2262 lines
111 KiB
Plaintext
2262 lines
111 KiB
Plaintext
THE FESTIVAL OF PLAGIARISM
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by Stewart Home
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In as much as this is a 'critical' piece of writing, it
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is concerned with some of the ways in which various
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individuals responded to the issues raised by the
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Festival Of Plagiarism. While I offer a description of
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the entire Festival, this description should not be taken
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as constituting any in-depth 'aesthetic judgement'. Pure
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aesthetics, were such a thing possible, would not in any
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case interest me. The description I offer is intended
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largely for informational purposes (to provide a 'record'
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of what took place).
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PART I: EVENTS LEADING TO THE FESTIVAL OF PLAGIARISM
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The Festival Of Plagiarism grew out of a series of
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earlier collaborations. Obviously, the outline which
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follows is schematic and excludes a number of important
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elements (i.e. it is focussed upon exhibitions, festivals
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and performances and largely ignores the input of various
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publications such as Variant, Smile, Edinburgh Review
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&c.).
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In the case of this essay, the 'Eighth International
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Neoist Apartment Festival' (London May 21st to 26th 1984)
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becomes a 'fictional' starting point. In the run up to -
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and during the course of - this festival, Pete Horobin,
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Stefan Szczelkun, Mark Pawson and myself (amongst others)
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met each other. The Apartment Festival consisted mainly
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of performances strongly influenced by futurism and
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fluxus. As a result of this Festival, the Neoist
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'movement' underwent a change of direction. This was (at
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least partially) due to my subsequent involvement with
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the group. The 'movement' (or at least parts of it) took
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up my (highly unoriginal) ideas about plagiarism as a
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'positive creative technique'. Simultaneously, Pete
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Horobin, tentatively a convenience and I helped lay
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stress upon the development of Monty Cantsin as a
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multiple identity to be adopted by all members of the
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Neoist Network.
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At the time it was held (May '85) the show
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'Iconoclasm' - a rudimentary installation by Malcolm
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Dickson, Gordon Muir and Peter Thomson (Transmission
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Gallery, Glasgow) - had no obvious connection with the
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London Neoist Festival. Although the exhibition
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consisted primarily of paintings and drawings, these were
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not simply hung at roughly even spaces along the wall.
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Rather, they were installed in such a way so as to draw
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attention to the fact that any arrangement of pictures is
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culturally loaded (and not - as the bourgeois art
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establishment would have us believe - an inconsequential
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means by which a series of objects can be displayed in a
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neutral space).
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Among those exhibiting in 'Our Wonderful Culture'
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(the Crypt, London December '85) were Stefan Szczelkun,
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Hannah Vowles, Tom McGlynn, Glyn Banks, Ed Baxter and
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Simon Dickason. At performances which took place during
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the course of the exhibition, I met and became friendly
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with Baxter, Dickason, Vowles and Banks. Shortly
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afterwards, Baxter, Vowles, Banks, Szczelkun and myself,
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began to discuss the possibilities of organising a group
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show together.
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Back in Glasgow, Dickson, Thomson and Simon Brown
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were busy organising "War Of Images". The exhibition -
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when it took place in January '86 - was split between
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Glasgow School of Art and Transmission Gallery. This
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show presented the visual polemics of dozens of young
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Scots (among them Muir and William Clark), whose work was
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theoretically and practically opposed to both the
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successful painterly style of New Image Glasgow and the
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dominant culture in general. Dickson, having seen a
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magazine I edited and published at the time, sent me
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promotional material for this show and added my name to
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the Transmission mailing list. Contact between London
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and Glasgow was thus established!
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Meanwhile, Baxter, Szczelkun and myself (my work was
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attributed to 'Karen Eliot') exhibited in "The Business
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Of Desire", held at the DIY Gallery, London May '86. My
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work consisted of three statements 'against desire':
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'Desire is the space between repression and freedom
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through which capital first entered its colonised
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subjects'; 'The separation induced between desiring
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"subject" and desired "object" is capitalist ideology
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materialised'; and 'The destruction of desire is the
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first task of those seeking a return to the pleasures of
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the unitary'. These statements had been mounted beneath
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a drawing of an arm which I'd cut into three sections;
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the contents of a syringe (visible across all three
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panels of the triptych) were in the process of being
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discharged into the lower part of the limb. Constituting
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a part of Baxter and Szczelkun's contribution was a text
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in newspaper format entitled "Bypass Control":
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"Glamour interprets the desires of all our senses as
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image. Sexuality ceases to exist as tactile pleasure and
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becomes an analogue of Power. Sex becomes a scene of
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power, a struggle for power that doesn't exist: a
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struggle to produce power relations. The machinery of
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oppression casts an invisible strain on all our human
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functioning..."
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The full text of "Bypass Control" is reproduced in
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the book "Collaborations" edited by Stefan Szczelkun
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(Working Press, London 1987) Denise Hawrysio also
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exhibited in 'The Business Of Desire' where she met
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Szczelkun. A further six months passed before I became
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acquainted with her and it was some time after this that
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I introduced her to Baxter.
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An application for a group show at BookWorks
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(London) - featuring Baxter, Szczelkun, Vowles, Banks and
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myself -was put together; but due to the gallery's
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precarious financial situation the exhibition didn't take
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place. This show was to have been a further exploration
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of the ideas with which Baxter, Szczelkun and I had been
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dealing in 'The Business Of Desire'. Among the proposed
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exhibits was a bookwork of mine entitled "Destruction Of
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Glamour/Glamour Of Destruction".
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Many of the ideas for the BookWorks show were
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subsequently put to use in a group installation held at
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Chisenhale Studios (London) and entitled "Ruins of
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Glamour/Glamour of Ruins". This exhibition was organised
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by Stefan Szczelkun and took place in December '86. In
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addition to those who worked on the abortive BookWorks
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project, the exhibition also featured work by Gabriel
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(Gabrielle Quinn), Andy Hopton, Simon Dickason and Tom
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McGlynn. Two key ideas shaped the ultimate form of this
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installation. The first was that the work should grow
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from an organic collaboration between the exhibitors; the
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second that the audience should be made to respond to the
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gallery as an architectural space and site of power. A
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somewhat bureaucratic procedure was adopted to achieve
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these ends; with the exception of Tom McGlynn (who flew
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in from New York immediately prior to the work being
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installed), the participants held regular meetings at
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which they thrashed out their ideas. A description of
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the "Glamour" show was included in the catalogue which
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accompanied a follow-up exhibition (Desire In Ruins,
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Transmission, Glasgow May '87):
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"Spectators entering Chisenhale Studios, London,
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during the 'Glamour' show, found themselves blinded by a
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spotlight. Since there was a wall to their left, they
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were forced to veer right. They thus found themselves
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entering a spiral of heaped coal. Any progression beyond
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the outer ring of the spiral was impeded by sharpened
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wood spikes. Similarly, it was not possible to step over
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the spiral at the point where the spotlight was hung.
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Spectators were thus forced to step over the spiral at a
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point just in front of the spotlight. By turning their
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backs to the light, they would find themselves at the
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best vantage point for viewing both the exhibition and
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any other spectators (particularly those entering the
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gallery)."
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The 'Glamour' exhibition was destroyed after it had
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been up for less than a week. Fierce debate ensued over
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whether it should be kept open. Szczelkun, in
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particular, felt - despite the graffiti and destruction
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of works - that the public should still be allowed to
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view what remained of the show. However, after much
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discussion, it was decided to close the exhibition. Had
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the gallery been kept open the insurance claim we'd
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lodged against 'damage' of works would have been
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jeopardised. Vowles and Banks were particularly
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intransigent on this point and insisted that nothing
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should be removed from the gallery (including an
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electrical extension lead which Szczelkun wished to use)
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until after the insurance company had said that it was
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permissible to do so. It should be noted in relation to
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this, that the gallery encouraged/pressurised us into
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accepting that the exhibition should be closed. Apart
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from anything else, this early closure greatly assisted
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them in scheduling the installation of their new track
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lighting system. Chisenhale eventually waived their right
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to a 25% cut of our insurance claim (collectable as
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commission!) but still collected a substantial sum for
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the redecoration of their premises.1
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Following the 'destruction' of the "Glamour"
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installation, Graham Harwood and I (we had met through
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Szczelkun) began organising the Festival Of Plagiarism
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(London). Three months later, a group show entitled "Our
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Wonderful Culture II - Voyage" was hurriedly put together
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by Hercules Fisherman at Fisherman Studios, London. The
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exhibition ran for two and a half weeks in March and
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April '87. Szczelkun, Baxter, Hopton, Gabriel, Dickason,
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Harwood, Karen Strang, Graham Tansley and myself (working
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as Karen Eliot) were among those exhibiting. Like the
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first 'Our Wonderful Culture', this show was overhung
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with an eclectic variety of work. However, because little
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attention was paid to organising an effective system of
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lighting, aesthetically considered hanging or ensuring
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that the gallery was open at the times advertised to the
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public, the exhibition did not meet with the same
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critical acclaim as its predecessor in the Crypt.
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Simultaneously, Malcolm Dickson and Gordon Muir held
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another installation entitled 'Iconoclasm' at the
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Transmission Gallery in Glasgow. Dickson's work was
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focussed around a transmutation of a May '68 slogan
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(which substituted the word 'Sewer' for 'Beach' and thus
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ran 'Beneath The Cobble Stones The Sewer'). The slogan
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simultaneously referred to the fact that a sewer ran
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beneath the cobbled floor of the gallery and the failure
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of the sixties youth revolt. The gallery space utilised
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by Dickson was lit by a single naked bulb which
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illuminated a uniform series of black, rectangular,
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plaster reliefs (entombed inside these were nuts, bolts,
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combs, broken records and other discarded objects).
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Muir's work consisted largely of paintings and drawings -
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many of which included quotations from (or other
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references to) the song lyrics of punk and post punk
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bands (in relation to this see Muir's text 'Iconoclasm'
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presented during the course of the show and included in
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Edinburgh Review No. 77).
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Immediately afterwards another group installation,
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"Desire In Ruins", ran at Transmission Gallery as part of
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the Glasgow May Festival. This show was organised between
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Ed Baxter, Malcolm Dickson, Carole Rhodes and myself.
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It featured the work of Baxter, Banks, Dickason, Hopton,
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Vowles, Szczelkun and myself (working as Karen Eliot) and
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was in many ways a further exploration of the themes
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dealt with in the DIY and Chisenhale exhibitions. Alan
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Robertson and David O'Vary (in an unpublished review)
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give the following description of the show:
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"Looking through the heavy grilles which protect
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Transmission's windows, one sees a surface covered with
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earth, upon which lies a rubber chicken and several other
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found objects, including a toy piano with its keys
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violently nailed down. On entering you find yourself
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amidst an Aladdin's cave of images and objects, lit only
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by a single spotlight. One's presence was immediately
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made known by the noise created from stepping on the
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discarded beer cans strewn across the entrance (a
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reflection on a drinking culture in ruins perhaps?).
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Stepping in front of the light in order to enter the
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space, shut off all illumination and brought a sinister
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peep-show squalor to the surroundings. The space was
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cluttered with objects, reminiscent of the stalls in
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Paddy's market. Pictures of a Pope in ornate plastic
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frames, bottles of 'Liquid Sky', paintings from a hair-
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loss advert, sheets of writing stuck on the walls,
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plastic baby dolls, condoms filled with some white
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substance, a bottle of ketchup on a plinth. All of these
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trash objects stand as icons to a culture of commodity,
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image and desire. Occupying a great deal of the first
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gallery space was an installation made up of bamboo
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canes, boards, wires, switches and the like. Impaled and
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stretched on these canes was a nylon leopard skin,
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through which the canes poked at strategic points..."
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The rear gallery was largely devoted to a visual
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investigation of those links between sexuality and
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childhood which had been outlined in the catalogue to the
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'Glamour' show ('the glamorous adult is modelled on an
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idealised vision of children'). Two works dealt most
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explicitly with this theme. Ultra-violet light
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illuminated a stereo-typed image of a cowboy (which was
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neither adult nor child and approached in appearance a
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gay 'clone') taken from a children's colouring book and
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reproduced life-size on the gallery wall. This piece was
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entitled 'Kind Pride' ('kind' has been adopted by certain
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paedophiles as a term of positive self-description).
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Another wall painting featured two naked children holding
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hands (the image was taken from a commercially available
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post card). Balloons filled with white paint were placed
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on and around this picture (to be shot at with an air
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gun, thus obliterating the image of the two children).
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The same image was used on posters for the show and
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resulted in threats of police prosecution.
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In September '87, Dickson exhibited a video
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installation entitled "XS" as part of the Smith Biennale
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at the Smith Art Gallery, Stirling. A less ambitious
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version of this installation (without television
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monitors) served as Dickson's contribution to the
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Festival Of Plagiarism; the film which had been put
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together for multi-screen use as a part of 'XS' was shown
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on a single monitor during one of the Festival video
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evenings. In November '87, Dickson exhibited another
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video installation - "Arrival/Departure" - as part of AVA
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(Audio Visual Experimental) at Arnhem in Holland.
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PART II: THE FESTIVAL OF PLAGIARISM
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I toyed with the idea of organising 'The Festival Of
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Plagiarism' from the summer of '85 onwards. I felt that
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if I was to set up such an event it would give me the
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opportunity to create something positive from my
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experiences at the Ninth Neoist Festival (Ponte Nossa,
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Italy 1st - 7th June 1985).
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Two months prior to going to Italy I'd decided to
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'renounce' my 'membership' of the Neoist group. I'd
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become disillusioned with Neoism because many of the
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individuals who constituted the 'movement' appeared to
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lack the theoretical skill with which to effectively
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direct their activity. However, since I had promised
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organiser Pete Horobin that I would attend the Festival
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in Ponte Nossa (and I knew he greatly valued my support),
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I felt 'duty bound' to put in an appearance. While I was
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still prepared to work with selected Neoists on an
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individual basis, I decided that the Italian Festival
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would be the end of any 'official' involvement I had with
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the group.
