Edgardo Antonio Vigo`s Proyectos a Realizar
Transcripción
Edgardo Antonio Vigo`s Proyectos a Realizar
Essay Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar Vanessa Davidson I n the catalogue accompanying a 1970 exhibition entitled From Figuration to Systems Art, Argentine critic and curator Jorge Glusberg related the curious circumstances of his acquaintance with a little-known artist from La Plata, Argentina, whose proyectos a realizar, or projects to be realized, were on display. “My personal relationship with Edgardo [Antonio] Vigo is emblematic,” he remarked, “for it began not by direct contact between a man from Buenos Aires and another living in La Plata, some 60 kilometers away, but rather by means of the comments made to me in a small town in Czechoslovakia—Trebic—by the painter Ladislav Novak. It was he who spoke to me for the first time of this artist, who I thus discovered, only two years ago, upon returning to Buenos Aires.”1 As director of the Centro de Arte y Comunicación, or CAYC, the focal point of esthetic experimentation in Argentina during the 1970s, Glusberg cultivated contacts with cutting-edge artists and curators abroad and served as local ringleader and talent scout. It may therefore seem surprising that he was unfamiliar with Vigo’s work, which, as he asserts in the same text, perfectly embodies the systems of art he defines as “a language with a dual interest in investigation and communication, and which at the same time commands the spectator’s active participation.”2 Vigo’s 1969 Obras (in) completas, or (In)Complete Works, included in Glusberg’s exhibition, are key examples of the text-based arte de participación he developed to challenge traditional definitions of art, and to question the nature of the creative process (Fig. 1). Sent through the mail to artists and friends near and far away, this work consists of four printed labels meant to be affixed to any objects the recipients deemed worthy of art status. The accompanying instructions specify that, “in line with the theory of participation art, a certain percentage of the creation is transferred to wherever you desire to place them”: a kind of doit-yourself kit for creating ready-mades, the work transforms former spectators into collaborators in processes of Duchampian designation.3 Affixing a set of these labels to earthenware bottles of Bols Gin—marketed as “the traditional drink of Argentine gauchos”— Vigo’s own rendition evokes Duchamp’s iconic bottle rack while also inscribing the project within Argentine popular culture. References to literary packaging (such as “Volumes 1 through 4”) complete the allusion to recipients as “co-authors,” exposing art as a fiction in which viewers are invited to play active roles. Textual operations are at the heart of Vigo’s practice. Recognized as the founder of mail art in Argentina, he is best known for vivid, graphic works on paper. However, his diverse conceptual activities 68 69 Anamesa Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar Fig. 1 Edgardo Antonio Vigo, Obras (in)completas, 1969. Reproduced with permission from the Fundación de Artes Visuales/Centro de Arte Experimental Vigo, La Plata, Argentina. are too often overlooked. This paper explores Vigo’s projects to be realized as paradigms of a participatory conceptual art with roots in poetry and play, and his theories as missing links in the current understandings of conceptualism in South America and its connection to poetic experimentation. Glusberg’s discovery of Vigo’s work through an Eastern European painter in 1968 attests to the artist’s paradoxical status as a marginal figure in his homeland and as a prominent member of the international mail art community that began to flourish in the mid-1960s. Though such practices made him virtually invisible to local commentators, they also enabled him to sidestep institutional mechanisms of promotion and diffusion to participate directly in international networks of collaboration and exchange. Frustrated that few artists within Argentina shared his enthusiasm for “an expansive art that reels you in by playful means, that facilitates the active participation of spectators via the absurd [. . .] No longer contemplation but rather activity,” he sought inspiration and encouragement elsewhere.4 Beginning in 1966 and continuing throughout his career, Vigo exchanged ideas, artworks, and poems with other artists via post, collaborating on textual exhibitions and long-distance conceptual art projects with colleagues he never met from Brazil to New York, Germany to Japan, and even, as we have seen, within the Eastern bloc. To disseminate his and his collaborators’ works and writings, during the 1960s and 1970s he founded a series of magazines imbued with an irreverence that characterizes his larger body of work, and organized ground-breaking exhibitions of such works in Buenos Aires and La Plata.5 One such magazine, Diagonal Cero (1962–1968), was especially important in disseminating Vigo’s poetic experimentation and connecting him to like-minded poets at home and abroad. The La Plata artists and poets who congregated around the magazine became known as the Movimiento Diagonal Cero, whose members included Luis Pazos, Jorge de Luján Gutiérrez y Omar Gancedo, who would later be replaced by Carlos Ginzburg. Taking cues from the Brazilian concrete poets of the Noigandres group, these young poets sought to overhaul outdated poetic tropes by experimenting with typography and word placement, also publishing articles on the most advanced art and poetry of the day.6 Even the format of their magazine was revolutionary: unbound sheets contained in sheaths enabled readers to peruse the pages in the order they wished. Special sections featured poetry and woodcuts by other Latin American artists, consolidating the magazine’s reputation as international in scope, and expanding Vigo’s list of mail art contacts.7 Nor was Vigo alone in experimenting with conceptual art in Argentina in the late 1960s, though he was the sole artist to arrive at conceptualism via poetry. Artists grouped around Buenos Aires’ Di Tella Institute, directed by Jorge Romero Brest, began such experimentation as early as 1966. For example, in 1966 Roberto Jacoby, Raúl Escarri, and Eduardo Costa developed a theory of arte de los medios, or mass media art, which would constitute “the work of art inside mass media itself.”8 Their most famous work, Happening por un jabalí difunto, or Happening for a Dead Boar, was a fictitious 70 71 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar account of a happening, news of which was published in several major newspapers before being exposed as