THE PERFECT KISS
In his sculptures and actions, James Lee Byars projected glamour as a tangible state of being, rooted in the word’s Scottish origins — gramarye and glamer, signifying magic and enchantment — as if glamour itself were a spell cast upon the world.
Byars used gold as his principal material to challenge its conventional meaning. Stripped of its decorative function, gold became for him a material of near perfection, a philosophical tool through which he explored ideas of purity, totality, and the limits of form. For Byars, gold functioned as a metaphysical element, a tangible manifestation of the sublime. Its reflective surfaces implicate the viewer directly, transforming perception into a participatory act.
Byars turned his own body into the work itself, becoming a living sculpture shaped by darkness and a metaphysical aura. His glamorous silhouette, both elegant and unsettling, hovered between seduction and fear, drawing the viewer into…
James Lee Byars, the perfect kiss, 1975, performance at the Musée du Louvre, Paris
James Lee Byars, the golden tower, 1990, stainless steel, 24-karat gold, installation view in Venice, photo Richard Ivey
James Lee Byars, world flag, 1991, gold lamé, 161 x 85 x 6 inches
James Lee Byars, the golden sphere, 1992/2012, gilded bronze, photo Claudio Abate