"It is not the sky we mean, but the past a non existent wall"
– Ron Silliman: Paradise (1984)
"If polyphonic orientation is wanted, the tones must be separated
while at the same time they are interwoven"
– Asger Jorn: Mind And Sense (1964)
Historiography is one thing when
it is a history in the abstract that seeks to find origins and from
these origins reassume the reproduction of those already outmoded
social relations that, at the deepest level, always inveigle us towards
intrepid discovery and the idealised wish to be someone other than who
we are becoming to be. Another historiography can exist. It can be a
drift in and out of archives; stealing in, taking out, photographing,
noting, continuing in a bar or outside a station by the sausage wagon.
You bump into it. Trip over the remnant of a bunker. Descend down a
ladder opposite the barracks. It reanimates you as you slowly discover
that the vista doesn't narrow to a vanishing point but that, once
arrived at, the vista widens, can no longer contain the desire that
made it so noticeable, and sets this desire to rove amidst detail,
conjecture and imagined presences. So too, the researchers disappear in
the loop of the roundtower, on the waves of Inderhavnen, in a practice
of histogenesis (1). After checking the acoustics of a ruin they next
sidle into the routed spaces of a backlit museum and rifle through a
dark case of exile. No longer is Asger Jorn the star pupil of Fernand
Leger, but one of many autodidacts who went to listen and discuss with
Christian Christensen, the Danish anarcho-syndicalist. And Jorn has a
brother too. His name is Nash as there can only be one by the name of
Jorn. In the shadows – fogs obscure the many bridges – Nash, a poet,
reinvents himself... but not quite as a Nashist. Somewhere nearby and
already distancing himself towards a later rapprochement is J.V.Martin,
an illustrator, a painter, a pyromaniac. At the so-called end of it all
this latter tops the accounting list with Debord and the entire Italian
section that goes by the name of Sanguinetti. So much for Pavan and
Laugesen. So much for the Situationist Antinational of '74.
We must accept the
standard Situationist historiography before we can read the
hieroglyphs. We accept it because our friends wrote it and we know they
wrote it so that it wouldn't have to become too well trod and, being
thus well treaded, arise as a litany that incants itself as we pretend
it is ourselves who are speaking and not the assemblage of which we are
only a part. In other words we accept Cobra as Copenhagen, Brussels,
Amsterdam. These places cannot be denied. They do, for the time being
at least, exist. And Jorn, existing too, was, like a good striker –
here, there and everywhere, looking for an inverse geometry of angles.
For him, and the others at Cobra, painting was already a realistic
abstract-expressionism, a surplus of energies, but, coming with a
consciousness of its own practice, coming at us with theoretical
tangents that sought a reconciliation of passion and logic, it never
quite revelled in the easy light of having its consciousness made for
it. A 1949 a priori: "True realism, materialist realism, renouncing the
idealist equation of subjectivity with individualism, as described by
Marx, seeks the forms of reality that are 'common to the senses of all
men'" (2). Pollock was an individualist in a world of masses. Jorn and
the others already had subjectivities, intensities, in a world that had
them too. Jorn always turned up. From CIA to SI via Alba and the
International Movement For An Imaginist Bauhaus Jorn wove people
together so that they could better break apart. He was at the founding
conference of the SI in 1957. Barely six months later Debord, a guest
in Copenhagen and brought to meet Christensen whilst meeting Nash,
collaborates with Jorn and the two relaxedly knock-up Fin De Copenhagen
as the London Psychogeographical Committee. With its iconic weather
maps recurring against a backdrop of paint drips, demi-lines and
newspaper fragments, this Fin De Copenhagen, already blunting pop art's
impact and provoking thoughts of a potential topography, still seems to
suggest the flexible fixity of a situated place as it is buffeted by
meteorological currents no nation or government can control. So too,
historians despair at the impending lack of finality and at the already
tangible sense of obsfucation: an obsfucation that puts us, like the
fogs that had us in the centre of nowhere, at both the hub and the
periphery of a mutable culture, in the interland of contradiction. The
two cover their tracks because to be tracked is to no longer be able to
play these games of bad passion. Visibility does nothing for
subversives – it beckons them to police cells and art bars that can
only offer the conversation of screws, curators, dealers and
journalists. But, on the same trip, visiting the Silkeborg Museum in
Denmark, Debord dreams of building an archive for the Situationist
International. So, already, at the very outset, before any documents or
activities have been produced and enacted, with 'everything to invent',
Debord, either with a sense of grandeur he feels sure he can live with
or in calling on history to be his judge, has something tangible in
mind. Is it, then, a case of what follows being done with half an eye
on posterity? Is it here, on the steps of Silkeborg, where a
Situationist ideology took hold and not in the convenient scapegoats
who went by various names at various times: Spur, Nash, Garnault,
Vaneigem. Posterity is transcendence... passion and logic unite in the
interstices of the everyday.
To announce a
presence something already present has to be revealed as too seamlessly
enunciating the persistent social relations. At first the SI's targets
gave rise to incisive critiques of cultural practices that had had
their day, but wouldn't tire of that day. Jorn's playful demolition of
Lettrist pretension, appearing over the two issues of Internationale
Situationniste published in 1960 – Originality & Magnitude and Open
Creation And Its Enemies – are not only eclectic expressions that
fulfil Jorn's ethos of writing "to oppose any clear-cut schemes or
directives about art" (3) they work on expanding a never finalised
theory of situations towards an extemporised topology, towards
situlogy. Not content with the role of pedagogue and preferring to
treat theoretical matter as an expressionist material, Jorn drew the
'construction of situations' as a "transformative morphology of the
unique". Breaking away from the neutralising equivalences of a topology
based upon geometry, Jorn attempted to offer "an inverse geometry" that
took account not solely of space, but of the transformative action of
time. Key here was Jorn's guiding principle of "the creation of
variabilities within a unity, and the search for unity among the
variations" (4) with which he tried to dynamise topology and to
overcome the self-atomisation of individualist artists through his
constant support of groupings such as the SI. For Jorn value lay in
variability, in the "morphology of time", that makes uniqueness a
common quality. He saw the schematics of Isou and the Lettrists as a
scientific practice of art that dissemblingly sought to extol
individual genius, as an indication that the creative aspect of human
life – the persevering with being as a morphing variability – was
forever being seduced towards a functionalism that served capitalism –
the preservation of being as an individualised unity. In the late 50s,
then, this variability as a human value, the "unique of the identical
form", had, for Jorn, a progressive revolutionary value that could be
found in the Situationist International as it grew to include fledgling
Italian and German Sections that were both instigated through contacts
Jorn had made. The strongest of these contacts seems to have been that
made with the Spur Group. Together they authored the first Spur
Manifesto and proclaimed a new aim for artistic practice beyond
commodification and non-committal contemplation: "Abstract painting has
given us the commonplace of four-dimensional space. The painting of the
future is polydimensional. Endless dimension awaits us". By the Third
Situationist International Conference of 1959 Spur had become
participants in the Situationist project. From 1960 they started to
issue their own, largely graphic, journal and began to work even closer
with other Scandinavian Situationists such as Staffan Larsson, Katarina
Lindell and Jørgen Nash. Indeed it was Nash, the one time vice-chairman
of the Aspekt Association – a grouping dedicated to politics and
culture – who co-edited the second issue of the Spur magazine and who,
together with Jacqueline de Jong and Danish artist Albert Mertz,
collaborated on a Spur film – So Ein Ding [Such A Thing] – rumoured to
have been orchestrated and urged upon its participants by Jorn. On this
same trip to Munich in early 1961, a collectively authored tract,
titled The Avant Garde Is Unacceptable, was printed and distributed as
an intervention against a conference on modernism: "In this society,
artists are expected to take over the role of the Court Fools of the
past, expected to take payment for providing society with the delusion
that there is a special kind of cultural freedom"(6). It was the status
of this 'freedom' that would soon lead to a rift in the movement – a
rift, each side of which maintained a presence in Scandinavia and a
claim on the title Scandinavian Situationism. This same rift was
straddled by Asger Jorn. He had perhaps, in Open Creation, already made
reference to it when he suggested that there were two tendencies of
situlogy – a ludic, playful, experimental tendency and an analytical,
technical and scientific tendency. Rather than seeing these as mutually
exclusive Jorn, ever hopeful for an interweaving, offered that situlogy
could give a "decisive push to the two tendencies".