a charade. Other early forays into conceptual art dealt more with social and political issues, blurring the boundaries between art, life, and politics. For instance, for his La familia obrera, or The Proletarian Family, Oscar Bony paid a laborer and his family (father, mother, and son) to sit on a plinth for the duration of the Di Tella’s Experiencias ’68 exhibition, paying them double their daily wages. For Tucumán arde, or Tucumán is Burning, also from 1968, a group of artists from Buenos Aires and Rosario collaborated with union members of the Confederación General de Trabajadores de los Argentinos (CGT, General Workers Confederation of the Argentines) to create a “circuit of counter-information” that would expose the government’s touting of Tucumán as the “garden of the republic” as a fiction. One of the country’s most impoverished provinces, the team documented the misery in Tucumán and displayed their findings in CGT union headquarters, first in Rosario, then in Buenos Aires, where it was shut down by police after two days.9 Although many members of the Tucumán Arde collective ceased creating art after this experience, considering art ineffectual for changing society, New York critic Lucy Lippard returned from Argentina after a 1968 trip “belatedly radicalized,” calling these artists’ “mixture of conceptual and political ideas” a “revelation.”10 Vigo never participated in the Di Tella’s 1960s Experiencias exhibitions, nor was his art politically radical during the 1960s. He did, however, sporadically participate in CAYC exhibitions in the 1970s, always at Glusberg’s invitation. As we have seen, he contributed works to the From Figuration to Systems Art exhibition, which traveled extensively in various versions throughout Argentina and Europe in 1970–74. He also contributed to Escultura, Ruido, y Follaje, or Sculpture, Noise, and Foliage, in 1970, to Arte en Cambio, or Changing Art, and to Arte en Cambio II in 1973. The pieces Vigo contributed to these exhibitions are not well documented, but reviews of the Systems Art exhibition suggest that they included Vigo’s conceptual works, objects, and woodblock prints, the latter harkening back to his first forays into art in the 1950s.11 Vigo studied at La Plata’s School of Fine Arts between 1950 and 1952, setting off for Paris in 1953, where he met Venezuelan artist Jesús Rafael Soto by chance in a bar. He was subsequently exposed to the kinetic experiments of the Denise René Gallery circle, but returned to Argentina in 1954, prior to the landmark Le Mouvement exhibition of 1955.12 Back in La Plata, he exhibited abstract structures made of painted wooden slats connected by metal bands, early experiments with his ideal of “a touchable art” meant to be freely manipulated by the public.13 Hanging from the ceiling and freestanding on the floor, these works’ irregular geometries and play with positive and negative space reflect the influence of Argentine Madí sculpture of the mid to late 1940s, such as Guyla Kosice’s 1948 Mobile Articulated Sculpture.14 However, it is doubtful that any of Guyla Kosice’s sleek, interactive works suffered the fate of Vigo’s mobiles during their first exhibition: instead of approaching them as vehicles for exploring the dynamism of forms in space, as the artist intended, the audience destroyed them. Needless to say, the exhibition provoked what Vigo remembers as a “small scandal” in the insular community of La Plata, and soured the artist’s attitude toward public displays of his work for years to come. Unsettled, yet undaunted, he withdrew to his studio to reconsider fundamental issues of artistic communication and audience engagement, mining Dadaist tactics for shattering the “solemn-religious character of the ‘work of art’” to embrace “lo lúdico,” or “playfulness,” as an esthetic device. In Vigo’s view, playfulness acts as “a point of contact among diverse approaches to art, since it has been proven that this is the only possible way for society to regain its interest and participation in the phenomenon of art.”15 Unfortunately, La Plata residents were as unimpressed with his geometric sculptures as they were uninterested in the “useless machines” he created as satirical commentary on the Argentines’ faith that industry and technology were keys to progress during the desarrollista period. For example, drawing obvious inspiration from Francis Picabia’s mechanical drawings and collages and Jean Tinguely’s meta-mechanical devices, Vigo’s 1957 dysfunctional Cargador eléctrico, or Electric Charger, comes complete with “technical specifications and an instruction manual” for solving most any problem: it can be used “for breasts, for Chinese shadows, to pick yourself up, to charge electricity, to evade sexual impulses.”16 Although he would continue to create such deliberately provocative pieces throughout his career, notably his 1963 Palanganómetro mecedor para criticos de arte (que no se mece), translatable as a Rocking Show-off Machine for Art Critics (that does not rock), in the early 1960s Vigo turned his attention to burgeoning epistolary friendships with artists and poets abroad. Involved in comparable experiments in contexts more propitious for their development, these colleagues shared Vigo’s interests in reformulating poetic and plastic languages into new, inter-media forms. Along with personal letters with news of life in La Plata, in these early mailings Vigo sent poems, magazines, and constructions he called relativuzgirs, in which 72 73 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar he translated his foiled pursuit of touchable, transformable art forms into works on paper. His “mathematical poems” are incomprehensible combinations of letters, numbers, and shapes that undermine numbers’ rational function and are meant to restore math’s “poetic constant and its quotient of mystery and wonder.”17 Projects such as his Revista irritante, or Irritating Magazine, of 1958, also frustrate expectations of practical utility. Vigo envisioned that the recipient would encounter a large, manila envelope in her mailbox and follow a crudely-drawn arrow to a smaller envelope on top, unfolding a note that advises her to “neither look for a solution, nor in its interior: all is relative.” Curiosity piqued, she turns the envelope over and peeks inside, only to find its contents stuck tightly together with sealing wax, making it impossible to extract the work without simultaneously destroying it. Perhaps intended as a parody of the inaccessible, incomprehensible objet d’art, this work—emphatically hecho a mano with banal materials and non-art techniques—entraps unsuspecting participants in a game of artistic