182 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
182 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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ON THE INTERNATIONAL SHADOWS PROJECT: 1990
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When the first atomic bomb detonated over Hiroshima at 8:15 a.m.
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August 6, 1945, people within 300 meters of ground zero were
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vaporized by the intense heat. They left faint marks on nearby
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surfaces. These have been called shadows, and these shadows have
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been growing in importance as symbols, examples, and icons during
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the 45 years since.
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During the early to mid '80's the maniacal nuclear stratagems of
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the Reagan administration gave great impetus to the global
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anti-nuclear movement and artists, poets, and composers responded
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with an upwelling of oppositional work. A resurgence of the
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guerrilla theater of the '60's emerged as performance art.
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Anti-nuclear mail-art flourished. Ruggero Maggi in Italy and
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John Held, Jr. in the U.S. united mail-art and performance and
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sponsored many events at home and abroad. Perhaps the most
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important of the mail-art shows was held in 1988 in Hiroshima
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itself, under international sponsorship with the active guidance
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of Shozo Simamoto, Mayumi Handa and others. Work from this show was
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passed on to form the nucleus of a 1989 show in Calexico, a city on
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the U.S.-Mexico border, curated by Harry Polkinhorn. This material
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was passed on to me after the Calexico show closed. Polkinhorn and
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I discussed turning it into a DNA show, one that divided and
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replicated itself, with part sent this year to Clemente Padin in
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Montevideo who wanted to do a show.
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Invitations started going out in late winter. One of my concerns
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was to bring in work from artists outside the mail-art genre. I hope
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future curators of similar shows will continue along these lines,
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making the project as open and uncliquish as possible. In the
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invitations I said the show would be "lightly juried." I would have
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liked to have left it completely unjuried, but wanted to be able to
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exclude work that would harm or get in the way of other pieces. One
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piece was set up so it made a continuous cycle of loud sounds that
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would have distracted attention from other works and would have been
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a sort of water-drip torture for people who worked in the bookstore
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or read in the gallery. This was the only piece excluded from the show.
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The openness of the show drew some criticism: Some thought that without
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a jury the show would be made up of nothing but junk from amateurs,
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fanatics, and lunatics. This may have discouraged a few people from
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sending work, but predictions of a cascade of trash were not born out
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by the show. A number of contributors fall into the amateur category
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but they didn't contribute insincere or irrelevant art. The lone
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rejectee was gracious enough to send a less harmful piece in place of
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the rejected one. That's hardly irrational behavior -- I'd like to see
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more people act as well in juried shows.
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The lack of a jury gets at one of the main goals of the show. The atomic
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age has been one of secrecy, exclusion, and elitism. It seems
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particularly appropriate to oppose this with complete openness,
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universal enfranchisement, and inclusion. Jerome Rothenberg's notion of
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the Critic as Angel of Death, as the officer at Auschwitz who decided
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who would live and who would go to the crematorium, seems appropriate
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here. We opened the show to everyone who wanted to participate, not
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deciding which works should "live" and which should "die."
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The nuclear age has been based in distrust, not only of foreign nations
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but also of people at home. The obsession with secret plots and
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domestic spies and saboteurs characteristic of the McCarthy witch hunt
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is alive and well in the current movement for greater censorship. A
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basic assumption of the Shadows Project is that artists can be trusted.
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Some contributors sent work that questioned or made fun of the concerns
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of the show, but none were guilty of bad faith. In this context, it is
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interesting to note that although the moral majority gestapo regularly
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patrolled the show, they found nothing that could be used to attack the
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gallery or close the exhibition.
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The show included about 600 pieces from some 300 contributors living in
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38 countries. Work included paintings ranging from Memling-like
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miniatures to large abstractions; elaborate collages and found art;
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video and audio tapes; poetry and musical scores; photos of everything
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from Hiroshima wreckage to children's faces to previous Shadows
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performances. Any inventory would be incomplete -- the show included
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many anonymous pieces, and even provenience is problematic: I sent
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invitations to artists in East Germany, and received responses from
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some of them at new addresses in West Germany, and the two Germanies
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ceased to be divided shortly after the show closed. About half the
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work was new. Of work from previous shows, some pieces are dated as
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early as 1982. It would be interesting to track their progression from
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show to show around the world over the years. Going by dates, some
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artists apparently had contributed to shows nearly every year throughout
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the decade.