Can we speak of a
rift, a clear cut secession? Does a cultural practice that is fluid,
collaborative and rhizomatic lend itself to an historiographic
segmentation? The finer details are always absent, their enigmas help
form an epistemophilic drive that makes research a matter of group
analysis, makes history a possible practice and makes life
associational. So, the year 1962, the year of the schism between the
artists and the politicos, the practitioners and the theorists, comes,
on this trip through the archives, to be a little more blurred than we
thought. It is this blurring of the edges that constitutes the dynamic
field of homeomorphism, the variability within a unity where the unity
is the accepted facts and the variability forms a chink in what we are
led to believe. Not only have Nash and Jorn decided to form a Bauhaus
Situationniste (BS) in 1960 (7), purchasing a farm in southern Sweden,
but Debord, Strijbosch, Bernstein and J.V. Martin are to make an art
exhibition in Odense in 1963. Either side of these events lies the case
of Spur. With copies of their magazine impounded by the German police
and the Spur members up in court on charges of producing 'degenerate
art' it was declared by the 'Conseil Central' of the Situationist
International that the Spur Group (i.e. the German Section) had been
excluded. The variability within a unity that Jorn espoused as 'open
creation' had been interpreted by the 'Conseil Central' as fractional
activity. Charged with disregarding Situationist discipline – they
failed to communicate fully with Nash and de Jong who were 'Conseil
Central' appointees to their 'editorial board' – the Spur Group were
condemned as using the SI in order to 'arrive' as artists. Perhaps more
damning, and indicative of an inconsistent proprietorship over
knowledge that would come to haunt the SI, the Spurists were accused of
a "systematic misunderstanding of Situationist theses". That the
'Conseil Central' did not aim their declaration at Jorn and Nash when
these two founded the BS at 'Drakabygget' in Southern Sweden, is
perhaps indicative of an anomaly of Situationist discipline: its
arbitrary wielding of a fledgling sovereignty. It seems equally
haphazard when, in Jean Sellem's chronology, all the Spurists are to be
found as members of the BS alongside Ansgar Elde, Jaqueline de Jong,
Asger Jorn, Ambrosius Fjord (psued), J.V.Martin, Jørgen Nash and Hardy
Strid. The exclusion of the German Section – who had made their Spur In
Exile edition at Drakabygget – sparked-off an almost immediate protest
in the form of the leaflet Danger! Do Not Lean Out signed by de Jong,
Nash and Elde. In it these three say that they were prepared to
criticise the Spur Group (presumably over the planned publication of
all issues of their magazine by an Italian art publisher), but were led
to protest against the action of the 'Conseil Central' – Guy Debord,
Raoul Vaneigem, Atilla Kotanyi, Uwe Lausen – which they saw as a 'fait
accompli'. A decision had already been arrived at by the four which the
signatories indignantly point out was itself an indication of
'fractionalist' activity: "An organisation whose essential decisions
are not based on the principle of debate is totalitarian and does not
agree with our rules of collaboration... To call in comrades from other
countries only to hand out a printed leaflet is not a very positive
method. It can be explained only as an outcome of the non-activity
policy of those four members" (8). This leaflet was met with a further
proclamation from the SI – calling itself the 1'Internationale
Situationniste – that first excludes all 'Nashists' and then goes on to
give the "supreme authority" to represent the Scandinavian section of
1'IS to J.V.Martin. The latter, a painter, who had worked with Jørgen
Nash in the Aspekt Association, who illustrated an Editions
Internationale Situationniste book of poems by Nash in 1961, and had
exhibited with Hardy Strid, also wrote a press release concerning the
ideological conflicts with the Drakabygget group. With the exclusion of
Strid, who was secretary for the Scandinavian section for barely a
month, all 'Nashists' had been excluded from 1'IS by the Sixth SI
Conference in Antwerp, leaving J.V.Martin in a somewhat isolated
position in Randers, Northern Denmark. It was Martin who proposed that
the term Nashism be adopted by the 1'IS: "Principally known for his
attempt to betray the revolutionary movement and theory of that time,
Nash's name was detourned by that movement as a generic term applicable
to all traitors in struggles against the dominant cultural and social
conditions"(9). This power to allot 'supreme authority' and name
'traitors' is another indicator of the sovereignty that 1'IS took upon
itself. Maybe it was calculated to irrevocably alienate Nash from any
claim to the Situationist 'title' and similarly to ward-off any
pretenders to the sovereign mantle: several months before this round of
exclusions, in the autumn of 1961, a magazine called Nye Linjer [New
Lines] had appeared in Copenhagen. Situationist ideas were in other
heads.
It is unlikely
that the 'Conseil Central' would have been too dismayed at the
accusations of their being dictatorial. Back at the London (1960) and
Goteborg (1961) Conferences the debates were cast as being between the
artists and the politicos. This led to a moment when the German section
had to leave the room. Heinrad Prem, a member of Spur, had read a
position-paper that cast doubt over the revolutionary efficacy of that
very proletariat that was coming to be the focal point for the 1'IS
ever since it had made contact with the French Socialisme ou Barbarie
group. Prem instantly withdrew the declaration in favour of unity. At
Goteborg the debates gave rise to a ruling on 'antisituationist' art
presented by Kotanyi – a move intended to preempt the use of the term
'situationist' as a mark of avant-garde value. Jørgen Nash is reported
as begrudgingly accepting this but, in a slip of the pen, the note
taker cannot hide his own disgruntlement with Nash and describes how
"only Nash objects, his spite and indignation having become sharper and
sharper throughout the whole debate, to the point of uncontrolled rage"
(10). Warming up for the 'supercession of art' – according to Vaneigem,
the actualisation of art and philosophy in individual lived experience
– the Spur and BS exclusions are linked to those differences of opinion
over the revolutionary efficacy of creativity and the status of
artistic 'freedom'. Jorn's 'unity of diversity' and the formation of
new counter-values based upon the surplus energies of creativity was,
if it ever had any practical credence within the 'Conseil Central',
being outmanoeuvred by the figure of the revolutionary proletarian as
the pivotal agent of an unambiguous transformative creativity. For
Debord et al a difference of 'opinion' over such matters was untenable
to the degree that their coming adherence to Marx's presentation of the
material reality of class took matters beyond opinion. The 1'IS, then,
was coming to see the artists in their midst as the symbols of an
ambiguous, readily assimilable, practice that they fetishized in
inverse relation to their being blind to the ambiguities of class – a
blindness that eventually impeded their ability to theorise the
recomposition of this class. However, could it also have been that the
practice of art was seen as being too close to the question of the
spectacle that the 1'IS was on the threshold of theorising? The problem
with this concept, a reduction of capitalist social relations to those
'mediated by images', cast its shadow over these exclusions as,
perhaps, the appearance of an intransigence informing the self-image of
the 1'IS. Accusations of 'dictatorial' behaviour, then, were nothing
when set beside the need to theorise the spectacle, and thus replace
artistic ambiguity with a written coherence that enabled the 1'IS to
project an unassimilable self-image as the proof of a pure and eminent
revolutionary intent, a sovereign exemplarity. This is further
compounded when we recall the plan to set up a Situationist archive in
Silkeborg (extensively diagramed by Debord) (10a). Knowing that many of
their other concepts were indistinguishable from the diverse
collaborations that they had embarked upon, the theory of the spectacle
was, and has since become, the 1'IS's most renowned, if flawed,
contribution to revolutionary theory. To be propounding such a theory
whilst collaborating with visual artists could have been seen to be
incoherent in terms of a projected practice and hence become a major
dent to the collective ego and its bid for an exemplary posterity: "The
ambiguity of all revolutionary art lies in the fact that the
revolutionary aspect of any particular spectacle is always contradicted
and offset by the reactionary element in all spectacles" (11). In many
ways the conflicts with Spur and the BS were to some degree encouraged
and used by the 1'IS to prune itself of contradictions that may have
eventually led to a deepening of the theory of the spectacle, a
politicisation of the practice of art and a productive extension of its
notion of class. As with the Nashism definition, the tone of the
pronouncements are such that any split would be irrevocable. The
problem of creativity – the right to productive socialisation as a
counter value – was not resolved, it was polarised. On the one hand
there was the revolutionary creativity of the proletarian movement
which was coming to be expressed by the 1'IS as theory, and on the
other hand the specialised creativity of artists expressed as
spontaneous action. On either side of this reified divide both currents
of Scandinavian Situationism would eventually run into problems that
orbited the dualism of politics and culture that the incipient movement
had once brought centre stage as the dialectical struggle of 'everyday
life'. Aiming for a 'dual power in culture', as the SI had professed in
1960 and which it maintained, through the words of Vaneigem in 1965, as
the building of a 'parallel society', would have politicised culture by
taking full cognizance of the reproductive function of culture, of the
need for new modes of relationship and the deprofessionalisation of
politics and art as 'separate' activities – all facets of the the
revolution of everyday life that the 1'IS had highlighted through the
'construction of situations' and had pursued, not untroubledly, through
the writings of Raoul Vaneigem. Instead the 1'IS was somehow intent on
artificially 'leaving' this cultural terrain whilst it sought an
everyday of 'real proletarianized life' and 'authentic revolutionary
praxis'. Aims fitting to the backglance of posterity, but ones that
would come to form a transcendent, if not metaphysical, vanishing point
that belittled their own experiences and, in not pursuing the
contradictions thus far raised, hindered their practice.
