285 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
285 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Mr.Jones on the Art Strike
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"Cluster round the jukebox for some songs you've probably heard before. It's
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nothing if it isn't pure."
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Yeah Yeah Noh Stealing in the Name of the Lord
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The Art Strike is a good thing only insofar as it produces more radical art,
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of which its own propaganda is a perfect example."
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Sadie Plant in Here & Now 10
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The success or failure of Karen Home's "art strike" propaganda can clearly
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not be judged in terms of how many artists do in fact down tools from now
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until 1993 - that would be too cruel. However, I cannot accept Plant's
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alternative evaluation: a political failure is not necessarily an artistic
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triumph. I would argue, on the contrary, that Home's enterprise is a bad
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thing all round, reactionary both in what it says (politics) and in how it
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says it (art). The Art Strike is a good thing only insofar as it is ignored
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completely [1]: any success will be a bad thing. Its importance lies in the
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weaknesses which its success has highlighted. This is most obvious in areas
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of concepts or art, where the Art Strike has succeeded in popularising a
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peculiarly banal and ill-thought-out version of what art is and what good art
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is or might be. It is time we got our own ideas on the subject sorted out. As
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Mike Peters' article in H&N10 began to suggest, it is not enough simply to
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advocate "more radical art". We must first identify what art actually is and
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does; then we can consider how it might be capable of being radical.
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My position, briefly, is as follows. Jean-Pierre Voyer wrote "Whether the
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subject sinks into madness, practises art or participates in an uprising Ž
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the two poles of daily life - contact with a narrow and separate reality on
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one hand and spectacular contact with the totality on the other - are
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simultaneously abolished, opening the way for the unity of individual life."
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(Reich - How to Use) Well no, he didn't - for "art" read "theory" - but the
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description holds good. Finding the language for real communication, as
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opposed to both an spectacular understanding of the totality and the
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meaninglessness of everyday "life" [2]; going beyond individual isolation and
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spectacular collectivity into a genuine commonality: this is the process of
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making theory, but also that of making art. Voyer's emphasis on the
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subjective experience of making theory, its effects of the theorist's
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characters armour as well as on her view of the world, apply here also. Art,
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just as much as theory, is a process of making common meanings: to the extent
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that those meanings are "radical" this will be a taxing activity, for the
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artist as much as the theorist. Contented artists, as much as contented
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theorists, should be avoided: they are clearly engaged in reiterating
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meanings which are already common. Tortured artists, on the other hand,
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should be sought out and encouraged.
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Now, it has long been assumed that art and theory are in fact not comparable,
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and that anyone involved in the former owes it to the global proletarian
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struggle to jack it in and concentrate on the latter. (Ironically, much of
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the suspicion with which Karen Home is now regarded arose for precisely this
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reason.) Like so much else that affects us today, this goes back to the 5th
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conference of the Situationist International (in Gôteburg in 1961). On that
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occasion, Attila Kotanyi stated that situationist art was impossible under
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"the dominant conditions of artistic inauthenticity": any art produced by
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situationists would promptly be recuperated. By way of solution, Kotanyi
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proposed that members of the SI continue to produce art but that all such
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work be referred to as "anti-situationist". "While various confused artists
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nostalgic for a positive art call themselves situationist, anti-situationist
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art will be the mark of the best artists".
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Whether this could have been, or was intended as, a serious solution is
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unclear: its actual effect was the exclusion of several members, the
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redirection of the SI's activities onto the plane of theory, and the
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longstanding bias against art which was eventually to enable Karen Home to
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impress the hell out of a lot of people by dropping names like Gustav
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Metzger. (OK, OK, I'd never heard of him either.) Whether it was justified in
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its own terms is equally unclear. While one sympathises with Raoul Vaneigem's
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call for the SI to cease its involvement in the "spectacle of refusal", it's
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hard to share Vaneigem's confidence that the (predictable) alternative - "the
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refusal of the spectacle" [3] - can be embarked on by the simple expedient of
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producing theory to the exclusion of art. Indeed, the Situationists could
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only maintain their own faith in theory as a spectacle-free zone by
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continually contrasting theory (hooray!) with ideology (boo, hiss!), a
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distinction which does little to illuminate the actual relations of
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production of theory, and which is, in any case, difficult to make with any
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consistency. However we describe the process of recuperation (and Kotanyi's
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statement that situationist art will be recuperated by society and used
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against us" contains too much paranoia and too little politics to be really
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useful) we need to be clear that it can be applied to everything. Kotanyi's
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fear, a school of art called "situationism" never came true [4]; but the
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political ideology of "situationism" appeared in 1968 and has never gone away.
