Clark, Lygia - Nostalgia of The Body

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The passage discusses Yve-Alain Bois' memories of meeting and getting to know the artist Lygia Clark. It describes her as deeply depressed at times but also able to transfigure into excitement and enthusiasm when discussing her art.

When Yve-Alain Bois first met Lygia Clark, she was visibly very depressed in her studio apartment in Paris after returning from an art exhibition in Venice.

Lygia Clark began to show Yve-Alain Bois her artworks scattered around the studio, letting him feel, handle and inhabit them. This seemed to help lift her depression and dark specter, and their friendship was sealed.

Nostalgia of the Body Author(s): Lygia Clark and Yve-Alain Bois Reviewed work(s): Source: October, Vol.

69 (Summer, 1994), pp. 85-109 Published by: The MIT Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/778990 . Accessed: 09/05/2012 09:55
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Nostalgia of the Body

LYGIA CLARK

Introduction Shortlyafter Lygia Clark'sdeath in 1988, I was asked to write her obituary,and, and given immediately withoutthe slightesthesitation,Ifound despitemyinitial acceptance, to it impossible do. Once again asked to writea short criticalarticle on her work five years be later,and despitemyfeeling that, shouldIfail to do so, I wouldsomehow shirkinga duty, I cannotfind a way of doing it. For the time being it is impossible don myprofessional to robeswith regardto her and play the university scholar. That may come later, once my mourning is over and once I am able to abstractmy imaginationfrom the huge burst of is laughterwith which she would have greetedthis notion. WhatI can do today,however, a few memories Lygia as I knew her. I am not in the habit of dwelling on the of provide of personalities artists or on mypersonalrelationswith them,but, althoughherentireoeuvre aims in someway at the disappearanceof the author, it seems justified to me in this case. I believe that Lygia lived herart likeno one has everdone. in Flash One: I metLygia Clarkforthefirst time in herstudio apartment the Citedes Arts, a building on the banksof the Seine wherethe City of Paris housesforeign artists. It was in 1968, shortlyafter the events of May, and she had just returned from the Venice she Brazil. Theexcellent had devoted her to Biennale, where had represented dossierJeanClay in Robho had not yet appeared,and I had no idea what I was going to find. The studio was filled with boxesof all sizes, and Lygia was visibly very depressed (depression her for assumeda monumental,oceaniccharacter; was not rarebut abrupt, it falling like a bag on her head and quite out of proportionto its apparentreason). Veryquickly,however, witI nesseda kind of transfiguration: touched (I was sixteen),irritatedno perhapsby myyouth doubt by my respectful attitude (I had heardher spokenof too often as a great lady), Lygia began to show me her things, that is, to let mefeel them, handle them, inhabit them.First what was scattered overthe tables,then the contentsof the boxesshe beganto openfor me one saw the darkspecter depression vanish in a matterof minutes: byone. I saw, yes, I literally of I think that was what sealedourfriendshipand latermade me one of her most called-upon at (and mostfaithful) resources times when thefigure of melancholywould again swoop down on her. Severaltableswerecovered with pebblesconnected small rubber bands tied together, by
OCTOBER69, Summer1994, pp. 85-109. Translation ? 1994 October Magazine, Ltd. and Massachusetts ? Instituteof Technology. Introduction 1994 Yve-Alain Bois.

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one or two pebblesat each end. Lygia showedme what interested in theseprecarious her and them.Youdrawa pebble a groupofpebbles or toward assemblies, howto "use" you, and, at a given, alwaysunforeseeable moment,the mass at the otherend of the elasticwillfollow, and willjump suddenlytoward you as if movedby a spring, or will dragfeebly likea slug. It was the interaction betweendifferent forces that movedLygia (your own pulling, the the elastic, and the weightof thepebbles), and thefact that the incommensuextensibility of rableaction that resultscannotfail to beperceived a phenomenological as for metaphor the with othersin theworld. of relationship yourbody a Lygia constructed flashback,unpackingthe oldestthingsfirst. Whatstruckme in was her Dialogue of 1966, an "object" particular designedwith Helio Oiticica:our two handsjoined in oppositedirections,each in one of the loopsof a little Mobius cloth right ribbon(elastic,thereagain), and byjoining or releasingthem,we experienced resistance the matter(ourgestures wererestricted), traditionaltopology. then toldme about belying of Lygia the beginningof the Neo-concrete movement Brazil, her own polemicalstarting pointin She that of breaking with the universalistclaimsofgeometric abstraction. had turnedone of in its marmoreal into the support Max Bill's mostcaptivatingsculptures, autonomy, draped I the an experiment aimed at abolishingany idea of autonomy. a moment defended For for art of Mondrian, myfirst love in painting, and I was surprisedto see Lygia agreewith enthusiasm,but she urged me to dissociatehis workfrom the air of pontification manner with whichit was spokenof in Paris. She told me it had nothing to do withPlato, and that all that Mondrianhad aimedat, particularlysince the 1930s, was the destruction form of (laterI had a similar discussionwith her in connectionwith Albersand his ambiguous spaces). Lygia continuedto openboxes.Nothing that cameout of themwas madesimplyto be seen and not touched. A ritual always presidedover the apprehensionof these objects designedto be transitional (Lygia laterread Winnicottand felt her intuitions confirmed). as This nonexistence the object such is obviousin the "propositions" the time (that was of of or her word):what would theyhave been-these plastic bags,pebbles shells,waterpouches, cowls and scuba-divingair hosesloopedonto themselves so madeuseless,these "sensory "what wouldthis entiresensory panoplyhave beenwithouttherulesof thegame,of the acting But the Animals (Bichos) of 1960, her articulatedmetal out I was invited to perform? "alreadysignaledLygia'stendency with which,hereagain, you have to "converse, sculptures The vehicle bodily as to conceive the object a mere for experience. Animals looklikeabstract of her with the black-and-white paintings of the 1950s theyare in appearance most sculptures; works.But one shouldnot bedeceived: are inaccessiexhibitable mostphotographic and they ble to anyone not engaged in combat with them, to anyone not unfolding them. The conflictingdirectionsof the hinges connectingtheir manyplatesforceyou to makecertain movements and preventyou from making others,and this always unexpectedly; turn they without insideout likea glove,for example, yourwantingthemto oreventhinkingit possible. Afterthe Animals comethe Trailings (Trepante) (1964), that is, almostnothing: fascinatedLygia at the time,for it susyou makea Mdbiusstrip out of paper (this 'form" and our position in the world,left/right, of pends the traditionaloppositions our geometry front/back, etc.). Using scissors,poke a hole in the middle of the band and start cutting