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Events in Ponte Nossa served to reinforce my worst
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suspicions about Neoism. Many of the performances
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undertaken during the course of the Festival indicated
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that the perpetrators had omitted to make any conscious
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effort to engage with a specific (or even a non-specific)
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audience. Beyond a vague desire to 'shock' outside
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observers, much of what occurred during that week in June
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appeared narcissistic and self-obsessed (and only escaped
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collapse into complete solipsism because of the
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participants' need to have an admiring crowd of friends
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applaud their antics). The audience (if one happened to
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materialise, which was not always the case) was used -
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quite literally - for personal gratification. Despite
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lip-service paid to the concept of 'creating open
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situations', the idea that the audience had a productive
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role to play in the creation of culture appeared quite
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alien to the small group gathered in Ponte Nossa. The
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local community was utterly bemused by the entire event.
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Over the past three and a half years I have received
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several indications of organiser Pete Horobin's low level
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of engagement with the implications of holding an 'avant-
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garde' festival in a small mountain village. The most
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significant among these is the fact that he suggested I
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was mythologising what took place after I wrote that
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local teenagers used the event as a backdrop against
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which to engage in mildly 'anti-social' behaviour. If
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Horobin had stopped to speak to the locals, he would have
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discovered how incorrect he was in assuming that the
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behaviour of village youths, during the course of the
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Festival, was 'normal'.
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Horobin's attitude towards the inhabitants of Ponte
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Nossa was reflected in the way he treated the Festival's
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participants. Over the previous year Horobin and I had
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become close friends; his cavalier behaviour in Italy
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(which was directed at all those around him, including
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myself) revealed several character traits I had not
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previously noticed. I was thus neither prepared for nor
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(due to personal circumstances) in an ideal condition to
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deal with the resultant personality clashes. I had been
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sleeping on a different floor virtually every night for
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the previous eight months. On top of this I had missed
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three nights sleep while hitch-hiking to Ponte Nossa. As
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a result (and as Horobin knew), my bodily rhythms had
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become so confused that I was finding it difficult to
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sleep for more than two or three hours each night - and
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this, despite the fact that I felt extremely tired the
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entire time. It should have been obvious that I was not
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going to take kindly to being woken up during the few
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hours sleep I was managing to snatch. Despite this, in
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the small hours of the fifth night of the Festival,
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Horobin shook me from my sleep and informed me that
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'something strange is going on' - while Stiletto filmed
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my barely conscious reactions. When I'd woken up enough
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to realise that Horobin and Stiletto had exploited my
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fatigued state to manipulate me into performing a scene
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they wanted for their video, I told them that unless they
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gave me the footage, I was leaving Ponte Nossa. Since
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they refused to give me the film, I walked out of the
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village and continued walking for the several hours it
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took until there was any traffic on the road from which I
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could hitch a lift. On reflection, I count myself lucky
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that I wasn't exposed to the same dangers as two other
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participants in the Festival - Horobin set fire to a vast
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pile of screwed up paper they were lying beneath. It
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should, however, be noted that Horobin later apologised
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to me for his behaviour. As Festival organiser he was
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under considerable pressure, which may account (at least
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partially) for his poor sense of judgement (and general
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lack of concern for the safety and welfare of others)
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during the course of events in Italy.
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The Festival Of Plagiarism was thus partially
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organised in response to what I perceived as the multiple
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failures of the Neoist Festival in Ponte Nossa (and in
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particular the exploitative, cavalier and generally
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thoughtless way in which various Neoists conducted
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themselves in relation to the local inhabitants - who
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were presumably considered as constituting the audience).
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Other, more positive, sources of 'inspiration' (perhaps
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because I didn't experience them 'personally') included
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the Fluxus Festivals of the 1960's and Gustav Metzger's
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"Destruction In Art Symposium" (which attempted to deal
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with the theoretical and practical issues raised by the
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destructive urges which exist throughout Western
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culture).2
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I mentioned my idea for a Festival Of Plagiarism to
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a variety of individuals (most notably Stefan Szczelkun),
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in the hope of persuading someone to assist me in the
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administrative tasks it would entail. Graham Harwood,
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who heard of my ideas for the Festival via Szczelkun,
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approached me and suggested we should organise the event
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together.
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Harwood and I met at least once every two weeks
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throughout the first half of '87 to talk over plans for
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the Festival. When not focussed on 'practical'
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questions, such as which venues to approach with our
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proposals and how to present our ideas to gallery
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administrators, Harwood would use these meetings as an
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opportunity to expound his ideas on the mass media.
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During the summer, discussions about the Festival took
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place between a larger group (which - along with Harwood
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and myself - included Baxter, Szczelkun, Hopton,
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Dickason, Vowles, Banks, Graham Tansley and Denise
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Hawrysio). From the ideas raised in these discussions,
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Harwood hoped to create a fat and lavishly illustrated
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paperback book. In the event, the book wasn't produced
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and the discussion (while being crucial to the
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development of the Festival) created organisational
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difficulties. Vowles and Banks withdrew from the
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Festival (and offered a variety of contra_dic_tory
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reasons for doing so). Szczelkun, who initially planned
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to mount a one person show at the Escape Gallery, changed
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his mind and then organised his 'Routine Art Co.
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Retroactive' at M&B Motors so late in the day that it
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missed inclusion in most of the Festival's publicity.
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Personal circumstances forced Hawrysio to leave London
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and return to her native Canada over the period in which
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the Festival took place.
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There were a number of reasons why the discussions
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we held over the summer (while necessary) proved
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disruptive to the organisation of the Festival. Graham
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Harwood had initially convened them so that we could talk
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over plans for a collaborative installation at Battersea
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Arts Centre. Harwood believed he had successfully
|
||
concluded negotiations over the use of exhibition space
|
||
at Battersea. The participants spent weeks working on
|
||
the project, before they were informed by Harwood that
|
||
the Arts Centre had decided his proposal was an
|
||
unsuitable choice with which to open their annual
|
||
programme. This news had a drastic effect on the morale
|
||
of the group, which had been led to believe that formal
|
||
confirmation of Harwood's proposal was a forgone
|
||
conclusion. After this, there was little enthusiasm for
|
||
the other project Harwood had been pushing in the course
|
||
of these meetings - his plans for a lavishly illustrated
|
||
plagiarism paperback. When pressed on how he intended to
|
||
finance the book, Harwood suggested that everyone present
|
||
donate #100 towards printing costs. Since a number of
|
||
individuals im_me_di_ately protested that they did not
|
||
have access to such a sum, this seemed a weak basis on
|
||
which to proceed with the project. After a month or two
|
||
in which he bemoaned our lack of support, Harwood
|
||
abandoned his plans for the book.
|
||
After the initial enthusiasm for the Festival had
|
||
thus been spent, the unstructured nature of our meetings
|
||
became a serious problem. Without any formal agenda, the
|
||
conversation would either wander haphazardly from debate
|
||
of organisational problems to argument over theoretical
|
||
issues and on into slanging sessions directed against
|
||
mutual acquaintances - or else just splutter to a halt.
|
||
My response to this situation was myopic in the extreme;
|
||
rather than addressing theoretical disagreements, I
|
||
attempted to find some common ground between
|
||
participants. This is a stance I consistently adopted.
|
||
It is reflected in my response to Harwood's ideas during
|
||
the earlier stages of the Festival's organisation when,
|
||
rather than being 'mutually supportive', we should have
|
||
been hammering out theoretical issues. While Harwood's
|
||
views on plagiarism were heavily influenced by the
|
||
cultural theory of John Berger &c., I wanted to orientate
|
||
the Festival around a perspective informed by the more
|
||
radical tenets of the (Berlin) dadaists and Fluxus (as
|
||
'personified' by Flynt, Paik and Vostell). Initially, I
|
||
attempted to synthesise these two approaches; the gauche
|
||
nature of the resultant texts ("Plagiarism As Negation In
|
||
Culture" and "Plagiarism, Culture, Mass Media"), are a
|
||
measure of the underlying unease I felt at making such a
|
||
compromise.
|
||
Despite this unease, I included these 'gauche' texts
|
||
in the pamphlet "Plagiarism: art as commodity and
|
||
strategies for its negation" (published by Baxter and
|
||
Hopton's Aporia Press in November '87). To minimise
|
||
printing costs, the booklet was unillustrated. Harwood,
|
||
who suffers from dyslexia, therefore found himself
|
||
effectively barred from contributing to the main
|
||
publication issued to coincide with the Festival.
|
||
Understandably this fact caused a degree of friction
|
||
between us; these differences were resolved when Harwood
|
||
saw the final product - which, upon reflection, he felt
|
||
gave adequate representation to his theoretical position.
|
||
As well as writing by Baxter and myself, the 'Plagiarism'
|
||
booklet also contained texts by John Berndt, Simon
|
||
Anderson, Ralph Rumney, John Zerzan, Valerie Solanas and
|
||
John Carlin (the writing of Zerzan, Solanas and Carlin
|
||
was reproduced without the authors' or their publishers'
|
||
permission).
|
||
Many of the texts included in the "Plagiarism"
|
||
booklet were intended to overstate the case for a
|
||
particular polemical position. My intention in doing
|
||
this was to stimulate debate and help create the
|
||
conditions for a radical shift in the reader's
|
||
orientation to the mental sets creativity, identity,
|
||
originality, individuality, value and truth.
|
||
Unfortunately this tactic tended to mask both differences
|
||
and similarities in how Baxter, Harwood and myself
|
||
approached various theoretical issues. It also led to
|
||
broader misunderstandings; a number of individuals (such
|
||
as the journalist John A. Walker) took ideas connected to
|
||
the Festival over-literally.
|
||
The most extreme response to the "Plagiarism"
|
||
booklet came from Ed Baxter, who quite rightly questioned
|
||
the adequacy of certain contributions - but in a 'ham
|
||
fisted' manner which was grievously flawed and tended to
|
||
gloss over the real weaknesses of those texts he
|
||
attempted to 'criticise'. In his capacity as publisher,
|
||
Baxter removed several short pieces ('all his own work')
|
||
from my final selection of material for the pamphlet and
|
||
replaced them with an essay entitled "ReDistribution"
|
||
(which he'd written using the pen name Waldemar
|
||
Jyroczech). This last minute switch effectively
|
||
prevented any debate (prior to the "Plagiarism" booklet
|
||
being published) of the issues raised in
|
||
"ReDistribution".3
|
||
In "ReDistribution", Baxter veers towards dogmatism
|
||
over the question of 'truth' (or to be more specific, the
|
||
absence of any 'truth'). He assumes, in relation to the
|
||
essay "Why Plagiarism?" (written/plagiarised by me and
|
||
credited to Bob Jones), that I - literally - 'mean what I
|
||
say' (as though 'meaning' could be fixed in such a way).
|
||
If one accepts that there is no absolute truth, Baxter's
|
||
position is - in itself - problematic. Simultaneously,
|
||
Baxter's attempts to impose a 'literal' meaning on "Why
|
||
Plagiarism?" downgrade the productive role of the reader
|
||
in relation to the text (and necessitates that he
|
||
studiously ignore the ironic aspects of the essay, such
|
||
as the fact that it is partially plagiarised from a
|
||
source of which I am highly critical - Debord and
|
||
Wolman's "Methods Of Detournement").
|
||
A general downgrading of the productive role of the
|
||
audience is a feature of the 'Jyroczech' essay. For
|
||
example, Baxter claims that 'originality' and
|
||
'creativity' 'occur in the realm of production'. These
|
||
categories are actually 'moral tags' which are applied in
|
||
the course of cultural administration and consumption
|
||
(that they cannot be 'objectively' measured or produced
|
||
to order in the same way as the output of coal or steel
|
||
provides sufficient evidence of this fact).
|
||
Baxter criticises me for the statement that '(t)he
|
||
plagiarist has no problem with meaning, reality, truth'.
|
||
He claims that such an assertion is 'inaccurate and
|
||
misses the point'. But if there is no absolute 'truth'
|
||
(and on this issue Baxter appears to concur with me), one
|
||
wonders what (in the absence of a Platonic ideal) he is
|
||
using as a criteria for measuring the (in)accuracy of my
|
||
statement. To make a 'problem' out of a category which
|
||
has no 'objective' existence (and little relevance in
|
||
this context, since we both seem to agree on the 'fact'
|
||
of its 'objective' non-existence) is simply a quasi-
|
||
academic fetishisation.
|
||
Baxter goes on to 'critically' quote a phrase from
|
||
the essay "Orientation For The Use Of A Context" (which I
|
||
wrote using the name Karen Eliot, while the phrase in
|
||
question was plagiarised from a text Michael Tolson wrote
|
||
using the name Monty Cantsin). The relevant section of
|
||
Baxter's essay reads as follows:
|
||
"No one nowadays need rely on, say, the use of
|
||
multiple names 'to create a situation for which no one in
|
||
particular is responsible'. The very existence of the
|
||
law implies a generalised absence of responsibility, one
|
||
reinforced in the realm of 'the arts' by the 'death of
|
||
the author' (cf. Barthes) and the 'liquidation of
|
||
originality' (cf. Warhol). Indeed, part of the problem
|
||
is that this state of affairs seems to belong to the
|
||
past, to an accepted but not understood history; a
|
||
plagiaristic repetition of the issues will tend to result
|
||
in the erection of a facade of ahistoricity; a kind of
|
||
fetishisation."
|
||
Here we find Baxter willfully imprisoning himself in
|
||
an ivory tower. Most people would find Baxter's world
|
||
view - should they chance upon it - completely alien.
|
||
While I would not dispute Baxter's claim that '(t)he very
|
||
existence of the law implies a generalised absence of
|
||
responsibility', his assertion that this constitutes part
|
||
of an 'accepted... history' is utter nonsense. One of my
|
||
intentions in consciously assisting in the creation of
|
||
situations for which no one in particular was responsible
|
||
(via the use of multiple names), was to bring (by
|
||
analogy) this 'generalised absence of responsibility' to
|
||
the attention of those who did not already perceive it.
