Prep School: "Voyage to Infinity" | NYU Skirball Center

Rooted in a fascination with states of impending collapse, both literal and metaphoric, Voyage Into Infinity captivates viewers through an inventive collision of reclaimed, everyday items with the spectacle that has defined much of Narcissister’s two-decade practice. The performance pays homage to Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s canonical video The Way Things Go (1987), in which the duo created and documented an elaborate Rube Goldberg machine. In contrast to the inspirational work’s unseen male creators, Narcissister’s rendition will foreground the artist and other female-appearing performers as both drivers of the action and subjects of the crowd’s fascination. Borrowing its title from a song by the hardcore band Bad Brains and featuring a live score performed by musician Holland Andrews, Voyage Into Infinity channels raw energy and a punk aesthetic. Through this work, which will exist as a video of its own right, the artist offers a contemporary, feminist revisioning of The Way Things Go. As in all of her projects, the emblematic Narcissister mask—originally repurposed from a 1960s-era wig display form—provides eerie commentary on entrenched beauty standards, the objectification of women, and the malleability of race.  

Read more about Narcissister.

Read more about Under the Radar.

Barbara Browning on Narcissister

The (deliriously) creative re-purposing of found objects, devices, contrivances, machines and engines has long animated Narcissister’s work.

Office Hours: Coming Soon

Get Into It

Get Thee to the LIbrary

Recommended readings to get you in gear for the show.

Grace Banks. Play with me: dolls, women, art (2017).

Tiffany E. Barber. Undesirability and her sisters: black women’s visual work and the ethics of representation (2025)

Kathy Battista. New York new wave: the legacy of feminist art in emerging practice (2019).

Kathryn E. Delmez, editor. Multiplicity: Blackness in contemporary American collage (2023).

Susan Manning, Janice Ross, and Rebecca Schneider, editors. The futures of dance studies (2020).

Read All About It

Interview Magazine | September 2024

“It’s Like, Baby Doll”: Backstage With the Performance Artist Narcissister

“I love the idea of finding things and trusting that whatever I find is what I need.”

Office Magazine | September 2024

Narcissister Voyages Into Infinity

“The mask is a core part of my Narcissister project, and I’m committed to it for life.”

Flaunt Magazine | 2018

Self-Ownership, Skeletons, and the Benefits of Loneliness

Narcissister has provided a far-reaching, collaborative, and expansive critique of the racism and sexism inherent to the capitalist patriarchy.

Filthy Dreams | October 2024

There’s No Going Back: The (Mouse)Trap of Womanhood in Narcissister’s “Voyage Into Infinity” and “The Substance”

Voyage Into Infinity felt part circus, part magic show, part Warner Bros cartoon, part children’s storybook, part punk burlesque show, and part horror movie.”

ArtForum | January 2024

Top Ten: Narcissister

“Curators and producers often say to me that my art is too challenging to program because of the nudity and erotic content.”

Bomb Magazine | November 2018

Studio Visit: Narcissister

Every horizontal space in the studio was covered with clippings and pages pulled from magazines.

Extra Credit

Listen to the Bad Brains song that inspired the title of Narcissister’s Voyage to Infinity.

Voyage to Infinity “pays homage to Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s canonical video The Way Things Go (1987), in which the duo created and documented an elaborate Rube Goldberg machine.”

Extra Extra Credit

Rube Goldberg machines on a much smaller scale than Narcissister’s sculptural staging.