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lengthwise;whenyou have worked your way backto the point of your original cut (which would have the effectof separatingthe strip into two), avoid it and chooseanotherplace to divide the strip, thengo on, eachtime choosingrightor left,until you cannotdivide the strip again. Everythingflows from the inescapable, ineffaceable moment of this choice: the unfolding is this moment,all or almostnothing. Oncethe "trail" theTrailing isfollowed, of all that remainsis a heapofpaperspaghettito bethrownin the trash. or and mademeput on her Lygiashowedme a lot moreof theseobjects, missingobjects, a on cover-alls onceinside one of them,I performed cesarean myself.It was, more"sensory the metaphor childbirth that haunted the last upheaval of this initial meeting: over, of just before departure, my Lygiaplacedin my hand a small transparent plastic bag whichshe had just blownup and sealed. Sheplaced a pebbleon one of its corners.It was balancedprecariouslyand sank a littleinto the corner the bag. It hung there,and nearly of fell, but even the in thepressure myhands causedit to riseagain likea floater. The bag was slightestchange of still hot. I felt as thoughI wereclumsilyhelpinga verydelicateanimal to give birth.Thedelicatefort/da of the littlepebblestayedin my memory a long time, partly becauseit was for relatedto the idea of a bodily,transpersonal memory,a genericmemory(Lygia called the seriesit belonged in 1966, Nostalgia of the Body). to, Flash Two: It was 1973, and Lygia (whomI saw almostdailyfor six years,from my arrival in Paris in 1971 until herreturnto Brazil) askedme to bepresent a visit from a for museumcuratorwho wantedto propose retrospective a exhibitionof herwork.Polite chitchat sitting in a circleon thefloor of her apartmenton BoulevardBrune. Almostimmediately therewas a clash with the seriouscharacter (who, I could see, held mepartlyresponsible for thefiasco). Lygia categorically the rejected idea of an exhibition,arguing that since 1968 all she had done was distance herselfeverfurtherfrom the object-that her currentwork, in which the individual bodiesof participants became collectivebodyin the forming of an a no architecture, longerboreany relationshipto art-particularly since the very ephemeral notion of a spectator was entirelybanished from it. She said that perhapsit had moreto do with psychotherapy was then going througha psychoanalysis-notfully orthodox but (Lygia at of the type called "existential" Ludwig Binswanger;her discourse the time was highly by with Groddeck, whoseessayon "thesoul of the stomach" seemed herof signal to impregnated importance).Only one solution would suit her: if the museumwould pay herfor a threemonth summerstay during which she could continue the "courses" was "giving"at she Saint Charles(a sinisterwarehouse belongingto the Universityof Paris). The curatorwas dismayedbut askedfor moreinformationon the coursesin question, and Lygia told him what went on-"rites without myths,"as she said. For example,during the "experiment," which was then veryrecentand whichshe calledthe Dribble, studentseach suckeda small reelof colored threadwhich theythen unwound directly from their mouthsonto one of their stretched on theground,the bodyof the lattergraduallyburiedundera mottled out colleagues webof regurgitations. act recovered his Initially troubled this symbolic of vomiting,the curatornevertheless by to equanimity.Thinkinghe could categorize Lygia's work,he made the mistakeof referring art" (particularly the masochistic to scenesof Gina Pane), and to Happenings.In an "Body instant, the wholebittersweet irony with which Lygia had beenplaying in this conversation