|
||
In writing and publishing "ReDistribution", I felt
|
||
Baxter's actions were at odds with his 'theoretical'
|
||
position. This divergence was underlined after the
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism, when Baxter typeset the texts
|
||
which accompanied the 'Refuse' installation. He waited
|
||
until after the other participants had handed him their
|
||
'polemics' before producing his own contribution - a text
|
||
which was in part a 'response' to his 'co-workers'
|
||
writing.4 As with the "Plagiarism" booklet, Baxter
|
||
attempted to present his opinions in the form of a 'meta-
|
||
narrative'. Thus while he writes about cultural
|
||
artefacts 'producing' their creators and their audience,
|
||
Baxter has (at least on occasion) operated as if the
|
||
written word (and specifically the academic text)
|
||
occupies a position of privilege which cannot and should
|
||
not be questioned.
|
||
. The "Plagiarism" booklet sold well (the initial
|
||
print run of 300 sold out within four months and it has
|
||
subsequently been reprinted three times) and acted as a
|
||
very efficient advertisement for the Festival. Looking
|
||
at the pamphlet now, this surprises me, since the speed
|
||
with which it was put together shows in the (at times)
|
||
flimsy arguments. Whatever its faults, the publication
|
||
did prove itself a useful tool for generating debate
|
||
(particularly between Baxter and myself) and as a result
|
||
of these discussions I became openly critical of
|
||
Harwood's ideas relating to the mass media. However,
|
||
despite the interest generated by the pamphlet, most of
|
||
those who actually showed work under the aegis of the
|
||
Festival seemed happy to let Baxter and myself argue out
|
||
'theoretical positions' while they 'got on' and 'did
|
||
their own thing'; which often meant contradicting what
|
||
Baxter or I had to say without any attempt being made to
|
||
refute the views we held on those issues which came into
|
||
dispute. One of the more extreme examples of this was
|
||
the press statement issued by William Clark, which
|
||
suggested that 'spiritual values' played a primary role
|
||
within the realm of the arts!
|
||
I found it disappointing that most 'plagiarists'
|
||
were unwilling to critically examine their use of the
|
||
term 'art'. As I stated in the "Plagiarism" booklet, I
|
||
felt the term stood for many of the things I oppose in
|
||
ruling class culture (claims of universality &c.). On
|
||
the basis of this, one participant in the Festival (not
|
||
Clark) informed me that I did not 'understand' art,
|
||
because if I did, I would not be critical of it! From
|
||
such a statement, I could only conclude that for the
|
||
individual in question, art was not something to be
|
||
'understood' so much as an article of religious faith.
|
||
The inability of certain plagiarists to engage in
|
||
critical debate was reflected in their inability to give
|
||
me a verbal description of their projected contributions
|
||
to the Festival, something I required if those
|
||
contributions were to be effectively publicised. To take
|
||
one ludicrous example, Krystyna Borkowska and Andrzej
|
||
Borkowski sent me two concrete poems to use as publicity
|
||
material - stating that they wanted the content of their
|
||
exhibition 'to be a surprise'!
|
||
Despite having moved to a position of openly
|
||
criticising Graham Harwood's plan to 'infiltrate the
|
||
media'5, I still accepted that it was foolish to 'ignore'
|
||
the press and the uses to which publicity may be put. It
|
||
was clear in a number of cases that the 'extensive' media
|
||
coverage of 'Ruins Of Glamour' was a deciding factor in
|
||
galleries allocating free space for plagiarist
|
||
exhibitions. And despite an alarming tendency towards
|
||
distortion and trivialisation, the press still has a
|
||
'useful' function in attracting (parts of) the audience
|
||
to events such as the Festival Of Plagiarism; or, at the
|
||
very least, informing individuals of the existence of
|
||
various cultural interventions which they may have
|
||
'missed' or chosen not to attend. However, I did not
|
||
feel the success or failure of the Festival rested on the
|
||
amount of press coverage it received. Reviews were
|
||
useful, not essential. From the outset, I felt that
|
||
Graham Harwood's approaches to television companies,
|
||
which amounted to nothing, were a 'waste' of time.
|
||
Harwood, however, insists there would have been coverage
|
||
on "01 For London" if Baxter had not 'backed off' from
|
||
allowing the producers of this programme to film the
|
||
'Hoardings' installation. On more than one occasion
|
||
Harwood has informed me that Baxter's 'antagonistic'
|
||
attitude towards the media, combined with my disinterest
|
||
in seeking exposure outside the medium of print,
|
||
discouraged him from pursuing other (reasonably firm)
|
||
possibilities of television coverage.
|
||
At the time of organising the Festival, I had not
|
||
previously orchestrated a publicity campaign. I
|
||
therefore found Denis MacShane's "Using The Media" (Pluto
|
||
Press, London 1979) a very useful guide to the most
|
||
efficient means of formatting a press release &c.
|
||
Because press coverage was not a top priority (and I was
|
||
tied down with more pressing aspects of Festival
|
||
administration) I did not make follow-up 'phone calls to
|
||
the journalists who received our promotional literature
|
||
(something which should have - at least in theory -
|
||
increased the number of post-Festival reviews). My chief
|
||
concern was to ensure that Festival events were included
|
||
in as many of the relevant magazine listings sections as
|
||
possible.
|
||
Writing an effective press release entailed a
|
||
certain degree of 'spoon-feeding'; in doing this I do not
|
||
believe I compromised the Festival. The general press
|
||
release covering the entire event read as follows:
|
||
"Painter Graham Harwood and writer Stewart Home have
|
||
organised a 'Festival Of Plagiarism' to take place all
|
||
over London in the New Year. The event will focus
|
||
attention on the redundancy of 'serious culture', in both
|
||
its modernist and post-modernist forms. The Festival will
|
||
simultaneously offer a platform for alternatives to these
|
||
worn-out modes of expression.
|
||
"We want to show that culture isn't the sacred
|
||
possession of a few moralists and intellectuals." says
|
||
organiser Stewart Home.
|
||
"We're calling our event the 'Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism' because anyone can get involved with what we
|
||
do. You don't have to be a genius to plagiarise
|
||
something!" said Mr Home.
|
||
The Festival will open on January 7th with
|
||
"Hoardings" by Ed Baxter, Simon Dickason and Andy Hopton
|
||
at the Bedford Hill Gallery, Balham. The show will
|
||
consist of a bizarre arrangement of kitsch objects and
|
||
rubbish picked off the streets of London. William
|
||
Feaver, writing in the Observer ("Anger In The Crypt"
|
||
8/12/85), described previous work by Baxter and Dickason
|
||
as "both protest and warning" which raised "more answers
|
||
than questions".
|
||
"Hoardings" will be followed by seven more
|
||
exhibitions over a two month period: including a group
|
||
show at Copy Art in Kings Cross, where all the
|
||
contributors will be showing under the name Karen Eliot.
|
||
The idea, here, is to undermine the false individualism
|
||
of consumer society, where 'cultural products' are often
|
||
judged by the 'brand name' put on them.
|
||
Other events incorporated into the Festival include
|
||
evenings of video, a weekend of music, National Home
|
||
Taping Day on January 30th (bound to infuriate the music
|
||
industry), and the 're-enactment' of famous crimes by
|
||
John Berndt.
|
||
A full list of events is enclosed with this, as are
|
||
a brief definition of plagiarism and a reduced size xerox
|
||
of the poster being used to promote the Festival.
|
||
The Festival in London will be accompanied by
|
||
simultaneous events in Madison and San Francisco. A 32
|
||
page pamphlet, "Plagiarism: art as commodity and
|
||
strategies for its negation", edited by Stewart Home is
|
||
being published by Aporia Press on December 10th. This
|
||
will provide a theoretical focus for debate raised by the
|
||
Festival."
|
||
As stated in the press release, the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism (London) took place over January and February
|
||
'88. It opened with a show entitled "Hoardings" which
|
||
ran at the Bedford Hill Gallery from January 7th to
|
||
January 23rd. The exhibition consisted of 'found'
|
||
objects which had been arranged by Ed Baxter, Simon
|
||
Dickason & Andy Hopton. Among these were a section of
|
||
wooden fencing mounted on a gallery wall, two paperback
|
||
books placed inside a pop-up toaster, a hammer balanced
|
||
on a sheet of glass, and a series of post cards -
|
||
featuring sunsets - exhibited in a post card rack with
|
||
barbed wire wrapped around it. A stuffed bird perched on
|
||
a supermarket trolley served to emphasise what appeared
|
||
to be the central message of the show: commodity culture
|
||
is a system based on the aestheticisation of death.
|
||
Capitalism takes human life and its possibilities,
|
||
freezes them and then sells the resulting products back
|
||
to those whose very existence it has stolen. A text
|
||
which accompanied the exhibition (partially based on an
|
||
article Baxter had written about the destruction of the
|
||
'Glamour' show; "Rueing Meaning Ruin?", Re Records
|
||
Quarterly Vol. 2. No. 1, London March 1987) made it clear
|
||
that such an understanding of the work was at best
|
||
tentative:
|
||
"The dialogue we wish to set up here focuses on the
|
||
creation of the totality of a 'universal world' which has
|
||
emerged in Western culture and the sense of unbelonging
|
||
which has accompanied this vision. To travel through the
|
||
world is also to create it. To retrieve the 'primitive'
|
||
and the 'unique' objects of other cultures is to
|
||
perpetuate a major contradiction of this accumulative
|
||
culture. We import the exotic and singular, and export
|
||
the mass-produced and banal. Attempts to resolve this
|
||
position inevitably fail: we carry with us our cultural
|
||
baggage into the Lost World 'beyond' 'our culture' - and
|
||
part of our baggage is the field glasses through which we
|
||
view the world: asked to send something rare as a
|
||
souvenir from India, Roussel sent a friend an electric
|
||
fire.
|
||
A critical response to cultural data will inevitably
|
||
entail a degree of definition - of fixing that data in
|
||
place, relating it to a code of 'the known'; and
|
||
investing it with certain values. But if this is so,
|
||
then it is still the case that this response has itself
|
||
been prefigured in the process of cultural production:
|
||
that is to say, in the case of this installation, the
|
||
'artist' will have had an analogous critical response to
|
||
the work in hand. To state the obvious - any work of art
|
||
is redolent of particular (critical) definitions of
|
||
'reality' and 'art'; and these definitions are all
|
||
ideological. The dubious nature of a particular cultural
|
||
artefact - that dimension of it which seems out of the
|
||
control of its supposed creator - constitutes an area of
|
||
struggle. This is not necessarily something which one
|
||
aims to resolve: indeed, as soon as efforts are made to
|
||
resolve it as a problem, the artefact tends towards
|
||
meaninglessness. Art which tends, in the words of
|
||
Dubuffet, to 'lie down in the bed made for it' is a mere
|
||
prop. Art which is made to lie down in the Procrustean
|
||
bunk of the bourgeois art establishment has typically
|
||
been tamed in the market. Any element of doubt has been
|
||
resolved by defining the work first and foremost in terms
|
||
of money, to a given amount of which it is said to be
|
||
worth, and via the medium of which it is measured against
|
||
other works. Such art could be described as useless,
|
||
were it not for the fact that it indeed has a specific
|
||
use: it is 'made to do the job' - of centring power.
|
||
Such art is 'meaningless' not in that it does not stand
|
||
for a particular definition of 'reality', a definition of
|
||
which it is a part, but in that it does not question
|
||
social relations. Meaning is a construct which is
|
||
produced as a contingent affirmation of
|
||
transformable/transformed social relations. Given this,
|
||
there can be no question of the artists alone simply
|
||
'achieving meaning', as if a particular work were
|
||
equivalent to a meaning of which it was the index. The
|
||
work of art does not even 'mean' what it was 'meant to
|
||
mean' to its 'creator'. The artist and the work enter a
|
||
kind of meaning gap. Something other than what was
|
||
intended will always arise in the art-work. While the
|
||
artists may indeed 'create' a work of art, this is only
|
||
part of a more complex process: the work of art in part
|
||
produces the artist. It also in part produces the
|
||
audience, those who experience the work of art. It will
|
||
be readily appreciated that there are other productive
|
||
forces as well, which can be broadly defined in terms of
|
||
context (where the art 'appears', the political
|
||
environment, the assumptions and beliefs of the audience,
|
||
the cultural moment, &c, &c.).
|
||
It is within the framework of these ideas that
|
||
'Hoardings' has been installed. The work is in part an
|
||
attempt to trace the geometry of the 'meaning gap' and to
|
||
explore the process of mutual production discussed above.
|
||
The installation comprises in the main of 'found objects'
|
||
and work created by other, anonymous hands, which the
|
||
artists have arranged, acting collectively. This work
|
||
calls into question the concepts of creativity,
|
||
suggesting that the artefacts have a productive power of
|
||
their own, which we struggle to grasp. The so-called
|
||
product actually produces the so-called creator; and the
|
||
artist and audience occupy a similar position in relation
|
||
to the artefacts. The role of the audience is again a
|
||
productive - perhaps performative - one. The audience
|
||
constitutes a part of the means of production of the
|
||
installation. It is not so much a case of 'everyone can
|
||
do it' rather than one of 'everybody does it, whether
|
||
they like it or not', you are implicated. The work is
|
||
necessarily incomplete and open-ended: 'time-based' in
|
||
that (like all artefacts, in fact) it has not been
|
||
decidedly resolved. The material we have used here is
|
||
deliberately and necessarily (given our finances)
|
||
'cheap': material which it is, we hope, hard to venerate
|
||
and which provokes the audience in such a way as to call
|
||
into question the tendency, promoted elsewhere to a
|
||
ludicrous degree, to be drawn onto the level of
|
||
commodities."
|
||
The issues raised by this text were further explored
|
||
in two talks given at the Bedford Hill Gallery on January
|
||
13th and 21st. At the first, Ed Baxter gave an
|
||
illustrated lecture which was followed by a general
|
||
discussion. On the 21st, Baxter's lecture was followed
|
||
by a brief talk by myself, in which I gave an outline of
|
||
the Festival's 'collectivist' orientation. The basic
|
||
thrust of my argument was that originality and
|
||
individuality as categories are essential to the
|
||
maintenance of capitalist social and property relations
|
||
and that plagiarism as a cultural practice is a strategic
|
||
weapon for undermining the hegemony of these concepts.