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My contention, then, is that the situationists were mistaken in labelling art
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as spectacular and theory as authentic. The reason why no art exists which
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can be guaranteed free of the taint of the spectacle (or of "bourgeois
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culture") is that there are no such guarantees. for art or anything else:
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there is no "this side" of the spectacle. Theory is not the situationists'
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utopian pure negative, nor is art a tool of the commodity economy. Rather,
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both art and theory are means of communication - languages of common
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meanings. Both come in new, old, subversive and spectacular varieties; both,
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if found threatening, will swiftly be recuperated: both can be plagiarised
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(or dÑtourned, as we pro-Situs used to say) - and the plagiarisms themselves
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may be useful or useless, radical or reactionary.
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The more attentive reader will by now have realised that I am not in sympathy
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with the Art Strike. I can best explain my reasons by referring the reader
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once again to that historic meeting in Gôteburg: more specifically, to Karen
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Home's view of the matter, as given in her The Assault on Culture: Utopian
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Currents from Lettrisme to Class War. (Is there any justification for that
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"e" on the end of "Lettrism"? I think we should be told.) Home rejects the
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SI's verdict in favour of theory and against art, siding with the
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Scandinavian and German situationists who were excluded following the
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"anti-situationist art" proposal and who later formed a second Situationist
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International. Home speaks approvingly of these artists who shared "a belief
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in the collective and non-competitive production of art". However, we're not
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actually talking about art here: "Overt and conscious use of collective
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practices to make "cultural artefacts" do not really fit the description
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"art" - at least if one is using the term to describe the high culture of the
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ruling class in capitalist societies." Nor, indeed, if one is using the term
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to describe pig-farming. The SI's valuation of theory rested on two
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oppositions: between theory and art, and between theory and ideology. Having
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reversed the terms of the first opposition, Home echoes the second with an
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equally mythical dichotomy: all art is either "high culture" (boo!) or
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collective cultural artefact production (hooray!), Like its counterpart, this
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is not an easy position to maintain empirically.
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The significance of all this for the Art Strike is twofold. Firstly, the
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terms become blurred: should all "art" cease, or only identifiably "high
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culture" forms? Or should art be allowed to continue only if it passes the
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Home Test ("overt and conscious use of collective practices")? This last
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interpretation might explain why issue 8 of Anti-Clock-Wise contains both
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anti-culture material and an article in praise of Mail Art by Mark Pawson.
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But material from the Mail Art networks has appeared in galleries before now,
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which presumably means that too is now an ornament of the ruling class; and
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in any case, Home is currently advocating a complete "refusal of creativity".
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Problems, problems! More importantly, if one rejects the picture of art as a
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sea of ruling class culture with a few islands of subversive practice dotted
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about in it, the whole thing collapses. The entire "struggle against the
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received culture of the reigning society" which Home has been conducting
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since 1985 [5] is built on the idea that "received culture" disseminates the
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values of the "reigning society", with art in particular representing "the
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high culture of the ruling class in capitalist societies". This image of
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culture as a conveyer belt, carrying the values of the ruling class into
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everyday consciousness, is necessitated only by Home's a priori decision to
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divide art into sheep and goats. It's certainly not necessitated by the
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facts. True, art is a material process within society; true, art is never
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innocent of the existing social order, and is always under pressure to
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promote it - within the artist's mind as much as anywhere. But this only adds
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up to saying that art - and "culture" - is a means of communication and
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therefore a region of contestation, or a battleground as we say in English.
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The task is not to combat received culture but to get to work on it:
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embracing parts of it, emphatically rejecting others, but above all diverting
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[6] it to our own purpose.
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In fairness, it must be said that there is more to the Art Strike than that.