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and (to the great incomprehension, discomfort, the visitor) becamea torrentof furious of nor abuse:herworkhad nothing to do with any performance whatsoever with the offering on a platter,for the secondarybenefitof a voyeur,of herfantasies and her impulses.It was to one to from it as a spectator. Anyonenot impossible "attend" of these "courses," retreat to to takepart in thegreatcollective fabricatedthere,eachtimeaccording a difbody wishing rite, was sent packing. She saw herpracticeas a type of social electric shock,at the ferent it limits of psychodrama: had no relationto thepadded spaceof the museumor the gallery in or (shesaw no interest shockingthe (no object), with the exhibitionism the avant-garde of was Thecurator quitesimplyshownthe door,afterwhichtherewas a gargantuan bourgeois). manic laugh,followedbyan impromptu party to whichmanyfriendswereinvitedto celebrate I the theirreversible divorce hadjust witnessed: Lygiahad dismissed art world,onceandfor all. Laterwhen Lygia sadisticallytold this story,I was a bit ashamedat having participated in thegeneralhilarity.Afterall, wasn'tit possibleto imagine,if not an exhibition,at least a displayin whichherjourneywould be shown in all its logic?Thepsychotherapeutic conducted Lygia during the last ten years of her life certainlydid not lend by experiments but to themselves any direct (Lygiais a passionpresentation, at leasttheycouldbedescribed to ate writer).As for all the previouswork from which theyarose(fromNeo-concretism the there nothingtoprevent is to and thenfromthe "nostalgia the body" the "rites"), of Trailings, are it, fromexperiencing providedthe "objects" not stuckon basesor hung on the wall. people not in This workis certainlydifficultto incorporate a museum(where Lygia's "impossible to or but eitheras a provocation as demagogy), not in understood touch"would beimmediately for passivity.Lygia believed a long time that any otherplace able to expungethe spectator's in obstacle the contraction timenecessarily this was unfeasible, of seeingan insurmountable she her for required an exhibitionof that type. Twoyears before death, however, took the chance: two months,in Rio deJaneiro,afterhaving seen thepaintings and reliefsof the for 1950s and played with the Animals, crowdshandled countless "objects" had made they was a phenomenal set themselves from modelsand materials out on tables.Thisfirst attempt the so success,and the demand a sequelwas considerable, it was repeated followingyear for to in Sdo Paulo. It is importantto understandthat Lygia wantedher objects be handled, unachievable: and to realizethat this is not monstrously perhapsone day, on this side of the Atlantic, an institutionwill allowitselfto takepart in thegame. -Yve-Alain Bois

Paris. 1967. (Photo: Lygia Clark. MichelDesjardins.)

Paris. 1965. (Photo: Lygia Clark. MichelDesjardins.)

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Born of a "vitalist"reaction against Max Bill's systematic-concrete which had art, movement formedin Rio was influencein Braziland Argentina,theNeo-concrete widespread statement in 1959. Hereis the theoretical formation. announcingthegroup's 1959: Neo-concretist Manifesto The term "Neo-concretism" marks a position taken relative to non-figurative, "geometric" art (Neoplasticism, Constructivism, Suprematism, the School of Ulm) which has succumbed to a dangerous hypertroand above all relative to art concret, of rationalism. Working as painters, sculptors, printmakers, and writers, the phy artists who join in this inaugural Neo-concretist exhibition have been led, through their own personal experience, to reevaluate the theoretical positions adopted by art concret to now-in the sense that none of these allow for a satisfying response up to the expressive possibilities onto which our experiences open. Born of the Cubist reaction against Impressionism's dissolution of pictorial language, it was normal that so-called geometric art would take a position diametrically opposed to contemporary painting's facile technique and content. The new discoveries in physics and mechanics, opening the widest horizons for objective thought, could not but stimulate, in the heirs to this revolution, a tendencyto an rationalizationof the processes and goals of painting greaterat each stage ever-increasing than the last. A mechanistic notion of construction came to invade the language of painters and sculptors, giving rise in its turn to an equally extreme, retrograde reaction, as in the irrational or magic realism of the Dada artists and the Surrealists. However, it is no less the case that beyond their theories in praise of the objectivity of science and the precision of technology, the true artists-Mondrian, that Pevsner, for example-constructed their work through an embrace expression of often bypassed the limitations imposed by theory. The work of these artists has thus far been interpreted, however, in the light of theoretical principles that the works themselves contradict. We propose a reinterpretation of Neoplasticism, of Constructivism, and of the various analogous movements, basing ourselves on their expressive gains and giving precedent the workratherthan to the theory. to If we were to understand Mondrian's work by means of his theories, then we would have to choose from among them. Either the prophecy a total integrationof of art into everyday will seempossible,and Mondrian's workrepresents first step in this the life and the workdoes not realizeits direction;or such integrationappearsalways moreremote, goals. Eitherthe verticaland horizontaltrulyconstitutethefundamental rhythms theuniof verse,and Mondrian'sworkderives from the applicationof this universalprinciple;or if this principleisfalse, and then the worklaborsunderan illusion. But beyond these theoretical contradictions, Mondrian's work is there: alive and fecund. What will it serve us to see Mondrian as nothing but the destroyer of the surface, of the plane, and of the line, if we are incapable of seeing the new space that arises from such destruction? The same holds for Vantongerloo or

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Pevsner. What's the difference what mathematical equations determine a sculpture or painting by Vantongerloo-since only direct perception of the work allows one to grasp the "signification" of these rhythms and colors? Whether Pevsner started out from figures of descriptive geometry is a question without interest when faced with the new space that his sculptures sustain, and the cosmicoorganic expression that these forms reveal by means of this space. From a specifically cultural point of view it is interesting to determine the connections that occur between art objects and scientific instruments, between artistic intuition and the objective thought of the physicist or engineer. But from an aesthetic point of view, the work only exists from the moment when it transcends its external relationships-by means of the existential meanings that it reveals, at the very moment that it creates them. By having given primacy to the "pure sensation of art," Malevich saved his theoretical definitions from the limitations of rationalism and mechanism. He endowed his painting ': 0: --: 0-with^ a transcendental dimension that still continues to give it an ^ ;^ .~;... iextraordinary 00 <5 contemporaneity. But Malevich paid dearly for his courage in simultaneously opposing figuraV| i j tion and mechanistic abstraction, :1 ;i'i~~ .IS since today certain rationalist "._! , <>ISSiii ~theoreticians consider him as a naif ~ who would have never really understood the true meaning of the -n-~ 'J;d'^"~^:: =new plastic order. In truth, Malevich ^ expressedan incompleteness,a - P ^ : --already will to transcend the rational and the *r;~ i* 0 0 that lies at the heartof painting :-.' ^ !'!:!'~/?i IS~ - -- 0sensory, and that manifests itself in our time in : an irrepressible i ^^^!f~-;~ j~ way. Neo-concretism, born from the need to express the complex reality of modern man by means of the structural language of new forms, denies the validity of scientific and positivist attitudes in the arts, and reconvokes the problem of expression in incorporating the new conceptual dimensions created by Constructivist, non-figurative art. Rationalismstripsart of all its autonomy,bysubstituting notions of scientificobjectivity the irreplaceable for qualitiesof the workof art. In this way the concepts of form, space, time, structure-which in the language of the arts are tied to an existential, emotional, affective meaning-are confused with the theoretical application science makes of them. In fact, in the name of the prejudices denounced by the philosophy of today (Merleau-Ponty, Cassirer,

