For the first three hours, the audience was kind. Act 1: The Honeymoon (Hours 1–2) The video shows a quiet gallery. People are shy. They turn her around. They offer her the rose. They drape the coat over her shoulders. One man gently places the feather in her hand. The mood is playful. The audience treats her like a doll they want to protect.

Marina Abramović’s Rhythm 0 (1974) is often cited as the most terrifying performance art piece in history. If you have seen the video footage (or the photographic reconstruction of the event), you have witnessed something that transcends art: a raw, unfiltered look at the mob mentality, the banality of evil, and the fragility of the human conscience.

This is where the video footage becomes tense. Realizing there are no consequences, the audience escalates. Someone cuts her neck with the razor—just deep enough to draw blood. Another pins the rose’s thorns into her stomach. Her clothes are cut off with the scalpel.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (Essential viewing for psychology, sociology, and art students) Warning: Extreme violence, sexual assault (simulated and real), nudity, blood. Recommended follow-up: Watch The Artist is Present (2012) to see Abramović reclaim her body through stillness and love, rather than danger.

She then invited the audience to do to her body using these tools. She took full legal responsibility for the outcome. Her only active role? To remain passive.