a Promise’ at MoMA: interview


Thirty-three years ago, an eon in contemporary art terms, artists Stephen Prina and Mike Kelley and choreographer Anita Pace collectively conceived a unique and gruelling performance. Beat of the Traps involved two drummers hammering their kits at excessive volume, while an actor shouted Kelley’s confrontational text and two dancers moved to the rhythms. Well received in Vienna and Los Angeles in 1992, it has never been seen again – until now. The piece is central to ‘Stephen Prina: A Lick and a Promise’, the Museum of Modern Art’s first-ever survey devoted to an artist’s performance work.

Prina and Pace, as well as the two original drummers, reconvened in Los Angeles last month to rehearse a fresh version of that now legendary event, to be presented in New York on 19 September 2025. Kelley had taken his own life in 2012, in part due to depression and alcohol, the vodka that is a part of this work’s text. Since the recent rehearsal was in the Geffen building of the Museum of Contemporary Art, an early supporter of the artists, it was an emotional moment for the old friends who were reliving its original creation.

Artist playing guitar during performance

Stephen Prina, Sonic Dan, 1994. Performed at SO 36, Berlin, Germany, November 3, 1996

(Image credit: Photo: David Brandt. Courtesy of the artist and Petzel, New York. © 2025 Stephen Prina)

Prina, with his cropped beard and trim black suit, recalled his friend: ‘Mike was very self-critical. This has been a little difficult, actually. I’m getting emotional because it’s brought my Mike to the fore. The actor in the play is basically a double for me in the performance but also for Mike. And so I hear Mike’s voice.’



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