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Suzanne Langer), prejudices that are crumbling in all fields-beginning with still modern biology's advance over Pavlovian mechanism-the concrete-rationalists see man as a machineamong othermachines,and try to limit art to the expression this of theoretical reality. We neither consider the work of art a "machine"nor an "object,"but rather, an almost-body, which is to say, a being whose reality is not exhausted in the external between its elements; a being which, even while not decomposable relationships a into parts through analysis, onlydelivers itselfup whollythrough direct, phenomenological approach. For us, the work of art surpasses the materialist mechanics that serve as its support, and this is not at all for metaphysical reasons. If it transcends its mechanical relations (such as Gestalt psychology objectifies them), it's through the creation of an implicit meaning (Merleau-Ponty) which emerged by itself for the first time. If we must lookfor an equivalent for the work of art, we will thusfind it neitherin the machinenor in the objectas such, but rather,as Langer and Weidle did, in living organisms. However such a comparison would not suffice to express the specific reality of the aesthetic organism. It is because the work of art is not limited to occupying a place in objective space, but transcends it in order to found a new meaning, that the objective notions of time, space, form, structure, color, etc., are not sufficient to understand the work of art, to account for its reality. The difficulty of finding a precise terminology to express a world that can't be reduced to formulae has led art criticism to adopt an imprecise vocabulary, the indiscriminate use of which has betrayed the complexity of the work of art. There the influence of technology and of science has again played a role-but in the opposite direction. Certain artists, offended by the critics' imprecise terminology, have tried-in a significant reaction-to make art on the basis of objective notions, trying to apply them as creative methods. This results in a simple illustration of methods given a priori,methods that prescribe the results the work is to realize in advance. Stripping itself of intuitive creation, limiting itself to an objective form in objective space, the painting of the concrete-rationalist evokes nothing but a reaction of stimuli and reflex responses from artist and spectator alike. The con-

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crete work offers itself to the eye in the form of an instrument and not as a human way of grasping the world and of giving oneself to it. It addresses itself to the eyemachine and not to the eye-body. It is because the work of art transcends mechanical space that the notions of cause and effect lose much of their validity in it. The notions of time, space, form, color, need to be integrated in such a way (in virtue precisely of the fact that as notions they do not preexist the work) that it would be impossible to speak of them as isolated terms. Neo-concrete art, in affirming the absolute integration of its elements, believes that the "geometrical" vocabulary it uses must take on the expression of complex human reality, in the way that many works by Mondrian, Malevich, Pevsner, Gabo, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, etc., demonstrate. Even if these artists sometimes confused the concepts of mechanicalformwith those of form, it's a matter of clarifying that in the language of art so-called expressive geometricalforms lose the objective character of in a geometry orderto become vehiclefor the imagination. For its part, because it is a causal psychology, Gestalt psychology is not sufficient to explain the phenomenon that gives rise to the realities, causally determined through the action of time and of spatialization." What we mean by spatialization of the work is the fact that it is always in the present, always 7':': in the process of beginning over, of beginning the impulse that gave birth to it over again-whose origin and evolution it contains simultane'1 ously. And if this descriptionalso takes ,'1-;1'1.1'':1 ;0 us back to a primal-total-experience art of the real, it's becauseNeo-concrete wants in fact to recreate this experience. Neo-concrete art wants to found a new, expressive, "space." This position holds equally for Neo-concrete which denounces in concrete poetry, poetry the mechanistic objectivity already denounced in painting. The concreterationalist poets have also set up an imitation of the machine as the ideal. And likewise space and time are nothing for them but the external relations between word-objects. If that were so, the page would reduce itself to a graphic space, and the word to an element of this space. As with painting, the visual is reduced here to the eye and the poem hardly goes beyond graphic dimensions. Neo-concrete poetry rejects such counterfeit notions and, faithful to the