discovery that is at once intellectual and manual, and privileges process over product. Vigo takes this emphasis on viewers’ active role in the literal and metaphorical unfolding of artwork a step further in his relativuzgirs of 1957–58 (Fig. 2). Identified as “clandestine visual magazines,” and produced in “collaboration” with two artists Vigo invented, Otto Von Mascht and Igor Orit, the works’ cryptic title is code for Vigo’s interest in art as experience that takes place in real space and time.18 According to the artist, “relativuzgir” is “a marriage between relativity, Einstein’s philosophical-mathematical base, electricity as an active element, and the property of rotation, that is to say the escape from the REPRESENTATION of movement to movement itself.”19 Made of coarse paper with hand-punched perforations, these unassuming works translate concrete art’s vocabulary of colored planes from two dimensions into actual space, enabling those who manipulate them to simulate the construction of abstract paintings and sculptures. Examined by itself, each sheet is a monochrome through which fragments of the world can be glimpsed; superimposition engenders variable patterns of color and form, as layered planes are shuffled and the composition reconfigured. Like Argentine Madí artist Juan Melé’s irregular frame paintings deconstructed into so many multi-colored puzzle pieces, or Soto’s semi-transparent planes detached from their supports for viewers to rearrange at will, these works break geometric abstraction into its constituent parts and invite audiences to usurp the role of artist in putting them back together. Though Vigo did not refer to them as such, these too are Fig. 2 Edgardo Antonio Vigo, Relativuzgir, 1957. Reproduced with permission from the Fundación de Artes Visuales/Centro de Arte Experimental Vigo, La Plata, Argentina. “projects to be realized,” “clandestine” manuals for making the most progressive art of the moment in one’s own living room. Vigo undoubtedly drew from international manifestations of geometric art in creating these works, but his relativuzgirs’ most compelling formal and ideological connections are with Brazilian neo-concrete art and poetry, specifically with Lygia Pape’s Book of Creation of 1959 and Wlademir Dias-Pino’s process poems of the mid-1960s (Fig. 3). As Brazilian poet and theorist Ferreira Gullar asserted in his 1959 “Theory of the Non-Object,” the neo-concretists aimed to “synthesize both sensory and mental experiences” in creations that served as “vehicles for the imagination.” Participants were “asked to use,” rather than contemplate, such works, which “exist[ed] only as potential, waiting for a human gesture to realize [them].”20 This is an apt description of Vigo’s interactive works, begun a few years earlier; Pape’s Book is also paradigmatic in this regard. Accompanied by titles that tell the story of the world’s creation— verbal clues she refused to document in writing, so that each rendition would necessarily diverge from the last—it posits poetry and abstract form as springboards for viewers’ personal constructions 74 75 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar Fig. 3 Wlademir Dias-Pino, Process Poem, mid-1960s. Reproduced with permission from the Fundación de Artes Visuales/Centro de Arte Experimental Vigo, La Plata, Argentina. of a universal narrative. Vigo’s relativuzgirs lack this lyrical dimension, as do Dias-Pino’s visual “poems,” but their formal congruencies are remarkable. Dependent on viewer involvement to transform from two-dimensional sheets of paper into three-dimensional works of art, these artists’ hand-made multiples recast rigid geometries into flexible systems that exist in a latent state of becoming. Their open structures allow for countless variations, while their collapsible formats enable participants to interact with them far from the confines of the museum. Much as Vigo’s work gains further dimensions of time and space as it travels through the mail, Pape’s photographs of the Book in everyday settings around Rio de Janeiro underscore the integration of art into the realm of life, and vice versa, as a crucial aspect of her project. All three works make intellectual operations physical, as participants are invited to turn works over in their hands as well as their minds. Yet Dias-Pino’s constructions offer an additional dimension: are they to be considered poems without words or interactive art? Though Dias-Pino characterized them as “process poems,” in which “what is important is the project and its visualization: [and] the word is dispensable,” for Vigo, they were both.21 These hybrid works also represent a theoretical point of departure for a new paradigm of activity Vigo elaborated in a 1969 treatise entitled “De la poesía/ proceso a la poesía para y/o a realizar,” roughly translatable as “From Process/Poetry to Poetry to be and/or Realized.”22 Written on the occasion of a ground-breaking exhibition he organized at the Di Tella Institute in 1969, the Expo/Internacional de la Novísima Poesía, this document lays the foundations for a theory of conceptual art based on operations inaugurated in poetry rather than art, a connection heretofore unexplored in the Argentine context.23 A didactic text, it takes the form of an “encyclopedic history” that charts the increasing emphasis on reader participation in poetic praxis over the course of the 1960s on an international scale. This evolution is defined in terms of a progression from concretism, to process poetry (also called “poems to be constructed”) to a category Vigo terms “poems to be and/or realized.” Using specific works included in the Novísima Poesía exhibition as examples, Vigo traces the transformation of poetry from a mental exercise, typified by the intellectual gymnastics required by concrete poets’ verbivocovisual play, to a physical activity, exemplified by the three-dimensional, transformable process poems created by Dias-Pino, among others, to works that consist only of minimal “clues” or suggestions for creative action that can take place outside the realm of poetry altogether.24 This last category of “poetry to be and/or realized” leads the way to a synthetic practice that forms the basis of Vigo’s conceptualism: “The possibility of art is no longer only in the participation of the observer, but rather in her constructive-ACTIVATION in an ART TO BE REALIZED that has burned down divisions between inherited genres and proceeds toward a goal of total integration.”25 In this new paradigm, artists and poets no longer merely present audiences with interactive works. They become “programmers of projects” who spur participants to “move from the category of consumer to that of creator.” The projects themselves could take many forms, so long as they are “most modifiable, allowed for changes, replacements, and additions, either of materials or of formal structures that foster play,” and engender “the truly active (and unconditional) participation of the ‘constructor.’”26 Though all of Vigo’s projects to be realized are designed as catalysts for action, they fall into two categories: several constitute proposals for creating art objects, while the majority are intended to generate experiences. In many cases, the use of simple materials 76 77 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar and basic techniques belies complex undercurrents of meaning. If at first glance some projects resemble children’s games, closer reading often reveals subtle political messages. For instance, Vigo’s Historieta para armar, or Comic Strip to be Constructed, of 1971 and Manual e instrucciones para realizar una “obra de arte” (ocidental y cristiana), or Manual and Instructions for the Construction of a (Western and Christian) “Work of Art,” of 1969 offer opportunities to create artworks at opposite ends of the commercial spectrum, from popular culture to fine art. Instructions for the Comic Strip are a jovial enjoinder to participants to seize their paintbrushes: “Sharpen your wit and proceed. We are providing you with MINIMAL CLUES. Color it, give it rhythm, fill in the bubbles and animate the characters. The result (which depends on you) could be: a story of love, of war, of gangsters, of politics (are you up for it?) Then keep it, show it off, destroy it, and come get another one and do it again or . . . we propose that you bring it to be exhibited in our window to share your results.”27 Since the only characters provided for animation are cavemen gathered around a fire, Vigo’s proposed cartoon melodramas must play out in participants’ imaginations—or be created from scratch. Beneath these huddled figures lies an index of the artist’s subtle subversions. Though the declaration “no tengo obras,” “I have no works,” might denote the artist’s transfer of creative responsibility to the recipient, it sounds a lot like “no tengo armas,” “I am unarmed,” a loaded statement in the tense, repressive environment of early 1970s Argentina. Manual and Instructions for the Construction of a (Western and Christian) “Work of Art” has an even more pronounced political bite. Vigo here mocks conservative ideals of high art: as in the Irritating Magazine project, recipients can peek through the hole provided in the envelope, but the secrets to creating a lofty “Work of Art” are locked securely inside. The work’s title, a familiar reference to General Juan Carlos Onganía’s justification of the 1966 military coup (and ensuing dictatorship) as morally righteous, makes the message contained in the cartoon bubble near the top all the more ominous: “Never fear,” it reads, “punishment will be for he who impedes the subjugating empire of esthetic acts. They will receive the . . .”28 Vigo’s work would become more overtly political as the military government cracked down on militants in the years preceding the 1976 military coup. Although his ideal of provoking participation is well suited to activism, the majority of his projects to be realized lacked this political charge before that date. Vigo’s Señalamientos, or Signaling series, begun in 1968, is instead intended to awaken audiences’ appreciation of everyday objects and activities. Delivered to participants via mail or handed out at random on the street, these works function as instruction cards for seeing life as art and art as life. Some propose purposeless action in determined locales, such as the Manojo de semáforos, or Cluster of Traffic Lights, Signaling event, which consisted of “an esthetic and creative analysis of the traffic light located at the intersection of 1st and 60th avenues in La Plata,” on October 25, 1968, at 8:00 pm.29 Spectators were intended simply to contemplate this unassuming element of urban architecture, one of the many they would pass in their daily perambulations around the city, and as such be awakened to the structural beauty of mundane objects. So as not to interfere with others’ realization of this “gratuitous act of esthetic investigation,” Vigo himself did not attend, though he conserved a photograph of the object in question in his archives.30 He was, however, present for the realization of the Paseo visual por la Plaza Rubén Darío, or Visual Stroll Through the Plaza Rubén Darío, in 1970, his fifth Signaling event, staged as part of the CAYC’s Escultura, Ruido, y Follaje exhibition. This piece simply proposed that participants select and mark with chalk a small area in a public park and make a 360 degree turn within it: “register within yourself what you have seen, and make your conclusions: in the end, you will have realized a VISUAL STROLL THROUGH THE PLAZA RUBÉN DARÍO.”31 Suggested variations—enacting the turn standing on tip-toe, crouching, or, impossibly, stretched out flat on the ground— engender different perspectives. Regardless of their chosen orientation, all participants are entitled to a badge emblazoned with a red “V,” the sign or brand of Vigo, a certification of artistic legitimacy that finds parallels in Yves Klein’s “Zones of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility,” Piero Manzoni’s “art certificates,” and fellow Argentine Alberto Greco’s own “dedo vivo” or “living finger” art, begun only a few years earlier. On the other hand, in their celebration of everyday life as raw material for esthetic experience, as well as their cultivation of chance and indeterminacy as crucial components, such signalings are akin to John Cage’s landmark 4´33˝ or “silent piece” of 1952 and to the Fluxus “event scores” born of Cagean influence during the early 1960s, as discussed below. Vigo’s 1973 Acciones interconectadas por sequencias, or Actions Interconnected by Means of Sequences, also encapsulate his esthetic of participation and play. The first proposes that participants “turn around. Look for points of reference at [sic] your choice. Memorize all seen during the 360 degrees of the vision. Statically, repeat the circle by ‘VISUALIZATION-MEMORY.’ To rub out the images, turn around in the opposite sense.”32 Unlike the Visual Stroll Through the 78 79 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar Plaza Rubén Darío, this proposal enables the participant to execute the suggested action whenever and wherever she wishes. The same can be said of the three remaining actions: the second, Modification by Soaking, calls for participants to catch the atmosphere in their hands and “soak” what they have captured; the third, Come and Go, invites recipients to cross the street and take a visual “inventory of things”; and the fourth involves hitch-hiking and assessing the time it takes to move from one place to another and back again. These ephemeral actions are intended to make participants aware of their surroundings by the simplest means, urging them to contemplate the urban fabric they traverse daily in a new light. Once again, life itself is the subject of Vigo’s art, as participants become aware of everyday elements they take for granted. Vigo’s Signaling works reflect an emphasis on what he calls “PRESENTATION rather than REPRESENTATION,” processes of making aware rather than making anew.33 A quasi-mathematical equation included in the Cluster of Traffic Lights event announcement encapsulates this further shift towards dematerialization: “no poetic image, plus no plastic image,” equals “yes real image.” Yet, even as the projects to be realized increasingly privilege action over objects, Vigo continues to rely on text as carriers of meaning and tangible points of contact with participants. For instance, in his (In)conferencia (de la serie Actos a Realizar N. 0001/69), or (Un)Lecture (From the Acts to be Realized Series N. 0001/69), Vigo invites participants not to give spontaneous discourses. The invitation reads: “The street invites you to your own (un)lecture to be given in the place, date, and time to be designated.” The instructions are spelled out clearly: “Decide one day to go to a place with the current invitation in hand and proceed to mumble, sing, whistle, move or sway your body, etc. Do not give your own lecture. For reasons of solidarity, please attend other (un)lectures.”34 This piece, sent complete with a “Ticket-Invitation” to give to others, highlight’s Vigo’s emphasis on the absurd as a valid conceptual strategy. Though many parallels exist, especially with fellow Argentine Alberto Greco’s “living finger” art of the 1960s, Vigo’s conceptualism was quite unlike contemporaneous works by artists from Europe and the United States. In Greco’s works, performed in cities throughout Europe and in Buenos Aires, he would spontaneously sign people and objects or encircle them with chalk, thereby turning them into “living works of art.”35 Some of his most enduring images are photographs of ordinary people (a peasant riding a donkey, a washwoman) holding up signs proclaiming “This is a Work of Art by Alberto Greco,” or simply “Greco.” These works in turn evoke Piero Manzoni’s “art certificates,” mentioned above, handed out to people he signed as works of art in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Manzoni also created a “magic base,” upon which people could stand to become “living sculptures.”36 In effect, in his notes for a project he called “PROSPECTIVA DEL PASADO,” or “PROSPECT FROM THE PAST,” Vigo writes: “MARCEL DUCHAMP, KURT SCHWITTERS, MACEDONIO FERNANDEZ, XUL SOLAR, ALBERTO GRECO, JOSEPH BEUYS would be my 6 names. They are not exclusive or unique, they are simply mine.”37 Macedonio Fernández was a modernist writer and poet (and Jorge Luis Borges’s mentor) who favored puns and had a penchant for the absurd. Xul Solar was a modernist artist and self-styled mystic celebrated by the early 1920s Martin Fierro avant-garde for his brilliant watercolors, strongly influenced by Paul Klee, who also proposed to develop a universal language he called “panlengua.” Duchamp’s influence is clearly seen in Vigo’s varied works, and the Beuysian notion of “social sculpture,” in which “everyone is an artist,” resounds throughout his projects to be realized. Vigo collected a sizable personal library,38 including monographs on Beuys and Duchamp, as well as Gregory Battcock’s seminal 1966 New Art: A Critical Anthology (Spanish translation 1969), so he certainly knew something of international manifestations of conceptual art.39 In addition, among his papers is a transcription in Spanish of Henry Flynt’s prescient 1963 essay “Concept Art,” in Jackson Mac Low and George Maciunas’ An Anthology,40 which would have provided him a window onto Fluxus activities.41 And he surely would not have missed exhibitions on conceptual art held at the CAYC, such as Lucy Lippard’s 1970 2,972,453, Art as Idea in England, organized by Charles Harrison of Art & Language in 1971, Art as Idea (USA), staged by Joseph Kosuth also in 1971, and Body Works, presented by Dennis Oppenheim the same year.42 Though Vigo began his own conceptual activities in 1968, these exhibitions must have given him much food for thought. As far from Joseph Kosuth’s tautological conceptualist practice as it is from Hans Haacke’s political works or the UK Art & Language’s ontological approach, Vigo’s conceptualism shares the most common ground with Lawrence Weiner’s early work. For instance, Weiner’s “Statement of Intent” of 1968 redefines the traditional relationship between artist, audience, and objects by positing the “receiver” as an active participant in the work’s “condition”: 80 81 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar 1. The artist may construct the piece. 2. The piece may be fabricated. 3. The piece need not be built. Each being equal and consistent with the intent of the artist, the decision as to condition rests with the receiver upon the occasion of receivership.43 Although the word “receiver” implies a passive stance, the viewer/ reader is here given an active role in determining the condition— linguistic or physical—and therefore the appearance of the artwork, as in Vigo. “Receiver” also emphasizes the works’ status as communiqués, verbal ideas delivered as messages with the potential for realization as three-dimensional objects, as, for example, in Vigo’s Comic Strip, sent through the mail to multiple recipients. By shifting responsibility for the decision to execute his verbal “sculptures” to the reader/receiver instead of realizing the pieces himself, Weiner remains as removed as possible from the work, as does Vigo.44 And, like Vigo, Weiner also transforms his audience into artists, since, for Weiner, “anyone making a reproduction of my art is making art just as valid as if I had made it.”45 Weiner’s pieces/instructions, such as his ONE QUART GREEN EXTERIOR INDUSTRIAL ENAMEL THROWN ON A BRICK WALL, or his A 36 X 36 REMOVAL TO THE LATHING OR SUPPORT WALL OF PLASTER OR WALLBOARD FROM A WALL, both of 1968, could engender objects as well as actions, while the majority of Vigo’s projects to be realized were intended to induce experiences. And whereas Weiner was responding to New York minimalism (especially evident in his