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There is also an argument about artists as people, alleging that their status
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as pseudo-radical high-culture merchants gives them Elitist delusions about
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"the superiority of their "creativity" over the leisure and work pursuits of
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the social majority". Without the prop of the anti-"culture" argument,
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though, this looks less like radicalism and more like guilt-tripping. Elitism
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is a disfigurement of the character; it's almost as bad as spots. If artists
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are worried about it, though, the answer is simple: go away and get it
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cleared up. We don't want them moaning to the rest of us about how ugly they
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are and all the parties they're missing ("I couldn't go out looking like this
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- what would all those beautiful workers say?") In any case, Ñlitism is a
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sign of incipient co-option and co-option means that your work is being
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misappropriated. Don't give it up - take it back! Just say no!
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So much for the overt - political - meanings of the Art Strike. There is,
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however, more to it than that: there is a sense, as Sadie Plant implied, in
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which the Art Strike is an art work. This can best be appreciated by looking
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again at the question of success or failure, our assessment of which depends
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entirely on how we interpret the Art Strike itself. Taken straight, it's
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clearly a miserable failure. It is unimaginable that an actual Art Strike
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will materialise; even the idea has made very little headway outside the
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pages of Smile and none at all outside the anarchist mileau. Talking about
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"the Art Strike" at all is doing it a fairly large favour: what exists is a
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campaign for an art strike, or more precisely propaganda in favour of a
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campaign for an art strike. That propaganda has no more popular support than
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the calls for a general strike that issue from time to time from the organs
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of the corpse of Leninism, and as such deserves the same oblivion.
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Alternatively, we can take the whole thing as a rather deadpan joke at the
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expense of "political artists" (If you're so radical let's see you on the
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picket line) but this doesn't improve matters much: hardly anyone has either
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got the joke or fallen for it.
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However, these are not the only possibilities. In between lies the whole
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terrain of irony, of saying one thing and meaning two or three others;the
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terrain where meanings split and proliferate, where the distinction between
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"theory" and "art" ceases to make sense. This, clearly, is the area where
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Home's promotion of the Art Strike [7] operates; this too is one of the areas
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where really new meanings get made [8] and an area where Here & Now [9] has
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squatter's rights. In other words, despite Home's post-Situationist
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attachment to a rigid division between art and theory, the disjunction
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between the Art Strike's apparent meaning and its real impact mean that it
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works, if it works at all, as a combination of art and theory; or rather, as
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a demonstration of the impossibility of separating the two.
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In makes sense, then, to refer to the Art Strike's propaganda as "radical
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art", at least in the sense of "unprecedented art". But this is not the only
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consideration: not all new meanings are good ones. So what is the Art Strike
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really saying? Two main themes are apparent: a complete abandonment of
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politics, associated with an impression of a kind of ultimate and
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unsurpassable radicalism. The first can best be approached by considering the
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hypothetical political impact of a realised art strike. Industrial action
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works to counteract the isolation and passivity endemic in this society:
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strikes are a collective rejection of the strikers' role as workforce and an
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affirmation that they're worth more than that. A strike by artists, though,
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would actually promote both passivity and isolation: the strikers would not
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be a group refusing work but a scattering of individuals doing nothing. To
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this picture we must add the facts that an art strike will not happen, and
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that very few people either know or care what artists do with their time
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anyway. A call for inaction, which is bound to be ignored, and which is
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addressed to people whose actions nobody notices: what is this but an
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elaborate demonstration of the futility of politics? The Marxists aspired to
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change the world; the point, it appears, is to withdraw from it.
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This relates closely to the second point. Home has made an easy reputation
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out of radicals' tendency to confuse the concepts of "qualitative
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supersession" and "reductio ad absurdum": that is, to assume that all
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previous radical practice can be superceded simply by "taking it further".
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This generally takes fairly sophisticated forms: talking about "situationist
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ideology", for example, or alleging that radical art is part of ruling class
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culture. Latterly though, Karen Home has specialised in the most
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radical-looking strategy of all: negate everything. The tendency of the Art
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Strike is to argue that outside itself there is no authentic opposition: that
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all oppositional activity, radical art included, is a form of social
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integration. The empirical difficulties here are obvious and major: it is
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hard to see how anyone other than Karen Home could ever prove that they were
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actually opposing existing society and not merely indulging in oppositionism
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- except perhaps by supporting the Art Strike, reading Richard Allen and
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slagging off the SI... The strategy which Home has "taken further" here is
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the division between the Seventh Day Adventists and all other "Christians".