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very nature of language, affirms thepoemas a temporal being.It is in time and not in that the word unfolds its complex, signifying nature. The page, in Neospace concrete poetry, is the "spatialization" of verbal time: it's a pause, a silence, a It's temporality. not a question, obviously, of returning to oral poetry's concept of time: whereas for the latter language unreels in a succession, in Neo-concrete poetry, language extends itself in a duration. Consequently, contrary to rationalist concretism, which takes the word for an object, transforming it into a simple visual sign, Neo-concrete poetry gives words back their condition of "verb," which is to say a human manner of presenting the real. In Neo-concrete poetry, language does not unreel, it continues. For its part, Neo-concrete prose opens the field to new expressive experiences; it recuperates language as flux, surpasses its syntaxic contingencies and gives a new, more ample meaning to certain solutions equivocally held out for poetry until now. It is in this way, in painting as in poetry, in prose as in sculpture, that Neo-concrete art reaffirms the independence of artistic creationin relationto objective knowledge (science)and practicalknowledge (ethics, politics,industry,etc.). The participants in this first Neo-concretist exhibition do not d form a group.They are not linked to each other by dogmatic principles. The obvious affinity of the investigations they have carried out in the most diverse fields has brought them ? and united them here. The together i i engagement that keeps them connected connects first of all to their iIX :i i^:::---: : !-:^I own experiences, and they will: remain connected insofar as the deep affinity that has brought them together continues. Rio deJaneiro. March 1959. -Amilcar de Castro; Ferreira Gullar; Franz Weissmann; Lygia Clark; Lygia Pape; ReynaldoJardim; Theon Spanudis.

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1960: Death of thePlane The plane is a concept created by humanity to serve practical ends: that of satisfying its need for balance. The square, an abstract creation, is a product of the plane. The plane arbitrarily marks off the limits of a space, giving humanity an entirely false and rational idea of its own reality. From this are derived the opposing concepts of high and low, front and back-exactly what contributes to the destruction in humankind of the feeling of wholeness. It's also the reason why people have projected their transcendent part outward and given it the name of God. In this way the problem of their own existence is raised-in inventing the mirror of their own spirituality. The square took on a magical meaning when the artist understood it as carrying a total vision of the universe. But the plane is dead. The philosophical conception that humanity projected onto it no longer satisfies-no more than does the idea of an external :: : ::: : God persist. In becoming aware that it is a matter of an internal poetry of the self that is projected into the exteriorb it is understood at the same timenthat this poetry must be reintegrated-as an indivisible part of the individual. W, It is this introjection that has also burst the pictorial rectangle
asunder. This rectangle in pieces has

been swallowed up by us and absorbed into ourselves. Before, when artists situated themselves in front of the rectangle, they projected themselves onto it and in this projection they charged the surface with transcendent value. To demolish the as a medium of expression is to become aware of unity as an organic, picture plane living whole. We are a whole, and now the moment has come to reassemble all the pieces of the kaleidoscope into which humanity has been broken up, has been torn into pieces. We plunge into the totality of the cosmos; we are a part of this cosmos, vulnerable on all sides-but one that has even ceased having sides-high and low, left and right, front and back, and ultimately, good and bad-so radically have concepts been transformed. Contemporary humanity escapes the spiritual laws of gravity. It learns to

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float in cosmic reality as in its own internal reality. It experiences vertigo. The crutches that held it up fall far from its arms. It feels like a child who needs to learn to balance itself in order to survive. The primal experience begins. 1960: TheBeasts This is the name I gave my works of this period, due to their fundamentally organic character. And also, the hinge connecting the planes made me think of a dorsal spine. The arrangement of the metal plates determines the beast's position, which at first glance seems limitless. When I am asked how many movements the Beast can execute, I reply: "Ihave no idea, nor do you; but the beast knows...." The Beastshave no reverse side. Each Beast is an organic entity that only reveals itself totally within j -_ its internal expressive time. It has affinities with the conch and shellfish. It's a living organism, an essentially active work. A total, existential integration is established between it and you. A passive attitude is impossible between you and the Beast,either on its part or on yours. What occurs is a kind of embrace between two living entities. It's in fact a dialogue through which the Beast reacts-thanks to its own specific circuit of movements-to the spectator's stimulus. This relation between the work and the spectator-until now a virtual onebecomes effective. The Beast is not composed of independent forms whose development one could pursue indefinitely at one's own will, as in a game. To the contrary: its parts work together harmoniously as in a real organism. When the parts are in movement an interdependence obtains between them. In these relations between the Beast and yourself, there are two types of movement. The first, purely external, is what you do. The second, the Beast's own, is produced by the dynamic of its own expressiveness. The first movement (what you do) has nothing to do with the Beast-because it doesn't belong to it. But, on the other hand, the conjunction of your gesture with the immediate response by the Beast creates a new relationship, and that is possible only as a

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function of the movement that the Beast knows how to execute itself: this is the lifeproperto the Beast. 1964: Trailings Trailings is the name I gave my latest proposition. Henceforth, I will give an absolute importanceto the immanentlyinscribedact that the participant will bring about. The Trailing supplies all the possibilities attached to action itself: it allows for choice, for the unpredictable, for the transformation of a virtuality into a concrete undertaking. Make yourself a Trailing:you take the band of paper wrapped around a book, you cut it open, you twist it, and you glue it back together so as to produce a M6bius strip. Then take a pair of scissors, stick one point into the surface and cut continuously along the length of the strip. Take care not to converge with the pre-existing cut-which will cause the band to separate into two pieces. When you have gone the circuit of the strip, it's up to you whether to cut to the left or to the right of the cut you've already made. This idea of choice is capital. The special meaning of this experience is in the act of doing it. The work is your act alone. To the extent that you cut the strip, it refines and redoubles itself into interlacings. At the end the path is so narrow that you can't open it further. It's the end of the trail. it's (If I use a Mobius stripfor this experiment, becauseit breakswith our spatial habits:right/left; a front/back,etc. It forcesus to experience limitlesstime and a continuous space.) Each Trailingis an immanent reality that reveals itself in its totality during the expressive time of the spectator-author. At the outset, the Trailingis only a potentiality. You are going to form, you and it, a unique, total, existential reality. No more separation between subject and object. It's an embrace, a fusion. The responses, diverse as they are, will be born of your choices. To the dualistic relation of man and Beast that characterized my earlier experiments, there now succeeds a new type of fusion. The work, being the act of making the work, you and it become wholly indissociable. There is a single typeof duration:the act. The act is what produces the Trailing. There is nothing before, nothingafter. Each time I attack a new phase of my work, I feel all the symptoms of pregnancy. Once gestation begins, I have actual physical symptoms, dizziness for example, until the moment I manage to bring my new space-time into the world. That occurs to the extent that I arrive at identifying,at recognizing new expressivethis ness of my workin my everyday The Trailing,for example, only took on meaning life. for me once, crossing the countryside by train, I experienced each fragment of the landscape as a temporal totality, a totality in theprocessofforming,of producing