statement that “the piece may be fabricated,” as many minimalist works were during the 1960s) Vigo was reacting to his local context, one tense with the threat of violence, and preparing such works to be sent abroad through the mail. Nevertheless, both artists began their activities as means of circumventing commercial art galleries and delivering their pieces directly to the public, who became complicit in completing the works. For both, the presence of language was enough for these pieces to exist as works of art. Yet the most compelling parallels between Vigo’s projects to be realized and international artistic occurrences are with the proto-conceptual “event scores” created by George Brecht and other future Fluxus artists who met in John Cage’s class on Experimental Music at the New School for Social Research in New York in 1958–59. Fluxus events act as frames that spotlight extra-artistic phenomena, thereby positing characteristically un-artistic or every-day actions and sounds as valid artistic material, as does Vigo. Reflecting Cagean notions of indeterminacy and “purposeful purposelessness or purposeless play,” as well as the context in which they were created, most Fluxus events are presented as musical pieces, though the majority focus as much on the found aspect of the actions performed as on the incidental sounds produced as a consequence.46 As Fluxus Chairman George Maciunas observed in reference to Brecht’s Light Piece of 1962, event performances often constitute “ready-made actions” because “you turn the light on and then off every day . . . without even knowing you’re performing George Brecht.”47 “I tried to develop the ideas I’d had during Cage’s course and that’s where my ‘events’ come from,” Brecht explained in an interview. “I wanted to make music that wouldn’t be for the ears. Music isn’t just what you hear or what you listen to, but everything that happens.”48 Most Fluxus events fit within two general categories. One strain of events posits musical instruments and traditions of musical performance as suitable materials for parody and play; the other consists of breaking down the “everything that happens” into discreet units that celebrate mundane activities and occurrences as art, as Vigo does in Actions Interconnected by Means of Sequences, among other works. All are presented as pithy statements on small cards, and can be performed by anyone regardless of authorship— Flux artists and audience members alike. Brecht’s assertion that “In principle, everybody could use the event scores as paradigms and invent their own whenever they wanted to” eradicates distinctions between artist and audience and leaves receivers’ creativity unbounded, aspirations at the heart of Vigo’s projects to be realized.49 Brecht, like Cage, characterized his work as “an involvement with processes,”50 but processes that instead of “creating something new” simply “bring things into evidence” that are “already there,” much as Vigo attempted to do in, for instance, his Cluster of Streetlights event.51 Yet while Brecht recognized language’s inherent ambiguity as an intrinsic source of indeterminacy, allowing for many possible renditions of his event scores, Vigo’s projects were more consciously defined. Brecht’s best-known events, like Violin Solo (Polish), Flute Solo (Disassembling; Assembling), String Quartet (Shaking Hands), Concert for Orchestra (Exchanging), and Piano Piece (Center), all of 1962, illustrate his propensity for performative “one-liners” that spoof conventional concert behavior, confounding the audience’s expectations by presenting “non-musical” or behind-the-scenes actions as the main attraction. 52 For example, since the verbs intended to spark the action are isolated in parentheses without subjects or objects, for Concert for Orchestra (Exchanging) performers could feasibly exchange anything they had at hand (instruments, 82 83 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar notes, sheet music, chairs, shoes, hats). As Brecht explicitly stated, “it’s implicit in the scores that any realization is feasible.”53 This indeed is what Vigo intended in his projects to be realized, manifest most clearly in the final page of the last issue of Diagonal Cero in 1968. This simple sheet with a round hole punched in its upper quadrant invites recipients to “Make your visual poem/ painting/ object/ sculpture/ landscape/ still life/ nude/ (self) portrait/ interior and any other kind and genre of art.” Its “mode of use” is to “place at a prudential distance before your eye and frame with free liberty the genre you desire.” For Vigo, as for the Flux artists who performed Brecht’s events at Fluxus Festivals around the world in the early to mid-1960s, conceptualism was an opportunity to spur others to creative action and play. This emphasis on participation and play, and his penchant for the absurd, differentiate Vigo’s works from that of other conceptual artists in Argentina and elsewhere. The sole Latin American artist to arrive at conceptual art via poetry, he was also the only South American artist to send conceptual artworks by mail. Just as his relativuzgirs constitute intermediary steps between art, poetry, and participatory action, on Vigo’s journey from concrete art to conceptualism via Dada and process poetry, projects to be realized ultimately serve as frames for action and experience, and their paper supports, as lenses through which life and art look indistinguishable. 7 8 9 10 11 12 r Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jorge Glusberg, De la figuración al arte de sistemas: Luis Fernando Benedit, Nicolás García Uriburu, Edgardo Antonio Vigo (Buenos Aires: CAYC, 1970), p. 10. This and all subsequent translations are mine, unless otherwise indicated. Ibid. Vigo, Obras (in)completas, 1969. [. . . respetando la teoría de un Arte de participación y una traslación de algunos porcentajes de la creación ubique donde Ud. desea los mismos.] Emphasis in the original. Vigo, “Declaraciones fundamentales,” 1968, reproduced in exhibition brochure for Edgardo Antonio Vigo: Poeta a la distancia, Galería I.C.I. (Buenos Aires, August 1997). [Un arte de expansión, de atrape por vía lúdica, que facilite la participación—activa—del espectador vía absurdo [. . .] No más contemplación sino actividad.] For example, Vigo’s Expo/Internacional de la Novísima Poesía, held at the Buenos Aires Di Tella Institute from March to April, 1969, and later at La Plata’s Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes in April to May of the same year, included more than 150 innovative works by poets from 15 countries, including Europe, the Unites States, and South America. The Noigandres poets of São Paulo included Neide, Álavro de Sá, and Décio Pignatari. 