The Nashist
'faction' based around Drakabygget did not take their exclusion lying
down. Following upon the Danger! leaflet, de Jong produced a text
entitled Critic On The Political Practice Of Detournement. This
handwritten, labyrinthine graphic text, complete with loops, circles,
clumps and spirals of writing, sought to clarify the events up to the
exclusion of the Nashists and offer some further ideas as to why these
exclusions took place. Neither referencing nor developing the arguments
of the previous SI conferences perhaps impedes this deliberately
hard-to-follow, excursive text, but de Jong ironically claim that the
practice of detournement had led to a legitimate protest against the
'Conseil Central' being misrepresented as an attack on the SI as a
movement. De Jong claim that facts had been falsified, elements of the
struggle omitted – especially her own suspicions about the Spur Group –
and that this amounted to the excludees being victims of a Situationist
coup. What is clear is that de Jong considered that a lack of
organisational clarity had led to areas where a 'sovereign power' had
been wielded: "the terms and theories of the IS were not to be
understood by everyone in an absolutely similar way" (12). One element
of her protest – that anyone could be a situationist, a member of a
situationist movement – is one that runs through all later
pronouncements and is one that, informed by the disagreements
highlighted at previous conferences, the 1'IS was coming to rhetoricise
around whilst actively refuting. De Jong touches on this: "The IS has
to be considered either as an avant-garde school which has already
produced a series of first class artists... or as an anti-organisation
based upon a new ideology which is situationist and which has not yet
found in details its clear formulations in the fields of science,
technique and art". Whether or not this was a further incitement for
Debord to pen the Society Of The Spectacle it is clear that the l'IS
was, at this stage, an anti-organisation – a 'conspiracy of equals'
that had announced the return of the 'most total revolutionary
programme'. It was proud of this. However, problems around its
organisation, especially the very intersubjective relationships proper
to 'everyday life' and inimical to its professed confrontation with
alienated communication, dogged it right up until the end. In 1962, the
outrage expressed by de Jong that such a group could be so undemocratic
as to seek to eject a 'majority' of its own members, could well be
indicative that as an organisation of affinities the 1'IS was
self-selecting. The trumpeted exclusions are also indicative of its bid
for 'sovereign power' – a political act that announces its own state of
exception, its own rules ('creating the sphere of its own reference'),
and in so doing disregards any notion of a binding 'contract' being at
the origin of its power (13).The 1'IS clearly, then, was in the throes
of re-orientating itself away from cultural revolution towards a
political revolution that it saw as far more historically grounded in
social creativity i.e. with culture not yet as developed as a
productive force the 1'IS saw the proletarian movement as the locus of
a productive, constituting power. This group no longer wanted to be
heir to the Dada and Surrealist movement, but to the First
International of Marx and Engels and thus to the potential 'sovereign
power' of the working class as auto-invested in workers councils. What
remained, then, was, at least in the years after 1962, a conflict over
the right to develop the direction of concepts and practices that had
been developed collectively. Such conflicts can go some way to
accounting for the vehemence around the exclusion of Nash – not to be
repeated as venomously until the resignation of Vaneigem – in that the
very exuberant vehemence dished-out seeks to nullify the threat posed
by the areas of concern represented by the excludee; areas of concern –
the everyday – that remained close to the 1'IS but, being vested in the
foibles of individuals rather than the group, being unconscious
loose-ends, dim recollections of a written ethos, are a threat in terms
of their highlighting the limitations of the organisation and in
pressurising the idealised coherence of the self-image as it comes to
be increasingly crafted through a posteriorising theoretical discourse.
The exclusion of the Nashists sorely impedes the 'guidelines' of the SI
as they were expressed in an unsigned piece from 1961 called
Instructions For Taking Up Arms: "The greatest difficulty confronting
groups that seek to create a new type of revolutionary organisation is
that of establishing new types of human relationships within the
organisation itself... Unless this is accomplished, by methods yet to
be experimented with, we will never be able to escape from specialised
politics" (14). The 1'IS could only function effectively as an
anti-organisation, a non-contracted grouping, if a 'new type of
intersubjective relationship' had been encouraged and practiced. The
exclusions, as an exercise of 'sovereign power', not only hindered
this, but, when also cast as "the only weapon of any group based on the
complete freedom of individuals" (15) compounded it further.
In a Declaration
from Drakabygget many of those associated with the Nashist tendency
declared themselves to be a 2nd Situationist International (16). This
curious Declaration, which was earmarked for revision and which bears
similarities to Jorn's situationist texts, attempts to make sense of
the divisions that had occurred between themselves and the 1'IS.