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itself before my eyes, in the immanence of the moment. The moment, that was the decisive thing. Or another time, while watching the smoke from my cigarette: it was as though time itself were ceaselessly forging its path, annihilating itself, remaking itself, continuously... I already experienced that in love, in my gestures. And each time the expression trailingwells up in conversation, it gives rise to an actual space and integrates me into the world. I feel saved. I also find that my architectural attempts, born at the same time as the wanted to be a link with the collective world. At issue was the creation of Trailings, a new, concrete, space-time-not only for myself, but for others. In making them, these architectures, I felt a great fatigue, as though I had worked at it all my life. Fatigue due to the absorption of a new experience. From which, sometimes, this nostalgia to be a damp stone, a stone-being, in the shade of a tree, outside time. 1965: Concerning Instant the The instant of the act is not renewable. It exists by itself: to repeat it is to give it another ...... It ....meaning. doesn't contain any of past perceptions. It's htrace moment. At the very tanother moment in which it happens it is already a thing-in-itself. Only the instant of the act is life. By its nature, the act contains in itself its own outstripping, its own 0 becoming. The instant of the act is the only living reality in us. To become aware is already to be in is the future in the process of making in the present-now the act. of 1965: Concerning Magic of the Object the The artist who transplants an object of everyday life (readymade) aims to give this object a poetic power. My Trailingsare very different. In their case no need for the object: it's the act that gives rise to poetry. What transpires then of such importance in the readymade? There, despite all transfer from the subject to the object, one still finds a separationof one from the other. With the readymade, we still need a support to reveal our internal

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the past. The raw perception of the act itself. The past and the future are implied

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expressiveness. Now this is no longer necessary because poetry is expressed directly in the act of making. What then is the role of the artist? To give the participant an object that has no importance in itself and which will only take on such to the extent that the participant will act. It's like an egg that only displays its substance when one opens it. I wonder if after the experience of the Trailing,we won't become more aware of each of the gestures we make-even the most habitual. It might be that this is impossible since it would require that from the outset one suspend all practical and immediate meaning for one's gestures. The first time I cut out a Trailing,I lived out a ritual that was very meaningful in and of itself. And I hoped that this same action would be lived with the maximum intensity by future participants. It was necessary that it be purely gratuitous, and that you not attempt to know-as you were cuttingwhat you were going to cut after nor what you had already cut. Concentration and willnaive perhaps-are needed to r grasp the absolute through the act .... of making the Trailing, in holding onto the gratuitousness of the gesture. The Trailing'sact is an aesthetic idea, a proposal, that is addressed to the person for whom labor, increasingly mechanized, automated, has lost all the expressiveness it used to i , i!i ;;::; I, have, when the artisan would I enter into a dialogue with his work. Perhaps this loss of expressiveness in the relation to labor-to the point of being totally alienated-has occurred so that one can now rediscover all the better one's own gesture filled with new meaning. So that just such a change might truly take place in contempoelse the rary art, something is neededbesides simplemanipulationand participationof the It's spectator. crucial that the worknot count in and of itself and instead be a simple springboard for the freedom of the spectator-author. The latter will become aware by means of the proposal offered by the artist. It is not a questionhereofparticipation for participation'ssake, nor of aggression its own sake, but rather theparticipantto for for invest his or hergesturewith meaning and for this act to be nourishedby thought,in the process bringingtheparticipant's freedom action to light. of of When the work was offered up completely finished (as "the work of art") the spectator could only attempt to decode it-and sometimes this took several
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generations to do. It was a problem for the elite. Henceforth, with the Trailings, it's in the very instant that the spectator acts that the meaning of the action is perceived. Communication is more direct. This is no longer a problem for the privileged. Moreover the older type of work-the object closed on itself-reflected an experience already past, already lived by the artist. Whereas now, what's important is the act of making in the present."Artbecomes the spiritual exercise of freedom. The advent of freedom is also what art accomplishes" (Mario Pedrosa). We are opening onto the anonymous work-whose signature is nothing but the participant's action. The artist is dissolved into the world. One's mind is grounded in the collective even while staying the same. For the first time, instead of interpreting a fact of the preexisting world, one changesthis veryworld,through a direct action. Even if this proposition isn't considered a work of art, and if one remains skeptical about what it implies, we still need to undertake it. By means of it, we transform and deepen ourselves, whether or not we know or want it. Of course, the artist thereby gives up a little of his or her personality, but at least the artist helps the participant create a personal image and reach, by means of this image, a new concept of the world. This is an extremely important development in that it is diametrically opposed to the depersonalization that is one of the features of our age. If the loss of individuality, so to speak, is imposed on the modern subject, the artist offers an alternative and the occasion for finding oneself again. Simultaneously with being dissolved into the world, with being grounded in the collective, the artist loses his or her uniqueness and expressive power. He or she is content to propose to others that they be themselves and that they achieve the singular conditionof art, butwithoutart. 1965: AbouttheAct For the first time I have discovered a new reality not in myself but in the world.I encountered a Trailing,an internal journey outsidemyself: Before, the Beast emerged from me, bursting out in an obsessional explosion, in all directions. Now, for the first time, with the Trailing,it's just the opposite. I perceive the whole of