13 14 15 16 17 18 For example, number 13 contained a section on “Poesía joven del Paraguay” as well as a “Pequeña antología del bolsillo de poetas mexicanos,” two poems by a Venezuelan poet and a manifesto from a Nicaraguan artist; number 14 included the “Segunda antología del bolsillo de poetas mexicanos” and a “Pequeña antología de poesía uruguaya”; and number 17 contained a “Breve antología de la joven poesía chilena.” Woodcuts by artists from various Latin American countries were featured throughout the magazine’s 28 issues, especially after 1966 when Vigo’s mail art practice began. Eduardo Costa, Roberto Jacoby, and Raúl Escari, “Un arte de los medios de comunicación,” manifesto, 1966. Reprinted in Oscar Masotta, Happenings (Buenos Aires: Editorial Jorge Álvarez, 1967) p.17. For more information on conceptual art in Argentina, see Mari Carmen Ramirez, “Tactics for Thriving on Adversity: Conceptualism in Latin America, 1960-1980,” in Global Conceptualism: Points of Origin, 1950s–1980s (New York: Queens Museum of Art, 1999), and Luis Camnitzer, Conceptualism in Latin America: Didactics of Liberation (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007). Lucy Lippard, Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object from 1966 to 1972 (Berkley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1973), p. ix. For example, one reviewer of From Figuration to Systems Art in Argentina, held at the Camden Arts Centre in 1971, writes: “[Vigo’s] designs incorporate allusive additives of the kind we have come to associate with Kurt Schwitters; envelopes, tickets, etc. but their presence in his compositions serves secondary purposes. They guide the eye’s thinking along lines predefined by his use of letter forms and his handling of these has the sensuously perfect silence of Arp’s sculptures. He discovers a native graphic dynamism in the western script’s units which can be bent to serve his own sensitive purposes. In his free-standing objects he tends to display ambiguously phrased definitions of intent and their minimal sculptured volumes underline, as jokes do, a point of his own. His empty scrolls, for instance, represent volumes of his Obras (in)completas. In fact, his punning is exact and realised in accordance with ornamentally valid arguments.” Review found without date, publication, or author in Vigo’s archive, La Plata. The importance of Denise René’s Gallery as a haven for international abstract artists cannot be overestimated. René promoted “hard-edge,” Constructivist abstraction as well as kinetic and Op art, while others embraced art informel, and her gallery provided a meeting place for emerging and established abstractionists in the early 1950s. Vigo, “Declaraciones fundamentales,” op cit. [un arte tocable] The Argentine Madí movement, founded in 1946, advocated invention rather than representation and published a magazine to express their views, Arte Madí Universal, published between 1947 and 1950. Its primary members included Gyula Kosice, Carmelo Arden Quin, Martín Blaszko, and Rhod Rothfuss. Kosice’s articulated sculptures were meant to be manipulated into various configurations by the public. For more information on Madí, see Gradowczyk and Perazzo, Abstract Art from the Río de la Plata, 1933–1953 (New York: Americas Society, 2001), pp. 42–44. Vigo, “De la poesía/proceso a la poesía para y/o a realizar,” (Diagonal Cero: La Plata, 1969), p. 9. [Y hablamos de lu lúdico como puente de contacto en diferentes formas de encarar el arte, porque está comprobado que esa es la única vía posible para que la sociedad retome su interés y participación en el fenomeno de arte.] Cargador eléctrico, 1957, modified in 1974. [para senos, para sombras chinescas, para levantarse a sí mismo, para carga de electricidad, para evadirse de lo sexual] Vigo, catalogue for Expo/Internacional de la Novisima Poesía, 1969. [. . . la constante poética y su cuota de misterio y asombro.] In a letter to Julien Blaine dated July 22, 1992, Vigo explained that a project of sending 25 letters to phony addresses was a simple play with the postal 85 84 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 service. “Both the character and the addresses were pure creations of mine.” Vigo archive, La Plata, Argentina. Cited by María José Herrera, “Vigo en (con)texto,” in Edgardo-Antonio Vigo (Espacio Fundación Telefónica: Buenos Aires, 2004), p. 14. Vigo also used the term to designate drawings and collages produced in the 1950s. [“Lo relativo, base filosófico-matemática de Einstein, la electricidad como elemento actuante y la propriedad de girar, es decir escaparse de la REPRESENTACIÓN del movimiento por el movimiento en sí.”] Emphasis in the original. Ferreira Gullar, “Teoria do não-objeto,” in Jornal do Brasil (Sunday Supplement), 21 November 1960. Reproduced in Aracy A. Amaral, ed. Projeto construtivo brasileiro na arte, 1950–62 (Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: MECFUNARTE, 1977), pp. 90–94. Dias-Pino continues, “Poema/Processo is that which, in each new experience, introduces informational processes. This information can be esthetic or not: the important thing is that it be functional, and in this way, consumed.” Cf Dias-Pino, “Processo, Linguagem, e Comunicação,” Revista de Cultura Vozes, 1971, and Álvaro de Sá and Moacy Cirne, “Do Modernismo ao Poema/ Processo e ao Poema Experimental,” Vozes, 1972, Vol. LXXI, N. 1, Jan/Feb, 1978. An earlier version of this text, “Un arte a realizar,” appeared in the La Plata magazine Ritmo, N. 3, 1969. Vigo staged an exhibition entitled Exposición de Novísima Poesía de Vanguardia in May of 1968 in Buenos Aires Galería Scheinson with works by La Plata poets Carlos Raúl Ginzburg, Jorge de Luxán Gutiérrez, Luis Pazos, and Vigo himself, presented with a text by French poet Julien Blaine. From an unpublished, undated manuscript found in Vigo’s archive, “Panorama sintético de la poesía visual en Argentina.” In Neide de Sá, Alvarez de Sá, and Décio Pignatari’s “Pilot Program for Concrete Poetry,” Noigandres, N. 4, 1958. Vigo, “De la poesía/proceso a la poesía para y/o a realizar,” op cit., p.10. [La posibilidad del arte no está ya sólo en la participación del observador sino en su ACTIVACIÓN-constructiva, un ARTE A REALIZAR que quemó las divisiones de los géneros heredados y va a la meta de la integración total.”] Emphasis in the original. Ibid., p. 27. [un “proyecto modificable” en grado sumo [. . .] permite cambios suplantaciones y agredados ya sea de materiales o de estructuras formales en aprovechamiento de lo lúdico [. . .] basada en la participación realmente