|
||
My talk was followed by a presentation of Alessandro
|
||
Aiello's slide/tape work "Recycled Arts". The evening
|
||
ended with an action by John Berndt. During the course
|
||
of this performance Berndt stripped while simultaneously
|
||
claiming to have committed some of the most famous crimes
|
||
of the past century. Interspersed with these fanciful
|
||
stories was an equal amount of somewhat bizarre but
|
||
genuine material (such as the fact that one of the items
|
||
of clothing Berndt removed during his strip had been
|
||
soaked in semen). The action ended with Berndt exhorting
|
||
the audience to take a close look at the tattoos on his
|
||
chest and back (those who did so quickly ascertained that
|
||
there were no tattoos to be seen).
|
||
Prior to these two talks, a series of mystery events
|
||
had been advertised as taking place on the Circle Line of
|
||
the London underground on January 9th. This was the day
|
||
of a massive gay rights (anti-Clause 28) demonstration in
|
||
central London. The impromptu speeches and actions made
|
||
by demonstrators using the Circle Line to travel to and
|
||
from the rally made the minimal performance actions of
|
||
Graham Harwood and myself (chiefly pointless and
|
||
'unending' travel) pale into insignificance. From the
|
||
beginning it had been intended that the concept of the
|
||
day's guerrilla performances should include random
|
||
actions made by individuals unaware of the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism (and the advertised mystery events). As it
|
||
turned out, the number and intensity of such events
|
||
resulted in them coming to dominate the day's
|
||
proceedings.
|
||
"Iconoclasm" by William Clark, Malcolm Dickson &
|
||
Gordon Muir was a plagiarist installation housed in the
|
||
Bloomsbury Crypt from January 15th to January 28th. The
|
||
gallery was divided into three parts. William Clark used
|
||
collage to attack the capitalist system in general (and
|
||
in particular the weapons industry, the growth of third
|
||
world hunger &c.) through a simple and highly effective
|
||
use of juxtaposition. The fact that Clark created one
|
||
large work covering an entire wall of the gallery (rather
|
||
than resorting to small framed pieces) greatly added to
|
||
the power of his message. Gordon Muir used paintings,
|
||
drawings, collage, prints and sculptural arrangements to
|
||
attack the British (and specifically Scottish) prison
|
||
system. Malcolm Dickson made an installation/sculpture
|
||
from a heap of abandoned consumer technology (hi fi, an
|
||
electric shaver &c.) which served as a metaphor for the
|
||
human and ecological wastage created by Capital. The song
|
||
"Born To Lose" by Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers,
|
||
playing on a tape loop, blared from speakers placed on
|
||
the outer layer of Dickson's sculpture.
|
||
The 'Iconoclasm' exhibition took place in the Crypt
|
||
by default. It had originally been planned that a group
|
||
installation organised by Graham Harwood and entitled
|
||
'Plagiarism: The Living Tradition' should take place at
|
||
this venue. When the proposed exhibition failed to show
|
||
any signs of materialising, Harwood somewhat reluctantly
|
||
agreed to the space being re-allocated to the
|
||
'Iconoclasm' installation. Being located in central
|
||
London, any show at the Crypt (like those at St. James's
|
||
Church and Copy Art) was in a position to attract a
|
||
relatively large audience. Given the nature of the
|
||
'Iconoclasm' installation (and the Festival itself), all
|
||
those involved were extremely pleased (and somewhat
|
||
surprised) to find that Clark, Dickson and Muir's work
|
||
attracted approximately forty visitors a day.
|
||
"Xerography & Other Ephemera From The Eternal
|
||
Network" was a group show held at the Reality Studios
|
||
between January 16th and 24th. The front room of this
|
||
'apartment space' gave the 'public' access to a
|
||
continually changing installation which Mark Pawson
|
||
'created' between June '87 and September '88. Throughout
|
||
this period, Pawson pasted all the mail he received from
|
||
cultural workers around the world onto the walls of his
|
||
bedroom, until the whole room was covered; then he went
|
||
over the walls again, and again, covering them three
|
||
times in all. The installation had not been on public
|
||
view prior to the Festival, nor was there any public
|
||
access to it afterwards. Pawson was forced to abandon
|
||
this project (and move to another property) when the
|
||
charity which owned the house decided to renovate the
|
||
building.
|
||
The second room of the Reality Studios also featured
|
||
works on paper pasted directly onto the walls; this time
|
||
text and images created specially for the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism by Miekal And and Elizabeth Was of Xexoxial
|
||
Endarchy. And's work took the form of a series of fake
|
||
Mayan codexes (crude, cartoon style, imitation Maya
|
||
drawings combined with text - such as "cerebral value
|
||
lies in excess"). Was dealt with the material processes
|
||
of plagiarism and xerography by creating a series of
|
||
repetitious designs based on the international copyright
|
||
symbol (the letter 'c' placed inside a circle). Also
|
||
exhibited in this room were all the submissions for the
|
||
"Crucifiction and Canonization" show which Graham Harwood
|
||
had planned to hold in the Gallery, St. James's Church.
|
||
Disappointed with the works submitted, most of which
|
||
failed to conform to the set theme, Harwood had cancelled
|
||
the exhibition. I felt obliged to do something with the
|
||
pieces that had been sent in, and so arranged for them to
|
||
be shown in this space.
|
||
In "Karen Eliot - Apocrypha", held at Community Copy
|
||
Art between January 28th and February 28th, twenty-seven
|
||
separate individuals engaged in a pseudepigraphic
|
||
experiment by exhibiting plagiarised imagery and texts
|
||
under the name Karen Eliot. The work was deliberately
|
||
crude and amateur in terms of both presentation and
|
||
execution, with a number of relatively sophisticated
|
||
pieces being used to counterpoint the aggressive 'anti-
|
||
aesthetic' which char_ac_ter_ised this 'overhung' show.
|
||
Provoking the most controversy among the image based
|
||
works was a nineteenth century landscape painting which a
|
||
contributor had bought at a flea market and then
|
||
detourned through the addition of a cut-out photograph of
|
||
an aeroplane (pasted directly onto the picture in
|
||
question). One member of the public was so upset by this
|
||
'wanton vandalism' of an art work, that he attempted to
|
||
buy the painting - so that he might 'restore' it.
|
||
Another picture on display had been stolen from Jamie
|
||
Reid's 'Twenty Year Retrospective' at Hamilton's Gallery
|
||
in Mayfair; it was exhibited without any additions or
|
||
alterations (when Reid - dedicated anarchist that he is -
|
||
was informed of this, he replied by telling me that the
|
||
next time I wanted some of his work, I just had to ask
|
||
for it). Other pieces on display included re-workings of
|
||
fine art and advertising imagery and even unaltered
|
||
reproductions of famous paintings.
|
||
A variety of texts and banners were pasted to the
|
||
walls and draped from the ceiling to ensure that visitors
|
||
to the exhibition did not miss its central point: that
|
||
Karen Eliot is a multiple identity used by a variety of
|
||
cultural workers. The text of a flyer gave an
|
||
explanation of this concept:
|
||
"Karen Eliot is a name that refers to an individual
|
||
human being who can be anyone. The name is fixed, the
|
||
people using it aren't. Smile is a name that refers to
|
||
an international magazine with multiple origins. The
|
||
name is fixed, the types of magazines using it aren't.
|
||
The purpose of many different magazines and people using
|
||
the same name is to create a situation for which no one
|
||
in particular is responsible and to practically examine
|
||
western philosophical notions of identity, individuality,
|
||
originality, value and truth.
|
||
Anyone can become Karen Eliot simply by adopting the
|
||
name, but they are only Karen Eliot for the period in
|
||
which they adopt the name. Karen Eliot was materialised,
|
||
rather than born, as an open context in the summer of
|
||
'85. When one becomes Karen Eliot one's previous
|
||
existence consists of the acts other people have
|
||
undertaken using the name. When one becomes Karen Eliot
|
||
one has no family, no parents, no birth. Karen Eliot was
|
||
not born, s/he was materialised from social forces,
|
||
constructed as a means of entering the shifting terrain
|
||
that circumscribes the 'individual' and society.
|
||
The name Karen Eliot can be strategically adopted
|
||
for a series of actions, interventions, exhibitions,
|
||
texts, etc. When replying to letters generated by an
|
||
action/text in which the context has been used then it
|
||
makes sense to continue using the context, i.e. by
|
||
replying as Karen Eliot. However in personal
|
||
relationships, where one has a personal history other
|
||
than the acts undertaken by a series of people using the
|
||
name Karen Eliot, it does not make sense to use the
|
||
context. If one uses the context in personal life there
|
||
is a danger that the name Karen Eliot will become over-
|
||
identified with individual beings. We are perhaps
|
||
heading towards the abolition of the personal, perhaps
|
||
everything is social and the personal (the individual) is
|
||
just illusion; this area of activity must be debated,
|
||
examined. However, previous experiments with multiple
|
||
names, such as the Monty Cantsin fiasco, indicate that
|
||
the failure to differentiate between the personal and the
|
||
social and in particular over-identification by certain
|
||
individuals with the context, is disastrous. The use of
|
||
multiple names for pop groups and magazines has proved
|
||
far less problematic than with human beings..."
|
||
I put this text together in '85 (the opening
|
||
sentences are lifted from an earlier piece Michael Tolson
|
||
wrote as Monty Cantsin). Although 'useful' as a 'pop'
|
||
explanation of multiple name concepts, re-using it during
|
||
the Festival Of Plagiarism gave me an opportunity to
|
||
focus on some of its inadequacies. For example, Karen
|
||
Eliot is not 'an individual human being who can be
|
||
anyone'. Karen Eliot actually refers to an
|
||
identity/context which has been utilised by approximately
|
||
one hundred individuals over a three and a half year
|
||
period. Apart from myself, those to make 'systematic'
|
||
use of it include Pete Horobin in Dundee, John Berndt in
|
||
Baltimore, Arthur Berkoff in Amsterdam, Graf Haufen in
|
||
Berlin, R. U. Sevol in Paris, and Drake Scott in Madison.
|
||
As well as the text 'explaining' multiple name
|
||
concepts, there were several other written works on
|
||
display -most significantly a series of Fluxus style
|
||
performance scripts for visitors to act out under the
|
||
name of Karen Eliot. The inclusion of work of this
|
||
nature (which was so obviously located in opposition to
|
||
formal closure) ensured that if the exhibition was to
|
||
make any 'sense' to the audience, then the audience had
|
||
to 'understand' its role in relation to the show - and
|
||
the Festival in general - as a productive one. Of
|
||
course, promoting such an understanding is a difficult
|
||
task, since many individuals find a set of social
|
||
relations in which audience, artefacts and creators are
|
||
comprehended as mutually productive forces, more or less
|
||
'meaningless'. This fact demonstrates the necessity for
|
||
events such as the Festival Of Plagiarism (which, if not
|
||
always 'successful', at least attempt to deal with the
|
||
problems of promoting such an understanding). Through
|
||
the dissemination of suitably disguised 'propaganda' (of
|
||
which the Festival Of Plagiarism is an example), it will
|
||
hopefully be possible (at some point in the future) to
|
||
achieve a discursive shift away from the general
|
||
passivity (and senseless worship of a few privileged
|
||
individuals) encouraged by the mental sets which
|
||
presently dominate society.
|
||
While the attempts of Fluxus (and other groups) to
|
||
bring the productive role of the audience into general
|
||
discussion have yet to achieve widespread success, they
|
||
were (and are) not without merit. Thus the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism was, to an extent, an attempt to consolidate
|
||
ground already covered twenty-five and more years ago.
|
||
Such consolidation is infinitely preferable to the
|
||
fetishisation of novelty prevalent in the art
|
||
establishment. This said, however, the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism - although influenced by Fluxus - was in no
|
||
way intended to be a retread of that movement's
|
||
activities. The theoretical precision with which certain
|
||
plagiarists approached the question of the productive
|
||
role of the audience is merely one indication of the
|
||
difference between the Festival Of Plagiarism and the
|
||
activities of Fluxus.
|
||
Like a number of the other shows which constituted
|
||
the Festival, the 'Apocrypha' exhibition was mounted in a
|
||
space which did not act primarily as a centre for the
|
||
display of cultural works. In this case, the exhibition
|
||
was housed in a building which functioned as a community
|
||
xerox centre. Although this imposed limitations on the
|
||
ways in which the work could be installed, it had three
|
||
important advantages over a traditional gallery space.
|
||
First, it created an audience out of those who had gone
|
||
into the space to make photo-copies. Secondly, the
|
||
chatter of those making xeroxes - and the noise of the
|
||
machines themselves -ensured that a reverential
|
||
atmosphere (which is all too common a feature of the
|
||
traditional gallery) could not develop around the
|
||
exhibition. Thirdly, the immediate accessibility of
|
||
xerox technology enabled visitors to add work cheaply and
|
||
easily to the show (much of the displayed material was in
|
||
the medium of xerox). This ready access to the machinery
|
||
with which scores of plagiarists had created their
|
||
exhibits proved a powerful aid in the fight against
|
||
closure and the concomitant emphasis on the productive
|
||
role of those viewing the exhibition; among that section
|
||
of the audience which was not created from Copy Art's
|
||
clients, several individuals who first visited the
|
||
building to see the 'Apocrypha' show later became regular
|
||
users of the centre's facilities.
|
||
It had been intended that the 'Apocrypha' exhibition
|
||
should be completely unjuried - but a number of works
|
||
were removed by the collective that ran the Copy Art
|
||
space. This was done on the grounds that the work in
|
||
question was sexist. Only one member of the Copy Art
|
||
collective had voiced objections to the images which were
|
||
subsequently removed - but since censorship within the
|
||
space was operated on a veto basis, a single objection
|
||
was sufficient to cause the removal of a specific work.
|
||
The majority of censored works had used collage
|
||
techniques to critically foreground gender stereo-typing
|
||
within media discourse.
|
||
The response of the organisers to this censorship
|
||
was somewhat ambiguous. I felt that, on one level,
|
||
censorship (with its anti-individualist implications) was
|
||
to be welcomed. However, the problem with such
|
||
censorship is that it tends to reinforce the idea that
|
||
there is a realm of 'self-expression' which can be
|
||
suppressed. It thus leads to consumption being viewed as
|
||
essentially passive rather than active and productive.