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the world as a single, global rhythm that stretches from Mozart to the footwork of a soccer game on the beach. Architectural space overwhelms me. To paint a picture on a surface or to make a sculpture is so different from living in architectural terms! Now, I am no longer alone. I am pumped up by others. Perception so powerful that I feel myself torn up from my roots. Unstable in space. I feel as though I were in the process of disintegrating. To live perception, to beperception ... These days I am almost continually ill. I can swallow nothing and my body deserts me. Who is the Beast-myself? I become an abstract existence. I sink in real depths, without connections to my work-which looks at me from a distance and from outside myself. "Is it I who did that?" Upheavals. A hysterical sense of leaking. Only a thread holds me fast. My body has left me-trailing. Dead? Living? I am extinguished by odors, sensations of touch, the heat of the sun, dreams. A monster surges up from the sea, surp[ rounded by living fish. The sun shines when suddenly it begins to go out. intensely The fish: dead, their white bellies upward. Then the sun shines again, and the fish are alive. The monster has disappeared into the depths, the fish along with him. I am saved. Another dream: in the inside which is - 1~: the outside, a window and myself. Through l this window I want to pass to the outside which is the insidefor me. When I wake up, the window of my room is the one from my dream; the inside I was looking for is the space outside. The Beast which I called "inside and outside" was born from this dream. It's a stainless-steel structure, supple and deformable. There's a void at the center of ' the structure. When you manipulate it, this inner void gives the structure completely new aspects. I consider "inside and outside" as the completion of my experiments with the Beasts (just before "inside and outside," I worked out another Beast without hinges which I called "before and after"). Often I awaken before the window of my room-looking for the exterior space as though it were "inside."I am afraid of space-but I reconstruct myself by means of it. During crises, it escapes me. It's as though we played-myself and itat cat and mouse, at winner loses. I am before and after, I am the future now. I am inside and outside, front and back.

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What strikes me in the "inside and outside" sculpture is that it transforms my perception of myself, of my body. It changes me. I am elastic, formless, without definite physiognomy. Its lungs are mine. It's the introjection of the cosmos. And at the same time it's my own ego crystallized as an object in space. "Inside and outside": a living being open to all possible transformations. Its internal space is an affective space. In a dialogue with my "inside and outside" work, an active subject encounters his or her own precariousness. No more than does the Beast, the subject no longer has a static physiognomy that is self-defining. The subject discovers the ephemeral in opposition to all types of crystallization. Space is now a kind of time ceaselesslymetamorphosed through action. Subject and object become essentially identified within the act. Fullness. I am overflowing with meaning. Each time I breathe, the rhythm is natural, fluid. It adheres to action. I have become aware of my "cosmic lungs." I penetrate the world's total rhythm. The world is my lung. Is this fusion death? Why does this fullness have the taste of death? I am so incredibly alive ... How to connect these two poles always? Often in my life I have discovered the identity of life and death. A discovery i -----, * .. which nonetheless has a new flavor each time. One night, I had the perception that the absolute was this "full-void," this totality of the interior with the exterior I've spoken of so often. The "full-void" contains all potentialities. It's the act which gives it meaning. The act in the process of happening is :-. (!i time. I wonder if the absolute is not the sum -f-6I #of all acts? Would this be space-time-where time, trailing along, continually makes and remakes itself? This absolute time would be 1 born of itself. We are a spatio-temporal totality. In the immanent act we see no temporal limit. Past, present, future, mix together. We exist before the afterward-but the afterward anticipates the act. The afterward is implied in the act in the process of happening. If time lives in the instant of the act, what comes out of the act is incorporated into the perception of absolute time. There is no distance between the past and the present. When one looks backward, the distant past and the recent past fuse. Perhaps none of this is clear. But the proof of the perception I had is the only thing I cling to.

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1965: Art, Religiosity, Space-Time I've thought about the parallel that exists between religious and artistic evolution. From ancient art until the present-day art that calls for the spectator's participation, the psychic distance between subject and object has not stopped narrowing, to the point that they now melt into one another. Thus the trailing. For its part, religion has witnessed the same progressive fusion. We have passed from God-the-Father, all powerful, to Christ who already has a human dimension. Likewise in the Greek religion, where the gods on Olympus gradually draw close to humanity to the point of taking on its physical appearance. With Nietzsche, all religious projections of humanity toward the outside are rejected, and religious feeling is introverted: humanity is divine. The same thing occurs in art: the proposition, formerly felt by spectators as external to themselves, enclosed within a strange object, is now lived as a part of them, as fusion. Everyone is creator. Art is not bourgeois What has mystification. is the form of communicating the changed proposition. It's you who now give expression to my thoughts, to draw from them whatever vital experience you want. This experience lives in the moment. Everything takes place as though humanity, today, could capture a fragment of suspended time, as if an entire eternity were secreted within the act of participation. This feeling of totality captured within the act should be encountered with joy, in order to learn how to live on the ground of precariousness. This feeling of the precarious must be absorbed for one to discover in the immanence of the act the meaning of existence. 1966: WeRefuse... What's happening around me? A whole group of people clearly sees that modern art doesn't communicate, is increasingly becoming an elitist issue. So they turn to popular art, hoping to fill the gulf that separates them from the majority. Result: they cut the ties that attach them to the development of universal art and fall back onto a form of expression that is local in character. I see another group that clearly feels the enormous crisis of modern expression. Those who compose it try to deny art-but this negation, they find no other way to express it except, precisely, works of art.