Drawing an analogy between the First International and the Second
'social democratic' International, the signatories clearly state that
their aim is one of social democratic reform. This is further
problematised by their claim that such an aim is in line with
Scandinavian characteristics and that this clash of cultures – a matter
of two culturally determined different points of view – had led to the
inability of the two groups to work with one another. Taking a swipe at
French enlightenment rationality the 'Parisian' point of view is
depicted as "purely a matter of position... the Scandinavian outlook is
completely different. It is based on movement and mobility". One
wonders whether the issue of national characteristics is a red herring,
an easy capitulation to cultural determinism, a matter of received
ideas standing in the stead of different notions about praxis and
enunciation for, between the lines, the split seems to be being
rendered as a conflict between a conceptual and an expressionist
approach, or, to echo Jorn's two tendencies of situlogy, a conflict
between the ludic and the analytical: "The Franco-Belgian Situationists
base themselves on the same principles as Pascal, Descartes... action
precedes emotion. Emotion is a primary non-reflective intelligence:
passionate thought/thinking passion". The issue seems to be one in
which the signatories are objecting to a use of theory that they relate
to as a blueprint for action that 'dictates' practice. As theoreticians
the 1'IS would have probably countered that they relate to theoretical
knowledge as a tool that highlights where best and how best to
intervene against capitalism. The Declaration adds, again echoing
Jorn's contention that, in situlogy, the ludic precedes the analytical:
"We do not always distinguish between theory and practice. We intend to
produce our theories after the event....The French work exactly the
other way round. They want everything straight before they start and
everybody has to line up correctly". Beyond the subtle obfuscations of
regional characteristics the arguments, which will later be
retrospectively cast as one between anarchists and authoritarian
socialists, have, at the outset, a vague Nietzschean ring to them: a
philosophising theory is only creative of prevaricating value
judgments, the combat against culture must needsbe install a culture of
affects, a semiotic of the emotions, that "removes antitheses from
things after comprehending that we have projected them there" (17). As
with the reified divide between culture and politics, this division
between theory and practice, concept and expression, passion and logic,
is similarly beset by misleading problems that, in line with capitalist
social relations, have the effect of disrupting new means of
socialisation and of hindering productive co-operation. Human
productive values are hived-off, separated out into 'spheres' and set
against each other exactly as they are under capitalist relations of
production. This may, in part, explain why both Situationist currents
were, at one time or another, attracted to the idea of taking over
Unesco under the auspices of the Mutant programme developed by Debord
and Jorn. Is it at such an international level that these divisions
between and within protagonists are unconsciously desired to be
surpassed – the unity that both currents sought, is, symbolically at
least, projected into the entity of a unitary Unesco which becomes the
group-fantasy of the whole person, the fantasy of omnipotent
sovereignty, the fantasy of revolution by other means? (18). Yet the
signatories of the 1962 Declaration were astute in pointing to the
Achilles heel of the 1'IS, a practical weakness that was candidly
admitted in an internal document written in 1966 wherein Debord, after
stating that the practical activity of the situationists is poor goes
on to offer that the communication of the theory of the 1'IS is "its
principal practical link" (19). Along with the absurd-sounding hope to
develop a 'theory of dialogue' (which should be read alongside
Vaneigem's "The erotic is pleasure in search of coherence"!) this
aspect of the 1'IS has an almost Althusserian ring to it: the
production of texts, the development of a theory, becomes a practice in
itself and not something developed as a praxis of 'everyday life'. The
1'IS met the problem of practice with the production of theoretical
texts that may or may not have lent it posterity, but numbed its
contemporaneous activity by meretriciously excluding a wider
participation and attracting only those who sought the 'theoretical
accord' that ostentatiously bound the group. It is as if, after the
Nashist exclusions, it was not only that a practice of art, seen as
individualistic and ambiguous, was collapsed into an authorial
production that was, when push came to shove, similarly judged as
individualistic and ambiguous, but that the whole issue of practice was
somehow put into limbo, captured in an idealisation of consciousness,
and delayed until such a time as the 1'IS could connect-up with the
historic current of a revolutionary workers movement. Coherence, as it
comes to establish orthodoxy, may look good in the archive but,
preempting communication, the need for others, the practice of
otherness, it is not the best means of securing participation, and
encouraging new modes of relationship.
Like Instructions
For Taking Up Arms, the Situationist Manifesto of 1960 seems to have
been a text which dissident Situationists took to be a definitive
statement of Situationist ideas. Alexander Trocchi used it as the basis
for one of the texts of the Sigma Portfolio and the BS also took its
ethos of collective participation to the letter: "Against the
spectacle, the realised situationist culture introduces total
participation" (20). It is this combination of participation,
creativity and 'the everyday' that the BS took to be the guiding ethos
of its activity and in many ways, by making use of Situationist theory
as the 1'IS had urged, it drew out a sting of proprietorship from the
latter which was not levelled at Alexander Trocchi and the 'loose
cultural venture' that was Project Sigma. Indeed, whereas the latter
met with a muted approval, the BS was lambasted at every opportunity
through the figurehead of Jørgen Nash. By coining the term Nashism
rather than being critical of the BS as a whole, the 1'IS maintained
its link to a figure it had banished by means of an exercise of a
'relation of ban' that ratified its 'sovereign power'. Furthermore,
Nash became almost sacred, a taboo figure that allowed the 1'IS to
leave unabreacted its own unconscious aprorias – those potentially
useful contradictions that were beset by collective myopia – and
enabled it to thus savour its own 'sovereign power' – a power that
elevated the individual situationist into an 'exceptional' case. The
left-communist Jean Barrot maintained as much when, talking of the
exclusions, he says that "one is obliged to see in this behaviour the
sign of a mystified coming-to-consciousness of the group's impasse, and
of a magical way of saving it" (21). The 'magic' comes in the exercise
of a 'state of exception' operated by all sovereign powers, an
exception that establishes its own arbitrary law to which no one has
recourse. Thus, Nash is lambasted and Trocchi is, if not lauded, then
at least 'legally' approved. It was not as if Trocchi shared the 1'IS's
hopes for a revolutionary proletariat and was, as a result, spared, as
both Sigma and the BS were far more interested in taking up 'the dual
power in culture' aspect of the situationist project, of working with
the productive activity that marked their 'everyday life' rather than
being marked-out by their 'separation' from culture. Rather than the
growing sense that the 1'IS was communicating with an 'outside', that
culture was something it consented to act in, Trocchi perhaps
articulated something of the drive of the BS when he offered that Sigma
intended to be: "a kind of shadow reality of the future existing side
by side with the present 'establishment' and the process [being] one of
general in(ex)filtration"(22). Not being inhibited by history nor being
off-put by the praxis of artistic activity meant that the issue of a
practice-in-waiting that dogged the 1'IS was not one that concerned the
BS. Instead it was not a matter of art being 'realised' and
'suppressed' (the magic formula of supercession), but of forging a
collective project, a 'learning community', around the Drakabygget farm
and making 'detournations' of urban life in Denmark and Sweden. So,
within months of their being excluded the BS had produced two issues of
the scrapbook-style journal Drakabygget, a book of poems by Gordon
Fazakerley, had collaborated with Jacqueline de Jong's Situationist
Times, issued multi-signed declarations to accompany their street
actions and made three short films – Nothing New In West Germany,
Stopforbud (featuring jazz pianist Bud Powell) and Locomotive. Thus the
BS embarked upon sustained 'meta-categorical' activities that were to
draw many participating people into their orbit. Their first collective
art action – along with Hans-Peter Zimmer of Group Spur – was to
exhibit as 'Seven Rebels' and to produce a Swedish version of the 1962
Declaration retitled as The Struggle of the Situcratic Society. With
the arrival to the group of jazz musician and art critic Jens Jørgen
Thorsen, whose Co-Ritus manifesto of 1961, formed the basis of another
sub-group, BS activities eventually extended into including a variant
of the street performance that they had experimented with in the 'Seven
Rebels' show when, with Hans Peter Zimmer as 'Christ', the group led a
procession through the streets of Odense. The first Co-Ritus exhibition
is noteworthy in terms of its interpretation of participation. Jean
Sellem: "The exhibition was remarkable in that when it opened the walls
were completely bare. On the floor... there were piles of materials –
paint, pencil, glue, wood, nails and paper – which could be used for
the construction of collages" (23). This exhibition at the Galerie
Jensen in Copenhagen set the tone for both Co-Ritus and BS activities.
Consisting of a group-constructed work whose assembly was accompanied
by musicians, the resultant collage, as much the work of visitors as
'showing' artists, was cut-up and its separate parts taken away by all
the participants. Arising from this Nash and Thorsen together with
Dieter Kunzelmann of Group Spur, were encouraged by local residents to
do something with a large grey fence that surrounded a development site
owned by Gutenberg House publishers. The three took this as a chance to
demonstrate in "favour of artists taking over the town centre as field
of activity" and succeded in painting slogans and murals on the fence
only to be arrested and fined for their endeavours. Nash and Thorsen in
an interview given to Aspekt in 1963 spoke of their take on the
"situationist idea" being "based on utilisation of art and the forces
of creativity within art being used directly in the social environment"
(24). Other actions that blurred the line between peformance art and
politicised demonstration were to follow. By the time of the
publication of the fourth issue of Situationist Times in 1963, the BS
together with Jacqueline de Jong and all four members of Group Spur had
collaborated on the construction of a labyrinth for the Facett 63 show
at Malmo's Radhushall. Only given a wall space of five meters squared
to work in, Jean Sellem recounts how "Thorsen.. came upon the idea of
increasing the available space by constructing a spiral labyrinth on
the floor area of the exhibition room through which the visitors could
wander...". Another manifesto, entitled The Situationists From
Drakabygget, The Spiral Labyrinth And The Situationist International,
accompanied their construction and provided another opportunity to
lampoon the 1'IS: "The first Situationniste International was a
lamb-like pious group that never pursued anything more than theoretical
discussions... It is true that the Drakabygget group was the most
radical in the sense that they wanted to realise what the others only
talked about" (25). The BS, then, had little need of backing from the
1'IS. They developed Jorn's 'situlogy' by referring to Kierkegaard's
philosophy of situations and, like Trocchi, sought to make use of the
'construction of situations' as a means to catalyse a change in social
relations, to experiment with 'ways of behaving' and of being together.