|
||
The censorship debate itself has, unsurprisingly,
|
||
tended to centre around the question of the 'right' to
|
||
'free expression'. This so called 'right' has never been
|
||
'enjoyed' by the vast majority of the population in
|
||
western society, many of whom are in any case
|
||
uninterested in constituting themselves as 'bourgeois
|
||
subjects' who view the act of 'creation' as productive
|
||
and that of consumption as essentially passive. Rather
|
||
than attempting to 'defend' this so called 'right' to
|
||
'free expression', I felt that the real issue lay
|
||
elsewhere (i.e. in the mutually productive roles of
|
||
'audience', 'artefact' and 'creator') and was therefore
|
||
unwilling to take up either a 'pro-' or an 'anti-'
|
||
censorship position.
|
||
Throughout the course of the Festival there were
|
||
attempts to demonstrate that in the dominant culture's
|
||
foregrounding of the role of individual 'creators' (a
|
||
foregrounding which is made particularly explicit within
|
||
the censorship debate) lies a very real source of social
|
||
conflict (and this is an area of struggle which should be
|
||
fully exploited by those who are working for social
|
||
change). One of the many ways in which we attempted to
|
||
make this area of conflict visible was by declaring
|
||
January 30th to be 'National Home Taping Day'. The
|
||
general public were asked to 'help kill the music
|
||
industry by making a cassette of far-out sounds for a
|
||
friend'.
|
||
To turn music into a commodity, the record industry
|
||
requires that the role of the musician (as 'creator') is
|
||
foregrounded (and that - in terms of appearance - the
|
||
listener is reduced to the status of a paying customer).
|
||
In a very limited (but still positive and productive)
|
||
way, home taping challenges this state of affairs. By
|
||
highlighting this area of conflict, we hoped to
|
||
demonstrate that an understanding of how commodities are
|
||
consumed is more important than simply reiterating that
|
||
as commodities they are consumed per se (hi-fi equipment
|
||
provided a convenient illustration for our argument and
|
||
complemented the extensive use of xerox techniques in the
|
||
'production' of work for the Festival).
|
||
Just as it commoditises music, the reigning culture
|
||
also commoditises 'love'. The exhibition 'Plagiarism -
|
||
Sweet Revulsion' which was held in The Gallery, St.
|
||
James's Church, Piccadilly between February 4th and
|
||
February 12th, dealt explicitly with this process. It was
|
||
a collaborative installation by Karen Strang, Jeni
|
||
Briggs, Anni Munday, Mark Pawson, Gabrielle Quinn, Graham
|
||
Tansley, Todd Hanzo and Kate Fraser, which attacked
|
||
traditional notions of 'romance' from a feminist
|
||
perspective.
|
||
Among the most striking works on display were a
|
||
series of large, expressionistic, paintings based on the
|
||
covers of the romantic fiction published by Mills and
|
||
Boon - to which slogans (such as "Sisters, Make Love To
|
||
Revolutionaries!") had been added. Actual Mills and Boon
|
||
paperbacks also featured in the installation, hanging
|
||
from washing lines and placed upon church pews as if they
|
||
were prayer books. Amid the scores of displayed images
|
||
were graphics appropriated from the ubiquitous Jamie Reid
|
||
(different promotional work for the Sex Pistols than that
|
||
attributed to 'Karen Eliot' at Copy Art). Like the
|
||
'Apocrypha' exhibition, 'Plagiarism - Sweet Revulsion'
|
||
was 'overhung' in a deliberately crude and amateur
|
||
fashion. The work being characterised by an a bright and
|
||
trashy 'anti-aesthetic'; given the church setting, the
|
||
confetti which had been scattered across the space was a
|
||
particularly powerful ingredient among those elements
|
||
which went into creating this effect.
|
||
The installation worked best on the opening night,
|
||
candle lit and shadowy. Several of the exhibitors came
|
||
dressed in clothes which parodied accepted notions of
|
||
what women should wear to make themselves attractive to
|
||
men; Brighton based cultural worker Andrew Longbottom
|
||
provided an effective counterpoint by posing as a 'macho-
|
||
statue'. During the course of the evening, Karen Strang
|
||
gave a performance in which she 'detourned' the texts of
|
||
several Mills and Boon novels. Members of the 'Jesus
|
||
Army' were so 'provoked' that they felt compelled to add
|
||
a biblical parable to the comments book: "No wonder Jesus
|
||
turned over the tables in the temple".
|
||
Graham Harwood and Graham Tansley showed work under
|
||
the title 'There Is No Natural Religion', in the Wren
|
||
Cafe, St. James's Church between February 4th and
|
||
February 28th. Images from Blake and the media were re-
|
||
worked (using collage and xerox processes) to make a
|
||
critique of both capitalism and Christianity. This work
|
||
was probably the 'slickest' exhibited during the festival
|
||
- and yet, despite the 'fine art' aura that surrounded
|
||
it, the content was still powerful enough to offend a
|
||
good number of the people who viewed it (even after the
|
||
work had been subjected to a rigorous process of
|
||
censorship by those who controlled the space in which it
|
||
was exhibited). Several of Tansley's framed pieces were
|
||
stolen during the course of the show. Harwood's work
|
||
(created entirely from xerox and pasted directly onto
|
||
boards and the walls of the cafe) escaped both damage and
|
||
theft.
|
||
'There Is No Natural Religion' had originally been
|
||
planned as a group show entirely dedicated to re-working
|
||
Blake images. However, during the course of organising
|
||
the exhibition, Harwood decided to re-orientate it
|
||
towards issues raised by the media. As a result, a
|
||
series of Blake re-workings executed by Gabrielle Quinn
|
||
were transferred to the 'Plagiarism - Sweet Revulsion'
|
||
installation, where (somewhat unsurprisingly) they
|
||
appeared a little out of place. This switch enabled
|
||
Harwood to use the Wren Cafe as a showcase for much of
|
||
the work featured in his book of visual narratives "John
|
||
And Other Stories" (Working Press, London 1987), as well
|
||
as his more recent Blake plagiarisms.
|
||
Of all the participants in the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism, Harwood and Tansley were the two who were
|
||
most immediately concerned with issues raised by the mass
|
||
media - as a statement which accompanied their show
|
||
demonstrates (it is actually an edited version of a text
|
||
entitled "The Public Image" which Harwood had produced in
|
||
'86 with the assistance of Chris Thomas, this new version
|
||
being jointly credited to Harwood and Tansley):
|
||
"I see the media as the main producer/exporter of
|
||
images within this society and they seemed (sic) to be
|
||
used by the dominating interests, both material and
|
||
cultural on the whole to reflect their values, goals,
|
||
aspirations and prejudices. The media seems to show just
|
||
enough dissatisfaction to titillate the feeling in us
|
||
that the dominating interests are changing and that this
|
||
society will remain fair, just and free.
|
||
I feel that this cultural domination coaxes and
|
||
teases us into submission by the degrading rejection of
|
||
our own personal his/herstories and culture. The media
|
||
fools us into believing that we are of less importance
|
||
than the reality/normality it shows. We are made to feel
|
||
insignificant unless we are depicted with the media
|
||
(sic).
|
||
As the dominant interests are best served by our
|
||
continued isolation and crippling feelings of
|
||
inferiority, the media steers, on the whole, well away
|
||
from our his/herstories and culture. Instead it creates
|
||
a contemporary version of Greek Gods and/or Catholic
|
||
Saints for us to believe in. Giving eminent people
|
||
quasi-religious power through their reproduction in our
|
||
minds.
|
||
The simple role of reproduction is that the more
|
||
images you make, the more people see them. In the same
|
||
way I feel the more an image is imprinted in our minds,
|
||
the greater its influence, until it becomes normal and
|
||
expected. This imprinting in our minds can give us the
|
||
impression that the public image is normality. So a
|
||
photograph of royalty in riches put say next to an image
|
||
of starving Ethiopians, appears unproblematic and not
|
||
obscene in our minds and in the Sunday press.
|
||
The television documentary appears to me to be a
|
||
strong force for social change within this society. It
|
||
derives its power, both symbolic and social, from the
|
||
simultaneous reproduction of a series of images in as
|
||
many as 5 million homes up and down the country.
|
||
However, usually within the space of two or three weeks
|
||
after seeing a documentary, most of us find it difficult
|
||
to remember its "stunning social message", and yet we
|
||
always seem to remember 'Bold Automatic', 'Daz' or
|
||
'I.C.I.'. I believe that we retain these images because
|
||
of their continual reproduction in our minds. It is the
|
||
same way that we pick up and retain the roles and
|
||
prejudices that are used to promote these products.
|
||
Images dominate our daily lives in the form of the
|
||
media, yet their role within society seems little
|
||
understood. Public images are in urgent need of
|
||
exploration both within the art world and outside."
|
||
Harwood and Tansley placed great emphasis on the
|
||
reproducibility of their work. And its slickness
|
||
reflected their desire to see this reproducibility
|
||
realised in the media. Between them they created most of
|
||
the promotional graphics which accompanied the Festival
|
||
Of Plagiarism. These found 'mass' distribution via a
|
||
number of publications, including Artists Newsletter, The
|
||
Times Higher Education Supplement and the free listings
|
||
magazine LAM. However, while there was a general
|
||
consensus that the media can, and often does, play an
|
||
important role in the creation and definition of various
|
||
audiences (a role which is often as productive as the
|
||
concomitant input a specific audience brings to this
|
||
process), most plagiarists did not share Harwood's
|
||
ambition of 'infiltrating' mass culture or the belief
|
||
(implicit in the text which accompanied his exhibition)
|
||
that the act of consumption is essentially passive.
|
||
Indeed, reading Harwood and Tansley's text leaves me with
|
||
the impression that they do not believe that it is
|
||
possible to exercise any degree of choice (or critical
|
||
judgement) over the question of rejecting engagement with
|
||
(for example) television as a medium. As was the case
|
||
with Clark, while greatly admiring Harwood and Tansley's
|
||
visual work, I have little sympathy for the 'theoretical'
|
||
explanation issued to accompany it. It should, however,
|
||
be noted that Harwood and Tansley (along with Baxter,
|
||
Berndt and Briggs) numbered among the few participants in
|
||
the Festival who were willing to discuss the role 'art'
|
||
played in reproducing the mental sets of the British
|
||
ruling class.
|
||
Shaun Caton was another individual who 'failed' to
|
||
engage with the issues which formed the 'theoretical
|
||
core' of the Festival. On February 7th at noon, he gave
|
||
a performance entitled 'Time Of Arrival'. This was held
|
||
in a disused petrol station near the Waterloo railway
|
||
terminus. The audience were advised to assemble outside
|
||
Lambeth North tube station, from where I led them across
|
||
a main road to the site of the performance. Here they
|
||
discovered Caton made up to look like a corpse and lying
|
||
as if dead amid a pile of rubble. The performance
|
||
consisted of Caton lying still for approximately eight
|
||
minutes. Although only ten people attended this action
|
||
(and despite Caton's indifference to the issues raised by
|
||
Baxter, myself and others), it was - to my mind - the
|
||
high-point of the Festival. Caton's performance was more
|
||
or less incidental to the success of this event. This
|
||
really was a case of the audience realising its
|
||
productive role in the creation of culture! The 7th was
|
||
a bitterly cold but very sunny day, the chatter and
|
||
intimacy among those present created a wonderful
|
||
atmosphere. After the performance had finished the
|
||
entire audience (with the single exception of the late
|
||
Steve Rogers - a professional observer from Performance
|
||
Magazine) retired to a cafe where the socialising
|
||
continued.
|
||
I understand (from a second-hand source) that Caton
|
||
was less than happy with the event and in particular the
|
||
size of the crowd he attracted. Like a number of other
|
||
participants in the Festival, Caton proved incapable of
|
||
organising a venue for himself. Since he was keen to
|
||
participate, I suggested he should undertake his
|
||
performance at the abandoned petrol station. He agreed,
|
||
although he continued 'phoning me and trying to persuade
|
||
me to find him a 'better' venue. At one point he even
|
||
claimed that the petrol station had been demolished.
|
||
Rather than cancelling his performance, he wanted me to
|
||
approach Chisenhale Studios and arrange for it to be
|
||
transferred to their prestigious dance hall. Fortunately
|
||
I had been past the petrol station a few hours before
|
||
Caton made his startling claim about its demolition, and
|
||
was able to state with complete certainty that it was
|
||
still standing.
|
||
In the case of Krystyna Borkowska & Andrzej
|
||
Borkowski, language barriers made it difficult for these
|
||
two cultural workers to engage with the Festival's
|
||
theoretical orientation. They showed 'Work' at the
|
||
Escape Gallery from February 9th to March 1st. Borkowska
|
||
exhibited collages made from xeroxes of drawings by well
|
||
known Polish artists. Borkowski showed a series of white
|
||
canvases onto which he'd copied the signatures of famous
|
||
painters. The pair had been put in touch with me by
|
||
Stefan Szczelkun who'd worked closely with them in the
|
||
anglo-polish cultural group Bigos. The Escape Gallery
|
||
was reasonably close to M&B Motors where Szczelkun
|
||
exhibited during the Festival. The openings for the two
|
||
shows were held on the same night with those attending
|
||
going first to the Escape Gallery and then moving on to
|
||
M&B Motors. This arrangement prevented Borkowska and
|
||
Borkowski's exhibition from appearing completely
|
||
disconnected to the Festival.
|
||
Szczelkun had a reasonable depth of engagement with
|
||
the issues raised by the Festival, partially because he
|
||
had (in the past) worked very closely with Baxter,
|
||
Harwood and myself. He held his 'Routine Art Co.
|
||
Retroactive' at M&B Motors from February 9th to February
|
||
20th. This was a retrospective of all the work Szczelkun
|
||
had produced over the previous seven years and included
|
||
his contributions to 'The Business Of Desire', 'Ruins Of
|
||
Glamour/Glamour Of Ruins' and 'Desire In Ruins' (as well
|
||
as other collaborative work he had undertaken with a
|
||
variety of individuals including Harwood and myself). At
|
||
the opening and on four subsequent days, Szczelkun
|
||
delivered a performance outside the gallery entitled
|
||
'House Of imMEDIAcy (Housework IV)'. This entailed him
|
||
pasting newspapers over the archetypal facade of a wooden
|
||
wendy house. Szczelkun then used white wash to daub
|
||
slogans in an alphabet of his own devising onto the
|
||
newsprint. After this he was joined by Ian Hinchcliffe
|
||
and the pair launched into a fuller performance related
|
||
to the ways in which the media interprets the lives of
|
||
'ordinary' people (centred on the news events of that
|
||
particular day).