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That many pieces were anonymous brings out several important things about
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mail art. It is not an art form from which artists expect to make money
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or achieve fame. It is a form that is not intended to be a commodity to
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be bought or owned but to go out in the world with a message that is more
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important than the identity or fortunes of the artist. Hence it should
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not be surprising that a large number of contributors were from eastern
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Europe and the Fascist dictatorships of Latin America; that is, places
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where artists' commitments have been put to a severe test. That little
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work came from Asian countries other than Japan or from Africa is a strong
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reminder that many people in the world cannot participate in shows like
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this because they cannot afford postage. Perhaps it is a shortcoming of
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these shows that none of their curators has found a way of getting around
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this.
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Though we don't have any numbers to back this up, the show apparently
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drew a larger number of viewers than any other mounted in the summer
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at Woodland Pattern during its ten years at the present location. The
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show formally ended on August 6, Hiroshima Day, with a poetry reading.
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Despite the official closing, the show was left up for an additional two
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weeks. This not only gave more people a chance to see it, it also
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suggested a reprieve of sorts: it's hard not to think that the human race
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put a gun to its head and pulled the trigger on August 6, 1945 and is
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only waiting helplessly for the hammer to detonate the cap. Maybe we can
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keep that from happening.
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1990 was a torch bearer year for the International Shadows Project. When
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the show opened on June 17, concern about nuclear weapons was probably at
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its lowest point in forty five years. A lot of the careless euphoria of
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the preceding year was still in the air. By the time the show ended in
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mid August, the world seemed to have changed. Troops were massing in Iraq
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and Saudi Arabia, ready for a war that could go nuclear. Of the two giants
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that had been terrorizing the world with their threats of nuclear
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armageddon for half a century, one was in effect bankrupt and drowning in
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debt, while the other was rapidly disintegrating. In their place, their
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former client states were arming themselves with nuclear weapons made from
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materials the superpowers had given them. A world in which two bullies
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bluff each other now seemed safer than one in which many impoverished
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countries had nuclear devices and little to lose in using them. At the same
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time, many people in the U.S. began to advocate the use of nuclear weapons
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to rid themselves of the Iraqi nuisance.
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By springtime, many of those who had advocated nuking Baghdad were
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expressing sincere and heartfelt sympathy with the Kurds and other victims
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of the Iraq war. Clearly these people didn't have the slightest
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understanding of the indiscriminate destructive power of even a small
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nuclear bomb. One of the purposes of these shows should be educational.
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Serious consideration of the devastation caused by the bomb detonated over
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Hiroshima (little more than a firecracker by contemporary standards)
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apparently must be encouraged; and the images of human suffering, with
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human faces, must be kept before those who advocate the use of nuclear
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weapons. This is particularly important after a war that seemed to many
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people in the industrial nations like a video game.
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By the following winter, the Soviet Union had become the world's first
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empire to disassemble itself. Through some sort of mass psychosis that is
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completely beyond my comprehension many people came to believe that the
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nuclear nightmare was over. This folly continued despite a hellish civil
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war in Yugoslavia that could easily be a rehearsal for civil wars in the
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former Soviet Republics, or more massive wars between the half dozen
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nuclear states that covered the center of Eurasia. The possibilities of
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nuclear weapons being used by China, India, the Koreas and other Asian
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countries became more apparent. None of the polyannas seemed concerned
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with the possible uses of material and technological ability that would
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be looking for some practical application if they were not used in such
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conflicts. The people who spoke of the end of the nuclear era had
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forgotten how ready people in the U.S. had been to use nuclear weapons on
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Iraq. Those who sponsor Shadows Shows in the future will have a more
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difficult job than mine. Of course, no matter how many shows are
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generated, not even if their number grows to thousands per anum, these
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shows can not be expected to put an end to the existence of nuclear
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weapons. But they may augment the many other anti-nuclear activities
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launched by responsible people all over the world. An unfortunate problem
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that any anti-nuke group faces is the speed with which images and ideas
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become pass<73>. My hope is that the changing of future locations and
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curators will keep the shows themselves changing fast enough to stay ahead
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of the ennui and trendyness that are the strongest allies nuclear weapons
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have. I can see large scale changes in the aesthetics and the approaches
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of these shows. I hope this will be magnified in coming years when I'm no
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longer involved in setting them up.
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Since Clemente Padin stopped answering my letters before the Milwaukee
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show opened, I assumed that there would not be one in Uruguay, and feared
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that he might have become one of The Disappeared -- particularly since
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much of his work has dealt with the subject of Disappeared Persons, and he
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had been one himself for several years, until an Amnesty International
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style letter writing campaign initiated by mail-artists forced his
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release. A letter from Padin arrived in mid October saying that the
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Montevideo show was mounted along with an Africa show. In this case, the
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crazy optimism characteristic of these endeavors was completely justified.
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[This is a revision of an essay that first appeared in WORLD'S EDGE, an
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English language Japanese publication, edited by Sherry Reniker in 1991.]
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