For the BS this took their combative art practice along the vector of
direct action in the streets. In 1965 they formed part of a committee
that organised a Demonstration For The Freedom Of Expression in
Copenhagen that brought upwards of three thousand into the streets.
Playing with a Danish law that forbade the performing of music in
public spaces, an illegal festival, a 'detournation', took place at
Stroget in Central Copenhagen. Whether this was an indication of the
most shopworn forms of artistic production, as the 1'IS had suggested
of the activities of the BS, is debatable as the BS never claimed their
activities as 'art'. For them their actions of 'communicative urbanism'
were part of a Situationistic movement, a collective unity that didn't
loose its variety.
In comparison to
the 1'IS's paralysing concern to 'constitute a global critical theory',
the BS were resolute cultural revolutionaries that prided themselves on
being 'active' rather than 'contemplative', on being inclusive rather
than exclusive. They, too, disparagingly mocked the 'happening' and its
spectacular development of a renewed objectal focus for art, seeking
instead to transform creativity from its traditional formalisation of
everyday life into an experiment in social relations. Jørgen Nash,
looking back at these activities in 1964, updated the 1962 Declaration
to state that "according to Scandinavian situationist philosophy action
is the result of emotion and arises out of emotion" (26). For the BS
the organisational strictures of the 1'IS were seen as too
disciplinarian, as placing a restriction upon who it was possible to
collaborate with, and thus restricting the terrain of possible
activity. Action for them could not be preplanned as, in the process of
planning, the original emotion, the energy of the thought could be
lost, and with it the energy that could be vital to attracting
participation was frittered away. Against this incipient anarchism, the
discriminating tendency of an 'idealised consciousness' with its dream
of sovereign coherence was seen as finding its apotheosis in "an
adherence to old-fashioned, classical and ultra-rigid patterns of
organisation" (27). Despite its avowed aim to 'create a new type of
revolutionary organisation' the 1'IS was practicing, according to the
BS, like any other orthodox political grouping. This resonates with the
way that a sovereign power was incarnated within the 1'IS as an
organisation. It was, in its own eyes, positively creating the sphere
of its own reference, defining itself through the exclusions, and yet
its sovereign power could not operate effectively (and operated
dictatorially for the BS) because, being reliant on the 'bare life' –
the everyday productive co-operation – of the working class, the 1'IS
was disabled from putting this power into practice and came instead to
instaurate politics within the group as a separate activity. This is
not to infer that the BS, as cultural revolutionaries, had tackled
these issues and surmounted them. Whilst the BS could, from their
'collective centre' at Drakabygget, found a "freely organized movement"
based upon "voluntary associations of autonomous work groups" (28) and
adopt an ethos of productive co-operation, their having anarchistically
demonised politics, and thus the scope for any renewal of politics;
their having shunned the organisational issue, meant that the BS would
soon be left with an inverse autonomy to that of the 1'IS – to be a
little too symmetrical it could be said that the BS had plenty of fully
sociable 'bare life', but little grasp on a potential subversive use of
sovereign power; be it that around its own institution at Drakabygget
or that of the working class. For the BS, operating in a social
democracy of consensus, there was no creative, militant lessons to be
learned from its working class: "The labour movement was once
considered to be the salt of the earth. Today it is more like a milch
cow whose udders are being pumped in an effort to get more and more
material benefits at the expense of the mind" (29). As with Alexander
Trocchi and Project Sigma, the BS, holding dear to the ludic trajectory
of 'situlogy', rejected work and the contradictions of wage-labour
outright and instead negotiated the risk of artistic assimilation,
confident that artists could become catalysts, the pivotal agents of
social change. However, their playful and spontaneous approach, whilst
leading to actions, demonstrations and occupations, neglected any
thought of strategy or tactics. Like the counter-culture it was a
foreecho of, the BS was inclined towards hitting out at the symbols of
capitalistic society – 'atom bombs, popes and politicians' – without
indicting capitalist social relations, and thus left these very real
and interconnected forms of power to continue unperturbed in a solely
symbolic existence separated from the everyday. One participant, Bjorn
Rosendahl, offered that "The weakness of the Bauhaus Situationist was
that all the fresh actions revealing society to itself were never
properly followed up. Instead the actions came in cascades. It was
bracing... but all that untamed power was never used in full" (30).
This may be the danger of Nash's totally emotional explanation for
action. With passion disconnected from logic, instinct can become
indistinguishable from a drive and expressionism can become
undifferentiable from exhibitionism. So, neither the
'anti-organisation' of the 1'IS, nor the 'avant-garde school' of the
Drakabygget group got any nearer to the 'semiotic of the impulses', the
'culture of affects', that was, as a revolution of 'everyday life', a
reconciliation of passion and logic, desired by both: "A mode of
thought that would restrict behaviour, or a mode of behaviour that
would restrict thought – both comply with an extremely useful
automatism: they ensure security" (31). Security does not imply risk,
it implies the preservation of being, the continuation of orthodox
social relations. Both the BS and the 1'IS remained affixed to the
means of expression they felt most comfortable with.
One facet of the
conflict between the two competing groups was that which centred around
the differences between two European cultures. It is into this area
that Asger Jorn returns. Having resigned from the 1'IS in 1961 whilst
still funding it, Jorn, who also funded de Jong, Nash and Elde's Danger
Do Not Lean Out! leaflet, threw his support behind the BS and not only
made polemical contributions to the first issues of the Drakabygget
magazine but is rumoured to have funded this magazine as well. However,
tensions are reported to have arisen between Jorn and the BS,
particularly a conflict centred around disagreements he had with
Thorsen's notions of art as a 'communicative action' as exemplified by
the Co-Ritus interventions. Not isolating himself completely from the
Situationist movement – he made contributions to the fifth issue of the
Situationist Times – Jorn founded a Scandinavian Institute for
Comparative Vandalism (32). Through this Institute, which was intended
to give his maverick views of art practice an institutional legitimacy,
Jorn sought to negotiate a passage between the academic practice of art
history and his interest in Nordic folk art. He had the intention of
publishing an ambitious project drawing together decades of
investigation into a millenia-long Nordic presence in European culture.