|
||
Humanity In Ruins', an exhibition I installed at
|
||
Central Space under the name 'Karen Eliot', was held
|
||
between February 11th and March 3rd. The two page press
|
||
release for this show was enlarged to 36 times its
|
||
original size and pasted to the walls at either end of
|
||
this long and narrow gallery. Apart from the exhibition
|
||
details (times, dates, gallery address &c.), this
|
||
consisted of the following message/description (and other
|
||
than this the space was completely emptied of cultural
|
||
artefacts):
|
||
"Humanity In Ruins" is designed to bring into
|
||
question the role art and anti-art play in the
|
||
maintenance of ruling class culture. Although the
|
||
installation is situated in an art space, the
|
||
incorporation of auto-destructive elements prevent its
|
||
immediate recuperation as a commodity.
|
||
The floor of the gallery will be covered with
|
||
enlarged xeroxes of a ten pound note. These will be
|
||
destroyed, during the course of the exhibition, by
|
||
visitors walking over them. Potential patrons will be
|
||
lulled into a sense of false security by a tape loop of
|
||
Abba's 'Money, Money, Money', interspersed with silence.
|
||
All the doors leading off the gallery and into artists
|
||
studios will be marked as Room 101. A blackboard will
|
||
stand against the far wall of the gallery, across which
|
||
the following message will have been scrawled:
|
||
"ART STRIKE 1990 - 1993.
|
||
Art is defined by a self-perpetuating elite and
|
||
marketed as an international commodity, a safe investment
|
||
for the rich who have everything. To call one person an
|
||
artist is to deny another the equal gift of vision: - and
|
||
thus the myth of 'genius' becomes an ideological
|
||
justification for inequality, repression and famine.
|
||
We have been living at a masqued ball; what an
|
||
artist considers to be his or her identity is a schooled
|
||
set of notions, preconceptions which imprison humanity in
|
||
history. It is the roles derived from these identities,
|
||
as much as the art products mined from reification, which
|
||
we must reject.
|
||
Art is a particular, evolving, mental set of the
|
||
ruling class. Romanticism, Modernism, Post Modernism -it
|
||
makes no difference: -
|
||
UNTIL WE DESTROY EVERYTHING THERE WILL ONLY BE
|
||
RUINS!"
|
||
To reinforce this point, and really emphasise that
|
||
"Humanity In Ruins" is propaganda rather than conceptual
|
||
- or perhaps anti - art, no photo-documentation will be
|
||
made of the show. The Artists Strike will commence on
|
||
January 1st 1990. Unlike Gustav Metzger's Art Strike of
|
||
1977 to 1980, the purpose is not to destroy those
|
||
institutions which might be perceived as having a
|
||
negative effect on artistic production. Instead, we hope
|
||
to bring the role of the artist, itself, into question.
|
||
Tea, rather than wine, will be served at the private
|
||
view - since alcohol tends to promote escapism. The
|
||
invitation card has a part of the exhibition agreement
|
||
collaged onto it; bringing into discussion the means by
|
||
which this, and all other, work comes to be shown.
|
||
"Humanity In Ruins" forms part of the London-wide
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism. The aim of the Festival is to
|
||
draw attention to the privileged position held by ruling
|
||
class culture and the various devices through which its
|
||
ideological content is mystified in current art practice.
|
||
Simultaneously, the Festival offers a platform for
|
||
alternatives to these alienated modes of expression."
|
||
Several visitors to the show enquired where the
|
||
exhibition was to be found (these bourgeois hacks were
|
||
obviously determined not to grasp their mutually
|
||
productive role in relation to the work and its
|
||
'creator').
|
||
"Humanity In Ruins" had originally been conceived as
|
||
an audio installation which re-worked Marlowe's "Doctor
|
||
Faustus" into a riot-torn vision of contemporary Britain.
|
||
This work was censored because the gallery's controlling
|
||
committee felt the proposed installation (which they had
|
||
initially approved) would have given the 'right-wing'
|
||
press ammunition with which to attack the 'left-wing'
|
||
bodies who funded their activities. The work that was
|
||
eventually exhibited was thus, in part, a reaction to
|
||
this act of censorship; it was, to a degree, an attempt
|
||
to radicalise the censors by offering a 'left' critique
|
||
of creativity and a linked project for the abolition of
|
||
'self-expression'. This seemed an eminently more
|
||
sensible position than simply adopting (as the gallery
|
||
had done) a bourgeois formula which while appearing to
|
||
'suppress' the work in question, actually lent the
|
||
'censored' product an aura of 'radicality'. Any act of
|
||
censorship (and those anti-censorship campaigns which are
|
||
related to it) must ultimately serve to reinforce the
|
||
mental set of 'self-expression' and via this assist in
|
||
the right's projected (but ultimately unrealisable)
|
||
reduction of the role of the consumer to that of a
|
||
passive spectator whose cultural intake is to be directed
|
||
by a 'higher' power (in theory the market, in practice a
|
||
coercive political force).
|
||
It must be stressed that rather than trying to
|
||
oppose censorship with 'anti-censorship' (which
|
||
reproduces an identical mental set to the very thing it
|
||
claims to combat), this entire mode of thought must be
|
||
outflanked with strategies such as 'the refusal of
|
||
creativity'. The ideological positions of both the 'pro'
|
||
and 'anti' censorship lobbies, reveal them as rival
|
||
groups within the ruling class; each of which wishes to
|
||
exercise cultural power over a passive body of consumers.
|
||
While 'anti-censorship' attempts to rally support around
|
||
an abstract 'right' to 'free expression' (and thus
|
||
obscures the productive role of the audience in relation
|
||
to cultural artefacts), the refusal of creativity acts as
|
||
a mechanism to shift discourse away from those mental
|
||
activities which play a central role in the construction
|
||
of the bourgeois 'self'.
|
||
The evenings of video, which were held at Community
|
||
Copy Art on February 16th and February 23rd, did not have
|
||
any particularly strong theoretical orientation. The
|
||
first evening was attended by an audience of forty who
|
||
watched "Instant Copier Animation" and "The Copied
|
||
Gallery" by Franz John, "XS" by Malcolm Dickson,
|
||
"Disconcerted States Of Mind" by Simon Anderson, "Work In
|
||
Progress" by Julia Gash and Neil Combs and "Untitled" by
|
||
Ben Allen. On the second evening the audience were asked
|
||
to shout out if they were bored with a video and wanted
|
||
it stopped (the video would then be paused and there
|
||
would follow a discussion and vote on whether it should
|
||
be continued). This system was introduced to prevent a
|
||
repetition of the obvious boredom which had prevailed on
|
||
the first evening during the screening of particular
|
||
videos (most notably "Disconcerted States Of Mind"). The
|
||
audience sat through all of "Flux Events" by Simon
|
||
Anderson, "Crickets" and "Instant Copier Animation" by
|
||
Franz John, "Wallpaper Performance" by Ade Barradell and
|
||
"Untitled" by Ben Allen (different untitled work to that
|
||
shown at the previous evening of screenings). Ralph
|
||
Rumney's "Two Men And A Door" was stopped after twelve
|
||
minutes and the audience unanimously decided that they
|
||
didn't want to see any more of it.
|
||
Undoubtedly the highlight of the video evenings was
|
||
the screening of work by Franz John. "Instant Copier
|
||
Animation" was a film generated from a sheet of PVC.
|
||
Using this single original element from which thousands
|
||
of differently treated copies were made on six xerox
|
||
machines, John created an animated film. "The Copied
|
||
Gallery" was a filmed documentary of an
|
||
installation/performance John had undertaken at Galerie
|
||
Paranorm, Berlin, in October and November '87. Using a
|
||
hand-held and battery operated (pocket) photo-copier,
|
||
John pains_tak_ingly copied the entire gallery and pasted
|
||
the resulting strips of xerox back over the surfaces from
|
||
which they had been generated. The performance ended with
|
||
the doors that gave access to the gallery being pasted
|
||
over with strips of xerox. The installation was in this
|
||
way 'completed' in a manner which made it impossible for
|
||
the work to be viewed in a 'resolved' state (since a part
|
||
of the work would be 'destroyed' by anyone entering the
|
||
gallery).
|
||
John's work was added to the programme of the
|
||
Festival at the last minute. He'd come to London wanting
|
||
to see and participate in our event after purchasing a
|
||
copy of the booklet which had been issued to accompany
|
||
it. John introduced himself to me at the opening of the
|
||
'Hoardings' show; greatly impressed with his work, I
|
||
immediately pencilled in the screenings of his films on
|
||
the video nights.
|
||
The Festival Of Plagiarism concluded with three
|
||
nights of music, noise and performance at the London
|
||
Musicians Collective. The paying audience on each night
|
||
varied in size from between fifty to seventy individuals.
|
||
The evenings of music were the only events during the
|
||
entire London Festival for which there was an admission
|
||
charge. The entrance fee was required to pay for the
|
||
hire of the hall and a public address system. The small
|
||
amount made in excess of costs was distributed equally
|
||
between all musicians.
|
||
On 26th February, Serle Kockberg and Chris Lee
|
||
performed jazz songs, Joseph Curwen (Ed Baxter working
|
||
under a name adopted from a Lovecraft novel) performed a
|
||
Nam June Paik piano piece, When played improvised music
|
||
over which they chanted beat poetry, N. A. Palm and His
|
||
Full Metal Jacket played country and western, Matthew
|
||
Saunders performed Bach viola solos, Le Pissoir played a
|
||
set full of songs whose riffs were plagiarised from 1977
|
||
punk classics, Big imitated the Smiths and the whole
|
||
evening was compered by Erik Fuller. On 27th February,
|
||
the Massed Ranks Of The Proletariat performed "A Workers
|
||
Operetta" (improvised style music in a play format),
|
||
while Klang! and Bing Selfish & the Idealists offered
|
||
experimental rock. February 28th saw a celebration of
|
||
technology with Pornosect, The Irresistible Force and A
|
||
Spanner Thru Ma Beatbox playing industrial dance music.
|
||
The industrial musicians were among the most blatant
|
||
of those attempting to exploit the Festival Of Plagiarism
|
||
for self-promotional purposes. A flyer advertising their
|
||
performance read as follows:
|
||
"By now, there must be few people who haven't heard
|
||
about this first London-wide Festival Of Plagiarism.
|
||
This spectacular event has been put together by an
|
||
obsessive and motley crew of post-scratch pundits, with a
|
||
series of events, installations and 'art crimes' taking
|
||
place in galleries and concert halls throughout the month
|
||
of February. It's climax comes on Sunday night, the
|
||
28th, at the London Musician's Collective in Camden Town,
|
||
home of many an obscurist improvising combo. This
|
||
Sunday, however, promises no ordinary night of rinky-
|
||
dinky jazz tunes... on this night be ready for CHAOS!
|
||
Flushed with the success of their debut album on
|
||
Earthly Delights, comes an aptly-named Spanner thru ma
|
||
Beatbox. Their music has been described in Underground
|
||
magazine as "the antithesis of techno advancement, a
|
||
challenge to luddites and a noise worth savouring... A
|
||
Spanner cut-up and indoctrinate 100 wayward drum-
|
||
machines, producing a hap-hazard rhythmic collage which
|
||
is just as danceable as it's haunting. Now if there
|
||
really was an alternative to po-faced structured pop
|
||
dance, then this is it!". God only knows what this most
|
||
intelligently subversive combo will come up with when
|
||
performing this, their first, live engagement.
|
||
Strong support is from Pornosect playing for your
|
||
entertainment (but not for your pleasure!) with avant-
|
||
garde techno Dub... and from Russia, for one night only,
|
||
the ever-popular KGB Sound System, so don't forget to
|
||
bring your recording walkman for a night to treasure and
|
||
savour."
|
||
Most plagiarists did not agree with A Spanner Thru
|
||
Ma Beatbox's estimation of their performance as the
|
||
climax of the Festival. I was left wondering why, if A
|
||
Spanner... really considered the Festival to be such a
|
||
'spectacular event', they had failed to notice that it
|
||
had been going on all through January as well as
|
||
February.
|
||
However, it was left to rich kid J.S.G. Boggs to
|
||
make the most spectacularly inept attempt at cashing in
|
||
on the Festival Of Plagiarism. A 'friend' of Graham
|
||
Harwood's, Boggs had been asked to participate in the
|
||
Festival - and expressed an interest in doing so. But
|
||
rather than making common cause with the plagiarists, he
|
||
hired the Young Unknowns Gallery and planned to put on an
|
||
exhibition entitled 'Money In Ruins', which was timed to
|
||
clash with the opening of the Festival. After his
|
||
collaborators (who included Hannah Vowles and Glyn Banks)
|
||
withdrew from the show (claiming that details had been
|
||
announced to the press before they'd agreed to them),
|
||
Boggs was left with an empty gallery and the bill for an
|
||
exhibition which hadn't taken place.
|
||
Such bungled opportunism does not characterise all
|
||
cultural activity; occurring throughout the course of the
|
||
Festival was an 'anonymous' (and deliberately
|
||
unpublicised) project entitled 'Sale Of The Century'.
|
||
This was organised by Paul Haywood who sent selected
|
||
cultural workers price tags, which they were to mark up
|
||
and attach to public monuments and other suitable
|
||
targets. The idea behind the project was to add to the
|
||
chorus of protest against the British government's
|
||
programme of selling off 'public' assets. I attached my
|
||
price tag (marked as 'for sale to the highest bidder') to
|
||
the Cenotaph in London. I have no idea whether anyone
|
||
even noticed the tag - and if by chance someone did,
|
||
whether or not it stirred up feelings of outrage (against
|
||
either myself or the government).
|
||
While the London Festival Of Plagiarism was being
|
||
organised, people in various parts of the world decided
|
||
to hold their own events under the same title. One such
|
||
Festival (organised by Miekal And and Elizabeth Was) took
|
||
place at the Avant-Garde Museum of Temporary Art in
|
||
Madison, Wisconsin, on January 22nd & 23rd 1988. Others
|
||
took place at Artists's Television Access in San
|
||
Francisco on February 5, 6 & 7th 1988; and at HBK
|
||
Braunschweig, West Germany, on June 8, 9 & 10th 1988.