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For myself, I belong to a third group that tries to elicit the public's participation. This totally changes the meaning of art as one has understood it up to now. That's why: We refuse representational space and the work as passive contemplation. We refuse all myth external to humanity. We refuse the work of art as such, and we place the emphasis on the act of realizing the proposition. We refuse duration as a means of expression. We propose the very time of the act as a field of experience. In a world in which the subject has become a stranger to its labor, we use experience to incite awareness of the alienation in which one lives. We refuse all transference to the object-even to an object that seems to be there only to underline the absurdity of all expression. We refuse the artist who pretends by means of the object to give a total commuitii Xnication of his or her message, without the spectator's participation. We refuse the Freudian idea of the , j conditioned by its past and we mhaisubject emphasize the idea of freedom. We propose precariousness as a new idea of existence against all static crystallization within duration. 1968: WeAreProposers We are proposers: we are the mill. It's up to you to blow into it the meaning of our existence. We are proposers: our proposal is _ j[ " !8 that of dialogue. Alone, we don't exist, we are at your mercy. We are proposers: we have buried the "workof art"as such and we call out to you so that thought will live by means of your action. We are proposers: we are proposing neither the past nor the future to you, but the "now." 1968: Are WeDomesticated If I were younger, I would be in politics. I feel a bit too at ease, too integrated.

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Before, artists were marginalized. Now, we, the proposers, are too well placed in the world. We are able to live-just by proposing. There is a place for us in society. There is another type of person who prepares what will happen, other precursors. They, they continue to be marginalized by society. When there is a struggle with the police and I see, in Brazil, a seventeen-year-old killed (I put his photo on my wall, in my studio), I realize that he dug a place with his body for the generations that will succeed him. These young people have the same existential attitude as we, they unleash processes whose end they can't see, they open a path whose exit is unknown. But society resists them, and kills them. It's thus that they work all the more. What they try to force is perhaps more essential. They are incendiaries. It's they who shake up the world. We, sometimes I wonder if we are
not a bit domesticated. That annoys me ...

1968: FourRecent Propositions The "MineField":Many high-powered magnets are hidden at different points in the ground which is itself covered over with a carpet of foam rubber. A group of spectators are invited to put on magnetized boots. In the course of their wandering through the work, they are abruptly nailed to the ground-from which they have a hard time disengaging themselves. Dialogue-Belts: The participants are
invited to put on magnetized belts, one

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a positive, the other a negative pole. . According to their circulation, they will be violently projected toward one another, or, to the contrary, will not succeed in joining one another, when the play of the magnets will be contrary to them. Film: Man at the Centerof Events. Four cameras are focused on the head of a walk_ ing man. Having begun to roll at the same time, they record everything that takes place around him, in front, behind, to the left, to the right-and particularly the reactions of the people who observe him, ask questions, want to interrupt, etc. After being developed, the four films are simultaneously projected on the four walls of a little room, at exactly life-size. The spectator enters this room, reliving the event as though he or she had provoked the reactions that are inscribed on the walls.

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Film: Invitation to a Voyage. Two rooms. In the first, sandwiches, newspapers, soft drinks, etc. In the second, a movie screen, and in front of it, plants, sand, shrubs, etc. And in the room, some stationary gym bikes. After having bought all the nourishment they need in the first room, the spectators get on the bikes. The lights dim, a cyclist seen from behind appears on the screen and by his gesture invites the participants to follow him. Everyone begins to pedal, while the screen shows a road that passes by beneath our wheels. Second sequence: the cyclist is stopped at the foot of a tree, to have a picnic. The spectators get off their bikes, spread out in the room, in the midst of the green plants-and make merry in complete freedom. Third sequence: the cyclist is once more pedaling on the screen-followed by the spectators. He stops in front of a bar where young people are dancing. From the screen, they invite the cyclists to join them. The participants begin to dance against backdrop of the image. Objectof the Film: Through a precise, temporal disjunction in our imagination, to - ; us aware of the gestures and attitudes ;'iimake : .i;: i' l; ; . ....%; *~:^.- . : I-?of life.. everydaylife. iE: Jll of

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Works Pages 92-96: Beast, 1960 (Photos: Sergio Zallis). Page 97: Going,1964 (Photo: Beto Felicio). Page 98: Three phases of Going,1964 (Photo: Beto Felicio). Page 100: Breathe with Me, 1968, from Nostalgia of the Body, 1965-88 (Photo: Photos Carlos). with Me, 1968 (Photo: Photos Carlos). Page 101: Breathe Page 102: Breathewith Me, 1966 (Photo: Photos Carlos). Page 103: Mask with Mirrors,1967, from Nostalgia of theBody. Page 104: SensorialGlove,1968, from Nostalgia of theBody. 1968, from Nostalgia of theBody. Page 105: RelationalObject, Pages 106-8: Lygia Clark and Helio Oiticica, Dialogue, 1966 (Photos: Sascha Harnisch).

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