Taking its title from the discovery of 'graffitied' elements on Norman
churches – which Jorn was convinced displayed the presence of a Nordic
craftsmen – the Institute was concerned with redressing the balance of
a Greco-Roman hegemony over European culture. In many ways the work of
the Institute was responding to a perceived lack of cultural confidence
that Scandinavians felt in relation to the rest of Europe – an
inferiority that was once more played out in the debacle of the 1962
exclusions. With Jorn's project in mind we can see how his work perhaps
influenced the BS when they spoke of the cultural incompatibilities
between themselves and 'Paris'. The 1'IS would not have given much
credence to this as for them such cultural differences were 'resolved'
by the dialectic of class struggle: the working classes have no
country. However, this not only begs the question of a working class
culture, a culture of productive co-operation that can get beyond a
capitalistic definition of value and aesthetics, it highlights how the
variabilities of inter-subjective differences within the Situationist
movement were submerged beneath the dream of theoretical coherence for
the 1'IS and recollapsed onto the cultural determinism of regionalism
for the BS. As a visual artist Jorn offered an avenue away from this
impasse by using the very ambiguities of a visual semiotic that he felt
could both override and draw attention to the overlooked ambiguities
and unsuspected authoritarianisms of language. Jorn's project, with its
use of a 'comparative' method of art history that gave greater weight
to the un-captioned juxtaposition of images from different places and
times, was weighted in favour of visual essays rather than a use of
images that illustrated theoretical texts. It was thought that this
method was best suited to reveal the differences, the variabilities
within similar forms and motifs (33). While it is undoubtedly a method
that is a lot more 'open' than a directly textual approach in that the
latter guides us towards the seduction of interpretation and
resolutions, the 'comparative' method allowed Jorn not only to cross
the disciplinary boundaries between art history and archeology, it led
him beyond strictly national boundaries and beyond the abyss of
aesthetics that his former comrades of the 1'IS were scared of falling
into. In some ways Jorn was developing a visual theory of 'living art',
expanding the boundaries of creativity beyond the aesthetic towards an
everyday use value for creativity, one in which form, rather than being
necessarily aesthetic and necessarily opposed to 'lived experience' –
the ambiguity of an art practice that had to be superceded for the 1'IS
– was simply the carrier for the expression of variabilities, a unity
of variables. Thus for Jorn, not only was it that the "most
commonplace, obvious and traditional art is most valuable, because it
is the common property of the largest number of people over the longest
span of time", it was also a matter of these variabilities running
seamlessly through the texture of 'everyday life': "what gives the
individual a social value is their variability of behaviour in relation
to other people" (34). Irrespective of aesthetic legitimacy, then, folk
art or 'living art' with all its intimate banalities was, for Jorn and
the BS, an expression of variability and difference, a basic
communicative need, a matter of relational energies that could
strengthen the bond of association to the detriment of a sovereign
individualism. The fact that Jorn's work both undermined the smooth
categorisation of art history and the notion of artistic production as
something entirely self-reliant and original, rather than as that which
"consists of some portion of originality combined with traditional
elements", may have found its advocates with those members of the BS
that, in the 1962 Declaration, stressed the 'tradition-directed' aspect
of their activity. Their work was not avant-gardist in the sense of its
being about new forms, but in the way that it sought to fill these
forms with its own variabilities. In this way, inspired by Jorn, the BS
understood Situationism to be a movement within which any creative
person could participate – for them anyone who tries to live is an
artist. Unfortunately, these more general conclusions were offset by
the framework of 'Nordic' culture that Jorn was fascinated by and which
the BS, initially at least, also supported. It is reported by Lars
Morrell that long term collaborants Group Spur grew wary of the 'Nordic
centrism' of the 1962 Declaration and distanced themselves from the
more all embracing idea of a 2'IS. This had the effect of weakening any
chances for such a 2'IS to gain any momentum outside of Scandinavia
until the persistence of its activities and its ethos of open
participation gave impetus to a revivified situationistic movement that
made Drakabygget an important node in the diffuse network of an
international counter-culture.
The 1962
exclusions had led to a state of affairs wherein the claim of the 1'IS
to be an international organisation was gravely weakened. The fourteen
exclusions in two months had just about removed all non-French speaking
participants from the project and all but decimated the German and
Scandinavian sections. These latter survived in the guise of Uwe Lausen
in Germany and J.V. Martin in Denmark. Whereas the former poet Lausen
would himself be excluded in 1965, Martin remained a member right up
until 1972 when, with only Debord and Sanguinetti left, he presided
over an anthology of SI texts entitled Der Er Liv Efter Fodslen [There
Is Life After Birth]. With its being offered that the communication of
its theory was the principal practice of the 1'IS it perhaps became a
matter of no little import that Martin edited three issues of
Situationistisk Revolution between 1962 and 1970. With the exception of
the one issue of Der Deutsche Gedanke [The German Thought] which was
published in 1963 there was no other foreign language journal published
by the 1'IS until the Italian and American Sections published theirs in
1969. In many ways this amounted to a far from negligible role for the
Scandinavian Section that is reflected in the 'Situationnistes
Chronologie' entries for the mid period of the 1'IS. Beginning with a
press release over the exclusion of the Nashists, Martin had by
November of 1962 presided over the first issue of Situationistisk
Revolution and arranged a conference at the University of Aarhus. In
many ways these events were necessary for the 1'IS in order to counter
what they saw as a Nashist recuperation of situationist ideas. To this
end the first issue of Situationistisk Revolution made public the
events around the exclusion of the Nashists, reissuing the proclamation
from March 1962, and including two texts by J.V. Martin that
polemicised around these areas – Antipolitical Activities and In Front
Of The Wall Of A Modern History Of Culture. Other key texts from the
early years of the 1'IS were also made available through translation
into Danish. These included Manifesto, The Situationist Frontier,
Instructions For Taking Up Arms, Preliminary Problems In The
Construction Of Situations, Debord's Theses on Cultural Revolution and
his Critique Of Urban Geography. If any theme could be gleaned from
this collection of SI texts then a predominant one, running throughout
many of them, is, the 'construction of situations'. This means of
politicising the everyday, of instaurating a "real and direct
communication" (35) that could have lent itself to an exploration of
intersubjectivity and a viable anti-organisational practice is, in
never having been embraced in all its intimate banality, and in being
enticed down the theoretical avenue of 'unitary urbanism', the one
Situationist concept that lends itself to reconception and wider
practice (Jens Jørgen Thorsen's 'communicative urbanism' and his
consistent exploration of the 'situation' as an experiment in social
relations was one such reconception). However, for the 1'IS, whose
Theory Of The Derive has the effect of delimiting rather than expanding
a common activity, the 'construction of situations' was perhaps a too
ambiguous practice as the 1'IS were already wary of the 'situation'
being reconceived as the 'happening'. It may be that this co-option of
the 'situation' to the spectacle, the mediation of what was intended to
be an unmediatable practice of communication, soon led the 1'IS towards
taking a more stringent and proprietorial line on the 'construction of
situations', closing it down until it became a specialised activity:
"... the situation defined by the SI can be constructed only on a
foundation of material and spiritual richness. This amounts to saying
that the first ventures in constructing situations must be the
work/play of the revolutionary avant-garde; people who are resigned in
one way or another respect to political passivity, to metaphysical
despair, and even being subjected to an artistic pure absence of
creativity, are incapable of participating in them..." (36). The 1'IS,
presumably a collection of coherently formed individualities, saw
itself as the avant-garde in relation to both artistic practice and
politics. Its conflict with the Nashists was, within a year, followed
up by a conflict with Dutch 'Stalinist surrealists' and with an ongoing
polemic against Henri Lefebvre and the left journal Arguments. Whether
these polemical conflicts were considered 'situations' or not is
perhaps difficult to tell, but their often expressed aim of avoiding
the role of specialists is continually undermined by a proprietorship
of ideas that makes participation in the Situationist project dependent
upon prior knowledge rather than on the potential becomings instaurated
by praxis. Indeed, in kindly offering the 'situation' as the
construction of 'micro societies', a self-institutional activity,
Vaneigem too, quickly moved towards limiting its capabilities by adding
the proviso that such 'societies' should be "maintained in a permanent
state of practical readiness by means of strict theoretical
discrimination" (37). That the first issue of Situationistisk
Revolution also carried the small Anti-Public Relations text that
requests, however jokingly, aspiring members to demonstrate their
written theoretical abilities is not only a further indication of a
self-appointed avant-garde role, but is another pointer towards the way
that the 1'IS was coming more and more to equate revolutionary practice
with the production of 'coherent' revolutionary texts. As they said
themselves, their 'direction' was coming to be more concerned with the
"theoretical organisation of contestation" (38). This idealisation of
consciousness – seen in the charge of 'misunderstanding situationist
texts' levelled at Spur and at the Nashists – and idealised to the
point of transcendence in its claim to be 'coherent', became the sole
basis upon which inter-subjective relations were carried out within the
1'IS. It thus not only hindered the 'construction of situations', but
lead to a neutralising of the contradictions, the incoherencies and
intimate banalities, of 'everyday life'. This had been raised by de
Jong: "Misunderstandings and contradictions are not only of an extreme
value, but in fact the basis of all art and creation, if not the source
of all activity in general life" (39). In other words practice, the
rapid alternation between activity and passivity, between passion and
logic, reveals antagonisms that not only inform consciousness, but
drive that consciousness to be best articulated as transformative
action.
J.V. Martin and
the Scandinavian section – which at best included only two other fully
admitted members: Peter Laugesen in the mid sixties and Bengt Ericson
in the late sixties – were, then, a crucial component of the 1'IS.
