Body fluids in art


Occasional use of body fluids such as blood, urine, feces, etc. in works of art is most common in shock art or transgressive art.

Examples

Blood

Urine

Piss Christ, a controversial 1987 photograph by American photographer Andres Serrano, depicts a small plastic crucifix submerged in a small glass tank full of the artist's urine.PISSED, a glass cube containing 200 gallons of the urine of Canadian transgender artist Cassils, was made in 2017 as a protest against a decision by the Trump administration to revoke an Obama administration executive order which guaranteed that transgender students could use restrooms that corresponded with their gender identity. It is currently on exhibition at the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art.

Feces

Artist's Shit, a 1961 artwork by Italian artist Piero Manzoni, consists of 90 tin cans reportedly filled with of his feces.

Breast milk

Human fat

Wenming zhu was made by artist duo Sun Yuan & Peng Yu in 2001. The work resembles a classical stone column, but it is, in fact, composed of layers of congealed, gleaming human fat, alongside wax and metal, the former of which was collected from plastic surgery clinics, and is currently held by the M+ Museum in Hong Kong.

Criticism and difficulties

Depicting objects of popular respect in art which includes body fluids can trigger public protests due to such material's historic association with dirtiness. The outcry about the Piss Christ photo is an example.
In addition to the obvious difficulties of preserving perishable material, there can be regulations complicating transport by rail, truck, or aircraft of liquid body fluids due to the fluids' possible classification as dangerous goods.
The sale of blood art via eBay is prohibited as eBay prohibits the sale of body parts, and classifies blood art as falling under this heading.