|
||
The San Francisco Festival was a 48 hour non-stop
|
||
be-in, very much influenced by the 'beat traditions' of
|
||
that city. The Braunschweig Festival took place in an
|
||
art school and tended to treat 'plagiarism' as an 'art
|
||
movement'; using it as 'an excuse' to pay homage to
|
||
famous artists - rather than as a means of assaulting the
|
||
individualist ideology of Western Capitalism. Despite
|
||
this, the event was redeemed by a high degree of audience
|
||
participation, a wonderful installation by Franz John and
|
||
a highly subversive plagiarist design
|
||
workshop/competition run by Stiletto (during which he
|
||
offered to authenticate the best copy of his work made by
|
||
a student, so that the winner of this 'prize' could then
|
||
sell their 'Stiletto original' to a collector for
|
||
thousands of deutsch_marks). Battling against an
|
||
institutionalised atmosphere, organiser Daniel Simons
|
||
pulled off an event which succeeded in extending itself
|
||
beyond the confines of the art school and into an
|
||
international community.
|
||
Beyond the title, none of the Festivals Of
|
||
Plagiarism had very much in common. This is not
|
||
necessarily a bad thing, since from the first stages of
|
||
organisation, the initiators of the London event had
|
||
positioned themselves in clear opposition to closure.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PART III: A BRIEF CONSIDERATION OF THE AD_MIN_IS_TRA_TIVE
|
||
QUESTION
|
||
|
||
A major achievement of the Festival Of Plagiarism was to
|
||
show that it is possible to organise an ambitious
|
||
cultural event without enough money to cover any more
|
||
than the most minimal of expenses. (At the time the
|
||
Festival was organised, Harwood and myself were both
|
||
registered as unemployed and our annual incomes were
|
||
<EFBFBD>1500 each, while Baxter was earning <20>2000 annually from
|
||
a book distribution service he ran).
|
||
The organisation of the Festival Of Plagiarism (and
|
||
similar events) is a natural outcome of the realisation
|
||
that art simply is (and always has been) a question of
|
||
administration (rather than some inherent quality in the
|
||
objects elevated to the status of art). The extent to
|
||
which the Festival was able to 'demystify' contemporary
|
||
cultural practice was limited by the unwillingness of
|
||
many 'plagiarists' to take on administrative
|
||
responsibilities. Many of those who responded to the
|
||
initial invitation to participate in the organisation of
|
||
the Festival, replied by asking for money and requesting
|
||
that they should be found gallery space (400 copies of
|
||
this invitation were mailed out and a further 300
|
||
distributed by other means).
|
||
It was Graham Harwood's enthusiasm which provided
|
||
the impetus for work to begin on the organisation of the
|
||
Festival, while I carried out the bulk of administrative
|
||
duties with the steadfast support of Ed Baxter. It was
|
||
not until we had begun work on the Festival that I
|
||
discovered Harwood was dyslexic and that this condition
|
||
would limit the type of administrative work he could
|
||
undertake. Having discovered this, I desperately sought
|
||
assistance from other quarters. Baxter stepped in and
|
||
helped me out at a point when no one else was prepared to
|
||
shoulder any of the administrative workload; without his
|
||
aid the Festival might well have become an organisational
|
||
disaster.
|
||
Fitting those who wanted to participate (and who
|
||
were 'unable' to organise venues for themselves) into the
|
||
available space became an administrative nightmare.
|
||
These difficulties were exacerbated by the way in which
|
||
work was censored by a number of the bodies who
|
||
controlled the spaces being used. Also, the largest
|
||
venue - Chisenhale Studios - was lost because after I had
|
||
arranged for it to be used (for a group show) during the
|
||
Festival, and then entrusted its administration to Hannah
|
||
Vowles and Glyn Banks, these two 'friends' pulled out of
|
||
the Festival and arranged for the space at Chisenhale to
|
||
be reallocated to themselves at a later date.
|
||
Despite all the changes forced upon the organisers
|
||
during the planning stages, what finally took place was
|
||
reasonably close to the advertised programme (as
|
||
distributed to the media and carried in the first edition
|
||
of "Plagiarism: art as commodity and strategies for its
|
||
negation"). The 'Plagiarism - Sweet Revulsion'
|
||
exhibition opened three days late (it was advertised as
|
||
opening on February 1st) because the participants didn't
|
||
put the show up in time. The content of the two video
|
||
evenings differed slightly from what was advertised; ex-
|
||
Situationist International member Ralph Rumney didn't
|
||
give his talk scheduled for the second evening because he
|
||
was laid up in bed with flu. For reasons best known to
|
||
himself, Richard Barnbrook failed to undertake his
|
||
planned guerrilla hangings of contentious images over
|
||
banks and insurance buildings. Stefan Szczelkun's show at
|
||
M&B Motors, William Clark's participation in the
|
||
'Iconoclasm' exhibition and the two talks at the Bedford
|
||
Hill Gallery were last minute additions and therefore
|
||
missed inclusion in the lists of events distributed to
|
||
the press. Such relatively minor changes compare very
|
||
favourably with the track record of the Fluxus Festivals
|
||
of the 1960's, which were notorious for bearing little,
|
||
if any, relation to the advertised programme.
|
||
Not unexpectedly, exhibitions and events in Central
|
||
London were far better attended than those located in
|
||
'fringe' areas of the city (where audiences tended to be
|
||
more 'local' in composition) Despite this, it was
|
||
heartening that at least some of the participants visited
|
||
most of what constituted the Festival. On this level,
|
||
Mark Pawson and Scott Larson (who contributed to the
|
||
'Apocrypha' show) proved themselves to be as supportive
|
||
as Ed Baxter. Others (such as Ben Allen, John Berndt,
|
||
Franz John, Brian Gentry, Mitch, Malcolm Dickson, Karen
|
||
Strang and Kenny Murphy-Roud) visited all the exhibitions
|
||
and events which co-incided with their visits to London
|
||
and in doing so showed a considerable depth of engagement
|
||
with the issues raised by the Festival.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PART IV: IN CONCLUSION
|
||
|
||
Progress within radical culture is often painfully slow
|
||
due to a general lack of information. For example,
|
||
multiple name experiments have a history stretching back
|
||
at least as far as Berlin dada; but to date such
|
||
activities have borne relatively few results. This is
|
||
because most of the work in this area has been carried
|
||
out by small groups who had no knowledge of earlier false
|
||
starts and failures (or, indeed, of the achievements
|
||
attained in the field). Producing adequate documentation
|
||
of activities is a crucial part of the cultural process;
|
||
if the hegemony of the dominant culture is to be
|
||
successfully challenged, then those who oppose it must
|
||
act on this fact...
|
||
In drawing up this report, I am dealing with events
|
||
which are relatively recent; it would be premature to
|
||
attempt an estimate of the full impact of the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism. In any case, this text is intended to fuel
|
||
the debate raised by the Festival. I believe this essay
|
||
will prove useful to anyone interested in the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism simply because it provides brief descriptions
|
||
of virtually everything which constituted the event (much
|
||
of which would in all probability go otherwise unrecorded
|
||
since media coverage of the Festival focussed exclusively
|
||
on four exhibitions).6
|
||
For me, the Festival Of Plagiarism was a 'success'
|
||
because it led to a several developments (both
|
||
theoretical and practical) in that series of interlinked
|
||
concepts with which I'd been working for several years.
|
||
The effect this has had on my understanding of
|
||
'plagiarism', 'multiple names' and 'art strike/refusal of
|
||
creativity' can be gleaned (at least partially) from a
|
||
close reading of the present text. Although I disagreed
|
||
with much of what Ed Baxter had to say, I found his ideas
|
||
pertinent to my own pursuit of issues linked to
|
||
plagiarism &c. Similarly, the discussions I had with
|
||
John Berndt during the course of the Festival were both
|
||
frank and stimulating; Berndt's treatment of the
|
||
censorship issue was particularly memorable and vigorous.
|
||
On a more mundane level and as I have already
|
||
stated, I feel that our ability to organise and carry
|
||
through (without funding) an event as ambitious as the
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism was a considerable administrative
|
||
achievement - something with which Ed Baxter now seems to
|
||
(at least partially) agree. However, Baxter still feels
|
||
dissatisfied with the level of debate he experienced
|
||
during the Festival. In my opinion Baxter's expectations
|
||
of the event were, from the beginning, unrealistic. His
|
||
experience may also be explained (at least partially) in
|
||
terms of personality differences, since a number of
|
||
people I spoke to were discouraged from engaging Baxter
|
||
in conversation because of what they saw as his off-hand
|
||
manner. Likewise, a good deal of the most interesting
|
||
debate over issues raised by the Festival has actually
|
||
occurred in the year since it took place.
|
||
An issue which concerned both Baxter and myself
|
||
immediately after the Festival was the question of
|
||
'coherence'. However, Baxter's claim (in his "A Footnote
|
||
To The Festival Of Plagiarism", Variant No. 5) that the
|
||
Festival's organisers presented 'a united front of
|
||
diverse tastes... to a body of consumers otherwise unable
|
||
to make sense of the discontinuous and confused
|
||
manifestations of a supposedly coherent radicalism', is
|
||
both inaccurate and patronising. With hindsight, it is
|
||
clear that making the Festival 'coherent' was never a
|
||
realistic possibility, nor much of an issue. Among other
|
||
things, Baxter's written statements both before and
|
||
after the event (i.e. "ReDistribution" and "A
|
||
Footnote...") warned the potential and actual audience of
|
||
the fact that the Festival was not so much a 'united
|
||
front of diverse tastes', as an arena in which various
|
||
cultural tendencies fought out their theoretical
|
||
positions. While this may not have been apparent to
|
||
those individuals who attended only one or two of the
|
||
events which constituted the Festival, anyone who read
|
||
the "Plagiarism" booklet and/or visited a variety of the
|
||
Festival's exhibitions would have been hard pressed to
|
||
miss the 'in-fighting'.
|
||
In relation to this, "A Footnote..." is interesting
|
||
on several counts and gives a fair indication of the (at
|
||
times) abstract nature of Baxter's approach to cultural
|
||
issues. Relying chiefly on an analogy with what he sees
|
||
as the 'cultural condition', Baxter suggests that 'little
|
||
ground which might have provided a basis for coherent,
|
||
intelligent and relevant radical-left cultural activity
|
||
was gained' during the Festival Of Plagiarism. Despite
|
||
his assertion that it would be pointless 'to mythologize
|
||
or lapse into an indulgent celebration of the Festival's
|
||
inadequacies', mytholo_giz_ing is precisely what Baxter
|
||
does, since the very thing missing from his recitations
|
||
of the Festival's 'failures' is any mention of the
|
||
Festival itself (nothing which occurred under its aegis
|
||
is described and beyond Baxter and myself there is no
|
||
indication of who organised or participated in the
|
||
event!).7 It is debatable whether or not the moral tags
|
||
of 'coherent', 'intelligent', and 'relevant' which Baxter
|
||
attaches to 'radical-left cultural activity' apply to "A
|
||
Footnote..."; within it Baxter claims the Festival was
|
||
both 'ignored by the establishment' and 'recuperated by
|
||
the art world' (and here, in view of the derogatory tone
|
||
and reference to recuperation, the phrase 'art world'
|
||
clearly signifies the cultural 'establishment'). To
|
||
suggest that the Festival was thus both 'ignored' and
|
||
'recuperated' is ludicrous since, given the context,
|
||
these categories are mutually exclusive.
|
||
However, despite the numerous criticisms I have of
|
||
Baxter's theoretical position vis-a-vis the Festival, I
|
||
do not wish to obscure the influence he's had on the
|
||
development of my thinking. This influence will be
|
||
readily apparent to anyone who compares the present essay
|
||
with the text "Plagiarism As Negation In Culture" which I
|
||
wrote (as Karen Eliot) in February or March '87 (after
|
||
Graham Harwood had badgered me about incorporating some
|
||
of his ideas on the media into a written statement that
|
||
could be handed out as an example of what should be
|
||
produced in terms of text for his proposed plagiarism
|
||
paperback).
|
||
While Baxter feels the Festival was a 'failure',
|
||
Harwood, like me, considers it to have been a 'success'.
|
||
Indeed, Harwood insists that rather than having problems
|
||
with the Festival itself, his difficulty was in knowing
|
||
what to do afterwards - since he could think of nothing
|
||
which might better it! Obviously, I did not share
|
||
Harwood's predicament since I committed myself to the Art
|
||
Strike of 1990 to 1993 long before the Festival took
|
||
place...8
|
||
|
||
Stewart Home, London March 1989.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other Events Of Interest
|
||
|
||
A number of events related to the Festival Of Plagiarism
|
||
have taken place over the past year. These include
|
||
"Arrival/Departure" a video installation by Malcolm
|
||
Dickson at the Third Eye Centre, Glasgow, in March '88;
|
||
"A Conspiracy Of Feelings" a one-person show by William
|
||
Clark at Transmission Gallery, Glasgow, in March '88; The
|
||
Festival Of Non-Participation which was organised in
|
||
Scotland by Pete Horobin over the summer and autumn of
|
||
'88; The Festival Of Censorship which was organised in
|
||
Baltimore by John Berndt in the summer of '88; a one
|
||
person show entitled "Work" by Graham Harwood at
|
||
Transmission Gallery, Glasgow, in September '88; and
|
||
"Refuse" an installation by Glyn Banks, Ed Baxter, Simon
|
||
Dickason, Denise Hawrysio, Andy Hopton, Hannah Vowles and
|
||
myself (working as Karen Eliot) which was organised by
|
||
Simon Dickason and held at Galleriet Laderfabriken,
|
||
Malmo, Sweden, in October and November '88. This last
|
||
event was arranged before the Festival Of Plagiarism took
|
||
place - and it is unlikely that all its participants
|
||
would have agreed to work together had they been asked to
|
||
do so in the aftermath of the Festival. The organisers of
|
||
the San Francisco Festival followed up their first event
|
||
with a week long "Art Strike Mobilization" in January
|
||
1989 (and like their Festival, this was held at Artists
|
||
Television Access). The Fifth International Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism will take place in Glasgow between August 4th
|
||
and 11th 1989.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism, selected bibliography:9
|
||
|
||
"Plagiarising Art Trivia", photo-story, Caribbean Times,
|
||
15/1/88.