Before the publication of the second issue of Situationistisk
Revolution in 1968, which carried a large proportion of Situationist
texts on the May Events as well as a republication of Debord's thesis
on Cultural Revolution, the Scandinavian Section had provided the focal
point for activities that did not always hinge around the production of
written texts. The first of these was the Destruction Of RSG-6 show
held in Odense in June 1963. When we bear in mind that the 1962
exclusions have been referred to as the 'break' with artists this show,
based around the threat of thermonuclear war and presenting the
scandalous findings of the 'Spies For Peace' group concerning the
existence of a dozen Regional Seats of Government (nuclear bunkers) in
England, is notable for its continuation of artistic practice and its
return to conflict within the art institution. For the show Debord
exhibited several of his hastily made Directives which consisted of
slogans – such as 'realisation de la philosophie' – painted onto framed
canvases. J.V.Martin exhibited a series of 'thermonuclear maps' –
gaudily coloured outlines of regions of the world partially obliterated
by dark scorch marks – and Michele Bernstein, subverting the tradition
of battle paintings, made model tableaux titled after revolutionary
defeats but renamed as victories (40). Whilst, with this show, it may
have been useful for the 1'IS to combat the 'falsifications' of the BS
in Scandinavia there is a lingering sense that the 1'IS required the
RSG-6 to draw a conclusion to its critique of art practice by
presenting a 'critical art' tied into the findings of the 'Spies For
Peace' group. It wanted somehow to resolve the ambiguities that it had
noted in an article commenting on the Spur/Nashist debacle: "It seems
to us that Nashism is an expression of an objective tendency resulting
from the SI's ambiguous and risky policy of consenting to act in
culture while being against the entire present organisation of this
culture and even against all culture as a separate sphere (But even the
most intransigent oppositional attitude cannot escape such ambiguity
and risk, since it is still necessarily has to coexist with the present
order)" (41). How can one 'act in culture' and be against 'all culture
as a separate sphere' unless one has transcended culture
idealistically? It is precisely this ambiguity and risk, the
antagonisms of the 'everyday', that the 1'IS wanted to escape from and
in so doing somehow leave behind a cultural practice that they saw as
an 'alibi for alienation', an easily assimilatable freedom. Its pursuit
of theory – an apt repository for an idealised consciousness – was seen
as the means through which ambiguity and risk could be overcome and the
organisation's idealised self-image ensured; a self-image nurtured by
the pursuit of a written coherence. However, was it not that the 1'IS,
in rejecting cultural activity, was in danger of leaving behind the
very 'everyday' terrain that could keep practice alive for it, that
would make the accord between its members more than just a theoretical
one? In the 1960 text co-authored with Canjuers, Debord had written
that "this sphere reserved for creative activity is the only one in
which the question of what we do with life and the question of
communication are posed practically" (42). In many ways the 1'IS was
torn between a take on creativity that pitted the practice of art
against the constituting creativity of the working class. The two,
already synthesised as the productive co-operation of labour power,
were kept more or less separate by the 1'IS who, in a text accompanying
the RSG-6 show, preferred to talk of the 'supercession' of both art and
revolutionary politics. The problem with such 'supercession' was that
in becoming programmatic, in transcending social relations, it placed
practice in the shadow of posterity and made participation almost
impossible. With its call for the 'supercession' of art and the
surpassing of existing revolutionary groupings, the 1'IS was
effectively calling for an end to its practical existence and
announcing its idealism – an idealism increasingly exacerbated by its
isolation. Having its practice determined for it by its 'theoretical
coherence' meant that it was, by trusting in written language to be the
sole semiotic of communication, becoming far more individualised than
the BS which could later boast of a whole raft of people and groups
passing through the 'collective centre' of Drakabygget – from Dutch
Provos and the Mexican Situationist Group to 1'IS excludees such as
Attila Kotanyi. For the 1'IS subjectivity, rather than being
intensified by the variables of different situations and modulated by
participation, was becoming preserved from the 'outside world', a
vessel of 'practical readiness' that was not only in danger of making
the 1'IS into an ivory tower, but running the risk of insulating itself
from the very creative antagonism of the working class. The theory of
the spectacle, with all its implications of an inescapable passivity,
ensured not only that the audio-visual would be demonised to the
benefit of written language, but made sure that revolution became a
matter of knowledge rather than the creation of a new social relation,
a culture of affects. If the working class were subject to
pacification, then rather than the revolution being a matter of a "mode
of being" as Jean Barrot points out, a matter of practical existence
and struggle, an ontological revolt, it becomes a matter for a logic
separated from passion, it becomes to be about a technocratic
application of knowledge (methodology). Under the rubric of the
spectacle the constituting power of the working class would have been
negated by pacification and thus, then, the self-selected role of
Situationists as exemplary leaders becomes necessary. To this end the
1'IS tended to theorise and agitate around consumption rather than
production. For it consumption was to be subverted because that
represented the 'creative' moment of proletarian life being inveigled
towards passive leisure. The fact that the working class were being
'creative' in their production of social co-operation, their social
relations, was something that bypassed the 1'IS. Not only did they
idealise creativity in the figure of the 'artist', consigning it to
specialisation, they came to see the creativity of the working classes
as being endlessly postponed until the moment that they constituted
workers councils – when they demonstrated a form of consciousness that
the 1'IS was waiting to recognise. Even an idealised working class was
not ideal enough. Thus Guy Debord's famous refrain that the workers
should become dialecticians was as self-defeating to the 1'IS's project
as abandoning the terrain of culture wherein the combat against leisure
and pacification could have been fought. Even after the May events, the
1'IS, not dramatically expanding its numbers or range of contacts,
began, in the absence of any practical experience that could inform its
theoretical wanderings, to add another layer to its idealism. Rather
than simply festishizing its 'coherent' theory (the mark of its
revolutionary intent) it began to fetishize its own organisation and
presented the two as being indicative of its revolutionary actuality.
In other words the 1'IS – all the king's men – became sovereign over
its own sovereign power.
Although, in 1964,
Debord was to collect his film scripts from the late 50s and publish
them as Contre Le Cinema through Jorn's Institute For Comparative
Vandalism, the 1'IS's attempt to supercede art was compromised when it
made one last foray into the 'sphere' of art with the Operation
Playtime show. Once again this collective exhibition, unsurprisingly
omitted from the Situationniste Chronologie, was organised in Denmark
by J.V.Martin and included, once again, work by Martin and Bernstein
(who had resigned in 1967) with the addition of five 'Nothing Boxes' by
Rene Vienet. This time Martin exhibited a series entitled Golden Fleet
– roughshod geopolitical paintings featuring coastlines, strategic
arrows and toy battleships sprayed over with metallic paint. For the
catalogue, released as a supplement to the second issue of
Situationistisk Revolution (along with a translation of The Explosion
Point Of Ideology In China as a separate issue), Martin wrote a
montaged text called Ny-irrealisme – "The neo-realist lives in an
unreal world but won't admit it. Long live the neo-irrealist who lives
in an unrealistic society but admits it" – that expounded on the theory
of detournement which had become, by this point, the last remaining
weapon in the cultural armoury of the 1'IS and one that Debord was to
heavy-handedly utilise in his film version of the Society Of The
Spectacle. Indeed along with André Bertrand, J.V. Martin was a prime
exponent of the practice of detourned comic strips, a practice that,
with his 'comics erotico-politiques', saw Martin the subject of a law
suit brought against him by the Danish section of the American-backed
Moral Rearmament movement, principally for the clandestine distribution
of these comics in Spain. Taking full advantage of the ensuing scandal
which was reported in the Danish press, Martin issued a tract – In
Namen Des Volkes – that dealt with his being charged with 'crimes
against morality and good custom' by retorting that "indeed the
Situationists were ... actively employed in the moral disarmament of
society as we know it". The lawsuit was dropped, not least, the 1'IS
astutely claimed, because the "suppression of publications injurious to
the Francoist order by the social democratic authorities of a country
officially opposed to Francoism was somewhat paradoxical" (43). Barely
two months after this scandal of January 1965 J.V.Martin was an active
hand in the organisation of an anti-NATO protest in Jutland after it
had been decided by NATO commanders to station two units of German
troops at barracks in Randers. Martin, together with local dockers,
resistance veterans and students from the University of Aarhus,
organised a committee to oppose the entry of the German troops into
Randers. After attracting much press attention and drawing protesters
from all over Denmark, the first and only column of German troops
arrived at the barracks in the midst of violent clashes between the
protesters and the Danish Army units that had converged in readiness.