activa (y no condicionada) del “constructor.”] Emphasis in the original. Historieta para armar, 1971. [Aguece su ingenio y proceda. Le damos a ud. las CLAVESMINIMAS. Coloreé, déle ritmo, llene las burbujas y anime los personajes. El resultado (que de ud. depende) puede ser: una historia de amor de guerra de pistoleras o política (se anima?) Luego, quédese con ella, lúzcala, destrúyala y venga a buscar otra para insistir . . . o le proponemos traerla para se expuesta en nuestra vidriera y compartir su resultado.] Vigo, Manual and Instructions for the Construction of a (Western and Christian) “Work of Art,”1969. Vigo, Manifesto for Manojo de Semáforos, 1968. [un análisis estético y creativo del manojo de semáforos ubicado en las calles 1 y 60 de La Plata] Ibid. [acto de investigación estética gratuita] “Un paseo visual a la Plaza Rubén Darío, 1970. [[. . .] grabe en ud. lo visto, saque sus conclusiones, en definitiva ud. ha realizado “UN PASEO VISUAL A LA PLAZA RUBÉN DARÍO.”] Acciones interconectadas por sequencias, 1973. Vigo’s translation. Ibid. [PRESENTACIÓN en lugar de REPRESENTACIÓN] Emphasis in the original. (In)conferencia (de la serie Actos a Realizar n. 0001/69) [Decida un día alejarse o acercarse a un lugar portando la presente invitación y proceda diclar, mascullar, cantar, silbar, agitar o bambolear su cuerpo, etc., no decir su propia 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 conferencia. Por razones solidárias se ruega asistir a las demás (in)conferencias.] Cf Alberto Greco (Valencia, Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, Centro Julio González, 1991), and Mari Carmen Ramírez, “Tactics for Thriving on Adversity: Conceptualism in Latinn America, 1960–1980,” in Global Conceptualism: Points of Origin 1950s–1980s (New York; The Queens Museum of Art, 1999), p. 61. Cf Piero Manzoni (Los Angeles Museum of Art; Comuni di Roma, Palazzo di Esposizioni; Ravenna, 1995). Vigo continues, “ Everyone has the right to take other names, facts, and actions for their PROSPECT FROM THE PAST that enables each one his panorama for the adventure-apocalypse. Further, their selection will open polemics because for some, my names could come from other fields. My elective base is the hermeticism of their labyrinthine languages that propels the search to untwine the tangled web of their proposals.” [MARCEL DUCHAMP, KURT SCHWITTERS, MACEDONIO FERNÁNDEZ, ALBERTO GRECO, XUL SOLAR. Serán mis seis nombres. No son exclusivos ni únicos, simplemente son míos. [. . .] Es derecho de cada uno tomar de la PROSPECTIVA DEL PASADO otros nombres, hechos, y acciones que nos permiten aclarar para cada cual el panorama de la aventura-apocalipsis. Incluso, abrirá polémicas su selección porque para algunos, mis nombres podrían prevenir del otro campo. Mi base electiva, es el hermeticismo de sus laberínticos lenguajes que promueven el recorrido para desanudar la madeja de sus propuestas.] From Vigo’s “PROSPECTIVA DEL PASADO,” undated, found among Vigo’s files, Vigo archive. Emphasis in the original. Vigo collected a wide variety of books, from art history and theory to psychoanalysis, most dating to the post-war period and stored at the Vigo archive in La Plata. He accumulated a considerable amount of publications on Dada and Surrealism, as well as an important collection of writings on Duchamp. The Mexico City 1969 translation includes essays by Duchamp (‘El acto creativo”), Leo Steinberg (“El arte contemporáneo y la confusión de su público”), Greenberg (“La pintura modernista”), Max Kozloff (“La esquitsofrenia crítica y el método intecionalista”), Susan Sontag (“El escenario del arte y el arte de no saber escribir”), Lucy Lippard (“Cartas de Nueva York, 1965: Reinhardt, Duchamp, Morris”), Ad Reinhardt (“Escritos”), John Cage (“Jasper Johns: Ideas y anécdotas”), Leo Steinberg (“Las cuadras de Paul Brach”), Samuell Adam Green (“Andy Warhol”). The complete title is: An anthology of chance operations, concept art, anti art, indeterminacy, plans of action, diagrams, music, dance constructions, improvisation, meaningless work, natural disasters, compositions, mathematics, essays, poetry (New York: La Monte Young and Jackson Mac Low, 1963). Vigo often transcribed texts that interested him with his typewriter, frequently arranging the words on the page to create typographical designs. One assumes that these texts were taken from borrowed books, translated by his wife Elena Comas, and then transcribed by the artist. Lippard’s efforts to create “‘suitcase exhibitions’ of dematerialized art that would be taken from country to country by ‘idea artists’ using free airline tickets” culminated in three shows, each titled according to the population of each city. The first was staged in Seattle (557,807); the second in Vancouver ( 955,000); and the final exhibition was held at the CAYC and was “a more strictly conceptual and portable exhibition.” Lippard, op. cit., p. xi. Published in Arts Magazine, April 1970. Weiner terms his verbal “statements” “sculptures,” insisting that “we all know that even a sentence is an object. Everything is an object.” In “Lawrence Weiner: Interview with Lynn Gumpert,” in Lynda Benglis, Joan Brown, Luis Jimenez, Gary Stephan, Lawrence Weiner: Early Work (New York: New Museum of Contemporary Art, 1982), p. 53. 86 87 Anamesa / Essay Davidson / Edgardo Antonio Vigo’s Proyectos a Realizar 45 Weiner, “October 12, 1969,” in Ursula Meyer, Conceptual Art, (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1971), p. 217. 46 Cage, “Experimental Music,” in Silence (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1961), p. 12. 47 Transcript of the videotaped “Interview with George Maciunas by Larry Miller,” March 24, 1978, in Fluxus etc./Addenda 1, The Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection (Detroit, 1983), p. 21. 48 George Brecht, in “An Interview with George Brecht by Irmeline Leeber,” in An Introduction to George Brecht’s Book of the Tumbler on Fire (Milan, 1978), p. 84. 49 Ibid., p. 119. 50 Ibid., p. 80. 51 George Brecht, in “A Conversation about Something Else: An Interview with George Brecht by Ben Vautier and Marcel Alocco,” in An Introduction to George Brecht’s Book of the Tumbler on Fire, op. cit., p. 68. 52 It is difficult to pinpoint many of Brecht’s event scores’ exact dates since the majority were printed on small paper cards and sold in “box-sets” like Water Yam, printed in 1962. It is safe to assume that the bulk of these scores were created between 1958 and 1962. 53 George Brecht, in “An Interview with George Brecht by Michael Nyman,” in An Introduction to George Brecht’s Book of the Tumbler on Fire, op. cit., p. 108. 88 Anamesa / Essay