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Even more important is the end result. So complete a negation results in a
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politics not of negation but of abstention: if nothing is authentic nothing
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can be done.
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This is the true message of the Art Strike. Ultimately Home, like
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Baudrillard, is advocating silence and inaction [10]; is promoting, as the
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ultimate negative, alienation from one's own capacity to act. This has its
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own interest for theory-collectors and the terminally disillusioned [11]; its
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main interest for the rest of us is that it makes Home out as a practitioner
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of theory for theory's sake, political activity taken up in the belief that
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it is pointless. To describe this as radical would do violence to the meaning
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of the word: the word "reactionary" fits much better. "Boring" does quite
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nicely too [12]. As with the theory of Baudrillard, as with the "art for
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art's sake" espoused by aesthetes from Walter Pater to the Neoists [13], the
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Art Strike's only real achievement will be the entertainment it gives its
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audience - and, of course, the careers it makes.
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Mr. Jones
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Notes:
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[1] Damn!
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[2] "Life's about as wonderful as a cold" - Mark Perry, 1977. Perry is not
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known to have been familiar with the situationists' theses on the
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banalisation of everyday life, but being a "punk" he was doubtless influenced
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by them anyway.
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[3] Cf the following comment on the Unification Church mass wedding of a few
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years back: "A spectacle or pairs, assuredly. Let us not forget, however,
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that this was also a pair of spectacles." Taken from Alec Douglas H's The End
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of Finality (Improbable Books, 1989) The situationists, we must conclude,
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never got much beyond the reversal of terms. It will be for others to create
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the terms of reversal.
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[4] Partial disproof: "Before Pop and after Abstract Expressionism there was
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a still-born movement, based in continental Europe... Called Situationism,
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this movement expressed a rebellious need to counterpose the creative and
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irreverent with the anticipated [sic] homogeneity of media society.
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Essentally a non-starter as art per se the movement had, nonetheless, an
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influence on French cinema and architecture." - Philip Core reviewing an
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exhibition at the ICA in New Statesman and Society (30/6/89) Of course, the
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curators invited this kind of misinterpretation by staging the exhibition in
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an art gallery rather than simply getting out and creating situations.
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[5] Not single-handedly, of course! Home's struggles have been shared with
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the PRAXIS group, a guy called Tony from Cork and numerous magazines from
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around the world all called Smile. In addition, many interesting uses have
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been made of that famous general-purpose pseudonym or "multiple identity",
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"Geurge Eliot".
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[6] Or detourning it. Next week: deriving for beginners.
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[7] My knowledge of the originators of the Art Strike - the PRAXIS Group - is
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woefully inadequate; however, I suspect they actually took the Art Strike
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seriously (but that's Americans for you). Only on its arrival in England was
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it transformed by Karen Home's creative genius into the polyvalent
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multi-media event that we all know so well.
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[8] Burroughs half-realised this when he asserted that cut-ups foretold the
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future: simply rearrange some words to make an unknown phrase or saying and
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"the future leaks through". Certainly, new meanings could be created by this
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method: it's a kind of automatic writing. I don't know though - call me
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old-fashioned but I prefer meanings which have been consciously made to the
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kind that leak out of the end of a random process. You can't beat a good work
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of art, that's what I say.
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[9] A magazine of radial tyres.
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[10] Articles in Smile have advocated "sensuous inactivity" for the duration
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of the Art Strike. Idle buggers!
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[11] At the ICA exhibition a couple of copies of Smile were shown, exhibited
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under glass so that we could appreciate the witty and amusing cover art.
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Those responsible are believed to fall into both categories at once.
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[12] Though, to be fair, this is a difficulty encountered from time to time
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by the greatest of theorists. "If the element of boredom I have experienced
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in writing this finds an echo in the reader, what else is this but one more
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proof of our failure to live?" as Raoul Vaneigem asked in his foreword to The
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Kids' Book of How To Do It (or The Revolution of Everyday Life as it's
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sometimes known). How true that is, how very true. And what a cop-out.
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[13] Home once described a reference to "situationist ideology" as a
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"calculated insult". To judge from Home's account of their activities,
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describing the Neoists as artists is more in the nature of a calculated
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compliment.
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By 'Mr Jones' from Here & Now 11 1991 - No copyright
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