|
||
"A New Look...", photo-story, Streatham & Lambeth Comet,
|
||
22/1/88.
|
||
"Hoardings Go On Show", photo-story, Streatham & Tooting
|
||
News, 22/1/88.
|
||
"All Whose Own Work?", Jonathon Sale, Punch, 5/2/88.
|
||
"Festival Of Plagiarism", (cover story) Artists
|
||
Newsletter, February 1988.
|
||
"Steal A Little Entertainment", Leslie Goldberg, S.F.
|
||
Examiner, 5/2/88.
|
||
"Living On Borrowed Time", John A. Walker, Times Higher
|
||
Education Supplement, 26/2/88.
|
||
"Art Imitates Art", Peter Johnston, Prism, March 1988.
|
||
"City 68/77/88/2000" (Item 3), Jon Savage, Heartbreak
|
||
Hotel No. 4 July/August 1988 (this
|
||
article had previously appeared in the Paris based City
|
||
Magazine - date not known - and was subsequently
|
||
reprinted in Vague No. 21, January 1989).
|
||
"A Footnote To The Festival Of Plagiarism", Ed Baxter,
|
||
Variant No. 5, Summer/Autumn 1988.
|
||
"Festival Of Plagiarism" (review), Jon Winet, Bloatstick,
|
||
Fall 1988.
|
||
|
||
Extracts from the booklet accompanying the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism ("Plagiarism: art as commodity and strategies
|
||
for its negation" edited by Stewart Home - first
|
||
published November '87 by Aporia Press, new edition with
|
||
two reprints Aporia Press '88) were published in Force
|
||
Mental No. 15. Reviews of the "Plagiarism" booklet have
|
||
appeared in "Box Of Water" No. 3 (autumn '88) and Artists
|
||
Newsletter (November '88).
|
||
The essay "Plagiarism As Negation In Culture" by
|
||
Karen Eliot was published in the "Desire In Ruins"
|
||
Catalogue (Transmission, Glasgow May '87). "Why
|
||
Plagiarism?" by Bob Jones was published in Variant 3
|
||
(Glasgow Autumn '87). Pieces by Tex Beard (Ed Baxter
|
||
writing under a pen name) and Stewart Home appeared under
|
||
the heading "Plagiarism" in the Encyclopaedia section of
|
||
Edinburgh Review 78/9 (Edinburgh Summer/Autumn '87).
|
||
These texts were all reprinted in the "Plagiarism"
|
||
booklet.
|
||
Also see "Photostatic" No. 31, a special 'plagiarism
|
||
issue'; "The Plagiarist Codex: an Old Mayan information
|
||
hieroglyph" (Xexoxial Editions, Madison '88); "Classical
|
||
Plagiarism" by Elizabeth Was (Xexoxial Editions, Madison
|
||
'88); and the small catalogue Baxter, Dickason and Hopton
|
||
issued to accompany the 'Hoardings' exhibition.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Footnotes
|
||
|
||
1: A word of warning: press coverage of "Ruins of
|
||
Glamour" should be taken with a pinch of salt. For
|
||
example, the London listings magazine City Limits
|
||
(18/12/86) claimed that: "What really aggrieved the
|
||
collaborators was the 'anti-art' nature of the attack".
|
||
Glyn Banks did virtually all of the talking to the press
|
||
-and so the coverage actually reflects his opinions and
|
||
not those of everyone involved in the show, some of whom
|
||
took extremely strong exception to the way in which the
|
||
media reproduced Banks' opinions as though they
|
||
'represented' those of the group.
|
||
The two most accurate reviews of the 'Glamour' show
|
||
were "Pink Feather Duster..." by William Feaver (Observer
|
||
14/12/86) and "Ruining The Ruins" by Nick Houghton
|
||
(Performance No. 46, March/April '87). The rest of the
|
||
press coverage was so inaccurate that it is likely to
|
||
hinder, rather than enhance, any understanding of the
|
||
exhibition.
|
||
Similarly, press coverage of the Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism generally represents a mixture of the opinions
|
||
of whoever an individual journalist happened to talk to
|
||
and the journalist's own peculiar biases - it should not
|
||
therefore be taken as representative of the attitudes of
|
||
the participants as a whole. Jon Savage's coverage is
|
||
the most intelligent because he places the Festival in a
|
||
cultural and historical context.
|
||
Ed Baxter's "A Footnote To The Festival Of
|
||
Plagiarism" (Variant No. 5, Glasgow Summer/Autumn '88)
|
||
was written a few months after the Festival took place.
|
||
It thus lacks the benefit of distancing from events - and
|
||
is, in my opinion, useful (in that it is a record of how
|
||
Baxter felt about the Festival at that time) but deeply
|
||
flawed (in that his assessment is not particularly
|
||
accurate). I produced a similarly flawed text - "A Short
|
||
Reflection On The Festival Of Plagiarism" (which was
|
||
written in March '88 and included in the revised edition
|
||
of the "Plagiarism" booklet). I would attribute the
|
||
chiefly (and definitely over) negative attitudes of
|
||
Baxter and myself at that time to exhaustion (caused by
|
||
the vast amount of administrative work with which we
|
||
dealt during the course of the Festival).
|
||
|
||
2: Prior to the Festival Of Plagiarism being organised,
|
||
Ed Baxter and I were in contact with Andrew Wilson who
|
||
was in the process of setting up a second Destruction In
|
||
Art Symposium. The 'original' event, like the Festival
|
||
Of Plagiarism, was run without any outside subsidy.
|
||
Wilson's Symposium was eventually postponed because the
|
||
venues at which it was scheduled to take place (Tate
|
||
Gallery &c.) felt there was insufficient funding to cover
|
||
costs. It became a standing joke between Baxter and
|
||
myself that we would organise a second Destruction In Art
|
||
Symposium before Wilson had raised sufficient cash to
|
||
cover the cost of holding a more 'official' event in the
|
||
style to which London's cultural 'elite' had become
|
||
accustomed.
|
||
|
||
3: I typeset the "Plagiarism" pamphlet and I did not see
|
||
the "ReDistribution" text until after I had delivered the
|
||
completed typesetting to Baxter for proofing; the essay
|
||
appeared along with the list of corrections Baxter
|
||
returned to me. When I complained that I had not agreed
|
||
to this text being included in the "Plagiarism" pamphlet
|
||
and that I disagreed with it, Baxter informed me that
|
||
this was 'tough'. Since I did not want to delay the
|
||
production of the booklet with an argument, I typeset
|
||
"ReDistribution" under protest alongside the other
|
||
'corrections'.
|
||
|
||
4: The essay is situated after two texts which deal with
|
||
the political-economic dimensions of culture, it begins:
|
||
"...Moving away for a moment from the political-economic
|
||
dimension of culture, but still keeping it in sight, a
|
||
few points may be pertinently raised." Baxter has
|
||
informed me that this sentence referred to his previous
|
||
writing, rather than that of the other contributors to
|
||
the 'Refuse' brochure. Given that this essay accompanied
|
||
an exhibition in Sweden where few, if any, of those
|
||
reading it would have seen Baxter's earlier writing, I
|
||
find this an unlikely explanation of what was intended.
|
||
In my opinion, Baxter's text was consciously composed as
|
||
a 'commentary' on the other writing included in the
|
||
'Refuse' brochure.
|
||
|
||
5: Harwood's project of 'infiltrating the media' is based
|
||
on a number of implicit assumptions, including the belief
|
||
that the technological aspects of the media are
|
||
'neutral'. In relation to this, it is perhaps
|
||
interesting to note that Harwood regularly watches
|
||
television, a leisure activity neither Baxter or I
|
||
pursued at the time the Festival took place.
|
||
|
||
6: In producing this text I have quite consciously been
|
||
engaged with the process of historification. Anyone
|
||
wishing to make a 'critical' assessment of what I have
|
||
written is, of course, well advised to take this into
|
||
account. This said, and since my description of the
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism was composed with the intention
|
||
that it should be accepted as 'history', I have done my
|
||
utmost to ensure that the facts I cite are 'historically
|
||
accurate'.
|
||
|
||
7: "A Footnote..." was intended as a 'theoretical',
|
||
rather than a 'descriptive', text; consequently I would
|
||
not expect to find detailed description within it. But
|
||
even taking this into consideration, I would expect more
|
||
description to relate the theory to its subject. Baxter
|
||
has informed me that "A Footnote.." was aimed at those
|
||
who participated in the Festival. If this was so, I am
|
||
left wondering why it was published in a magazine where
|
||
the majority of those reading it were unlikely to have
|
||
attended the Festival, let alone participated in it.
|
||
|
||
8: In the course of this essay, I suggested that Ed
|
||
Baxter attempted to present his opinions in the form of a
|
||
'meta-narrative'. In composing this text I, too, quite
|
||
consciously exploited the position of privilege granted
|
||
to the written word within our culture. Since it is
|
||
impossible for me to go beyond the 'limits' of this
|
||
society (quite obviously I am a part of it), I have
|
||
chosen instead to make what I perceive as its 'limits'
|
||
visible (this is a tactic I adopted throughout the
|
||
Festival Of Plagiarism).
|
||
|
||
9: This bibliography includes all feature length articles
|
||
of which I am aware that have been published in English
|
||
and which relate directly to any of the Festivals Of
|
||
Plagiarism; it omits published writing in languages other
|
||
than English and short commentaries appended to listings
|
||
of plagiarist events as carried in a variety of
|
||
magazines.
|
||
|
||
AN INCOMPLETE LIST OF THOSE WHO CONTRIB_UTED WORK TO
|
||
'KAREN ELIOT - APOCRYPHA' & 'XEROGRAPHY & OTHER EPHEMERA
|
||
FROM THE ETERNAL NETWORK'.
|
||
|
||
Al Ackerman
|
||
Alessandro Aiello
|
||
Larry Angelo
|
||
B-Boy
|
||
Ade Barradell
|
||
Keith Bates
|
||
Ed Baxter
|
||
E. Lynne Beal
|
||
John Berndt
|
||
Nenad Bogdanovic
|
||
Gerd Borner
|
||
Cavellini
|
||
Cerebral Discourse
|
||
Clyde Action
|
||
Ryosuke Cohen
|
||
Neil G. Combs
|
||
Crippled Hippo
|
||
Robin Crozier
|
||
Indra Dewan
|
||
Luc Fierens
|
||
Foist
|
||
Julia Gash
|
||
David George
|
||
Brian Gentry
|
||
Duscan Grobovsek
|
||
Pedro Juan Gutierrez
|
||
Graham Harwood
|
||
John Held Jr.
|
||
Stewart Home
|
||
Nick Hopkins
|
||
Pete Horobin
|
||
David Jarvis
|
||
Joki Mail Art
|
||
Hazel Jones
|
||
Ulrich Kattenstroth
|
||
Jurgen Kierspel
|
||
Scott Larson
|
||
Pascal Lenoir
|
||
Mike Liegh
|
||
Ruggero Maggi
|
||
Simoni Mariarosa
|
||
Pierre Marquer
|
||
Paul Matusic
|
||
Mitch
|
||
Emilo Morandi
|
||
Georg Mubloch
|
||
Kenny Murphy-Roud
|
||
Kum Nambaik
|
||
Rea Nikonova
|
||
Jurgen O. Olbrich
|
||
Open World
|
||
Clemente Padin
|
||
Mark Pawson
|
||
Steve Perkins
|
||
Barry Edgar Pilcher
|
||
Carlo Pittore
|
||
Private World
|
||
Radio Free Dada
|
||
C. Schmeck
|
||
Serge Segay
|
||
Shozo Shimamoto
|
||
Mariarosa Simoni
|
||
Ivan Sladek
|
||
Biasin Stefano
|
||
Stringy
|
||
Stumato
|
||
Graham Tansley
|
||
Tape Beatles
|
||
Ulrich Tarlatt
|
||
Jayne Taylor
|
||
Chris Thomas
|
||
Chris Winkler
|
||
Xexoxial Endarchy
|
||
|
||
Additional Note
|
||
|
||
This text was originally published by Sabotage Editions,
|
||
BM Senior, London WC1N 3XX, UK (full address) in 1989.
|
||
The printed version contains 15 illustrations not
|
||
included here. Only a typeset version of the final text
|
||
was saved and there were some problems converting it back
|
||
into a word processed format, therefore there may or may
|
||
not be some unintended differences between the printed
|
||
edition and this one. However, this situation was not
|
||
unproductive because among the jumble of text was the
|
||
following 'randomly'<27>created slogan REALISE YOUR
|
||
PRODUCTIVE ROLE IN THE CREATION OF STEWART HOME. Yes, the
|
||
author is dead and it's your job to reinvent him. To
|
||
proceed further with this process please read some of
|
||
'his' other works such as THE ASSAULT ON CULTURE and
|
||
NEOIST MANIFESTOS or the novels PURE MANIA, DEFIANT
|
||
POSE and RED LONDON.
|
||
|
||
The British Library Cataloguing in Publications Data for
|
||
the printed version of this text is as follows:
|
||
|
||
Home, Stewart, 1962
|
||
The Festival of Plagiarism.
|
||
1. Visual Arts. Copying
|
||
I. Title II. Festival of Plagiarism (1988: London,
|
||
England)
|
||
702.8'7
|
||
|
||
ISBN 0-9514417-0-1
|
||
|
||
Stewart Home QUICK, CLEAN AND EFFICIENT SINCE 1962
|
||
can be contacted c/o Sabotage Editions.
|
||
|
||
Title: The Festival of Plagiarism
|
||
|
||
Author: Stewart Home
|
||
|
||
Date: 1989
|
||
|
||
Description:
|
||
Text of the pamphlet of the same name, documenting the history of the
|
||
Festivals of Plagiarism organised in the late 1980s.
|
||
|
||
Keywords:
|
||
Art, Anti-Art, Plagiarism, Home
|
||
|
||
|