Place is associated with the
Conceptual Art movement and has lectured and performed at events including at the
Sorbonne in Paris, London's
Whitechapel Gallery, and the Andre Bely Centre for Experimental Writing in St. Petersburg, and the Getty Villa in Los Angeles. In 2012, Place was the first poet to perform as part of the
Whitney Biennial. In 2013, Place had her first solo art exhibition,
The Lawyer is Present, a response to
Marina Abramović's
The Artist Is Present, at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, in which she listened to confidential confessions from volunteers and then performed them for the public. In 2014, Place exhibited her work
Last Words alongside
Andrea Fraser’s
Tehachapi at Kings Road at the MAK Center for Art and Architecture/
Schindler House. Critic Sharon Mizota, writing for the
Los Angeles Times, notes the two artists "filled the Schindler House, a landmark of 20th century modernism, with nothing but sound. Emptied of all but a few pieces of furniture, the house becomes both a setting and a listening device: an echo chamber reverberating with history and ideology." Place has been reciting a set of rape jokes through her performance,
If I Wanted Your Opinion, I’d Remove the Duct Tape, since 2016. The Nu Performance Festival in Tallinn and the
Swiss Institute in New York have previously hosted the performance, and philosopher
Mladen Dolar was the respondent for a performance in Ljubljana. In a 2017 interview with
Artforum, Place states: "The structure of a joke, according to Freud, is that it is a sudden discharge of repression, often sexual, often kind of obscene. And so, in that way, the joke itself ends up being structured, or ends up having the same structure, as a rape — a violent discharge of repressed sexuality." after a protest by other exhibition artists, leading to a panel on the project at
Cabinet Magazine in Brooklyn, and a 2017 folio in Studies in Gender and Sexuality. Place says she conceives of her soundworks as "liquid sculptures," wherein "sound behaves sculpturally." In the same Artforum interview, she emphasizes that her sound art depends upon the bodies of the audience receiving the work, as those bodies are also liquid sculptures. Place used Lacan's pronouncement "la femme n’existe pas" [there is no woman] to argue that "woman" as a category "only exists contextually — one can only be woman relative to man…" "Conceptualism," she says, "like feminism, asks one equally to consider the ‘=.’ How does A become equivalent to B, why does it seem (or seem to be proven to be) B’s equal, and at what cost does this equivalency work to A, and for that matter, B?" In "A Poetics of Radical Evil," an essay published in 2010, Place modifies
Kant to argue: "There must be an art [...] that is willing to be affirmatively evil, not immoral exactly, but as a work of malfeasance, not for the polemic or didactic turn, showing that certain things are bad, stupid, etc, that’s easy enough, and sadly it seems one is expected to say these things, which is another form of obscenity, but for a more primal acceptance." Critic Naomi Toth notes that Place "prefers hot items," subjects that generate unease and discomfort among audiences: "the legal defense of criminals, rape jokes, racist realist novels, the last words of death row convicts." Toth suggests Place takes up the discourse "of the suspect, the one we’ve designated as guilty, the one we’re going to execute, the one we consent to push off-scene: the person and the narratives many of us would prefer to suppress to shore up our identity, to found our own innocence." Toth states that Place's project can be understood as "one which makes this innocence suspect, for the duration of her performance at the very least. And for this choice, listeners hold her responsible in turn." == Writing ==