Although the unit finally entered the barracks the fallout of the
conflict did not dissipate as two days later a firebomb exploded in a
room of Martin's apartment in Randers. He was promptly arrested only to
be released the next day as the police, changing their minds as is the
wont of their sovereign power, moved their attention to another
demonstrator called Kanstrup. A sequence of legal charades, which
included Kanstrup having the terrorism charge reduced to possession of
explosives, led the 1'IS to rightly finger Kanstrup as a provocateur
and to take the 'Incident in Randers' as an indicator of a rising tide
of social unrest which, quite generously for them, they also credited
to the Dutch Provos. But, however efficacious these events were in
drawing out the passive control of a celebrated Danish social democracy
it is perhaps a little flighty of the 1'IS to suggest of the Randers
Incident that "the SI's practice showed its excellence" therein. In an
intriguing aside to their write-up of the events in Randers it is
mentioned that many of the paintings that had been shown at the RSG-6
show had perished in the bomb blast. It was added that "the 'blanket'
of art now finds itself burnt". In this flush of enthusiasm for
political provocation – an intervention participated in by only one
Situationist, J.V. Martin – the 1'IS seems, in conspicuously
celebrating the loss of 'artworks', to be suggesting again that it had
superceded art. However, whereas art was seen as a privileged
concession, the creative activity of written theory was not, as far as
the 1'IS was concerned, subject to the same ambiguities and
contradictions. Raoul Vaneigem who could see the 'semantic realm' as a
principle site of struggle, could also write: "ideology is the
falsehood of language, radical theory the truth of language" (44).
Armed with such 'truth' the 1'IS, coming to see itself as the 'unknown
theory' of a movement growing in confidence and scope, contained a
similar iconoclastic egotism to that of the artistic sphere it claimed
it had superceded. It was the measure of truth, it was the incarnation
of consciousness. In the text accompanying the RSG-6 show, The
Situationists And The New Forms Of Action In Politics And Art, Guy
Debord wrote "we acknowledge the perpetrators of these new radical
gestures as being situationist, and are determined to support them and
never disavow them, even if many among them are not yet fully aware of
the coherence of today's revolutionary program, but are only moving in
that general direction" (45). Like good avant-gardists ahead of the
field the 1'IS, enthusiastic about the 'new' and their own 'newness'
and seeking to be the intermediaries of the future, could not only
dissemble about the social-relations (the 'relation of ban') from which
they had sprung, but could offer their consciousness, an idealised
consciousness resolved into writing, as a model consciousness that
others should follow. One aspect of this tendency, and a damaging one
in the long run, can be seen in J.V. Martin's Nashism motion and in the
project for a Situationist Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of definitions
for which Mustapha Khayati wrote a preface. Whilst these projects did
not develop beyond the Definitions of 1958 and whilst they may have
been exemplary detournements that touch on a critique of received
knowledge and pedagogy (and in the case of Khayati on the 'semantic
realm' as a site of struggle) the same reification of meaning that they
sought to combat was still persistently present. The seeds of a
'situationist ideology' are thus here as well, in the very titles of a
full span of texts – Theory of the Derive (1958), Minimum Definition of
Revolutionary Organisations (1967), How Not To Understand Situationist
Books (1969), Provisional Statutes Of The SI (1969) – and in the way
that a control over future interpretations is exercised in conformity
to the demands of posterity.
Whilst the
incidents in Randers and J.V.Martin's pivotal role in them could
perhaps be indicative of what Debord later referred to as a "concession
to 'united action' with the semi-radical currents that are already
beginning to take shape" (46) they were nonetheless practical,
collaborative activities that received profuse press attention and
caused a stir in Denmark. In some ways the 1'IS capitalised upon this
direct action, making it the marker of a practice that had otherwise
become stunted by the continual refusal of the 1'IS to collaborate
sustainedly with other people and by its search for an elusive
theoretical 'coherence' that was having it practice politics as a
'separate' activity. These both amounted to an idealisation of
consciousness that hierarchically judged the actions of others by means
of the yardstick of the idealism incarnated in the self-image of the
1'IS. Their self-alloted avant-garde status, then, led them to
momentarily offer their support to "those Danish comrades who over the
last few weeks have resorted to incendiary bombs against the travel
agencies that organise tours to Spain" (47). Whether or not any
Situationists were involved in these campaigns, it is nonetheless
indicative of a drive to become associated with something more than the
'semi-radical' – the exemplary actions of the exemplary. Terrorism,
whilst it can provoke moments of crisis, has always been an endeavour
that belittles and regresses emerging social relations, it is a
vanguard action that, in the long run, seeks to impatiently transcend
the reformulation of revolutionary practice in the 'everyday'. Whilst
the 1'IS, through Giofranco Sanguinetti, later revealed state terrorism
as a strategy of counter-revolution they never seriously embraced such
actions. The vanguardism of the 1'IS was more a matter of their seeking
to be the headless leaders of an emerging movement through a deployment
of theoretical perspectives, an overestimation of which put them, at
the time, in an authoritative relation to the burgeoning
counter-culture which they never ceased to castigate. Just as the
incidents in Randers involved many people who were not members of the
1'IS, so too the other Situationist scandal of this period, that
fermented by 1'IS sympathisers around Strasbourg University and the
collaborative authoring of On The Poverty Of Student Life in 1966, was
carried out by dissident students. Jens Jørgen Thorsen reported that
those involved were eventually excluded by the 'de Bordist section'
even though they had no want to be thus included. He also noted how
these exclusions followed upon a moment of collective production and
draws attention to the similar treatment of the Mexican Situationist
Group and some of the American Groups – Black Mask and Up Against The
Wall Motherfuckers (48). The 1'IS was, then, prone to limiting the
efficacy of any forms of intervention that did not match up to its
ideal. This had the effect of elevating its own (non) actions,
inferring them to be at the hub of a movement without a centre, whilst,
damagingly to it and its claims to be the most contemporaneous
theorists, it began to loose touch with the changing conditions of
capitalism. Whilst the 1'IS could, in its Minimum Definition Of
Revolutionary Organizations, urge itself and other organisations to act
as the "negation... of the prevailing social spectacle which, from news
media to mass culture, monopolises communication between people around
their unilateral reception of images of their alienated activity" (49),
it could simultaneously block itself from any further theorising of how
the continuing production of a 'social imaginary' was changing the
conditions of everyday life and the very terrain of revolution. By
naming the 'spectacle' the 1'IS, recursively fleeing from its own
nemesis (ideologisation of social relations), separated itself from
those shared social conditions and, as was its wont with denying
anything but an idealised working class creativity, it undermined an
awareness of the 'productivity' of the spectacle as an additional force
in the reproduction of capitalist social relations and, crucially, as a
new weapon in their subversion. Thus, whilst it sought maximum exposure
for its own scandals, it could discount the interventionist activities
of the Nashists as seeking the "grossest commercial publicity" with the
"active collusion of some journalists" (50). This collusion may well
have involved Jens Jørgen Thorsen. In the early 60s Thorsen worked as a
journalist for a Danish tabloid and it may have been his practical
understanding of the workings of the media industry that led to the
success of the scandal of the Little Mermaid. This incident, occurring
in 1964 (the same year that Asger Jorn refused the Guggenheim prize),
was titled by the BS as The Little Mermaid Loses Her Head. It was
carried out by providing the media with an anonymous action, the
decapitation of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen harbour, and
then promising, over a period of weeks to unveil both the head and the
perpetrator. Having provoked a national crisis – the statue is a
powerful totem of the Danish social imaginary – having provoked the
deployment of the Danish police's murder squad, the BS, being closely
monitored by the police, informed the media that they would release all
details of the event in the next issue of the Drakabygget magazine
which would be available at an exhibition – The Situationists In Art –
to be held at Varberg. On the day of the opening a crowd gathered at
this coastal town and, being urged to the sea's edge by Hardy Strid,
was soon greeted by the sight of an incoming boat. As the boat moored
in the bay a frogman swam inland carrying a bundle until, once in view
of the crowd, he clambered onto a rock only to drop the bundle into the
sea and swim back to the boat. Looking back on this event Thorsen
referred to it as "a complete new use of mass media" and it could also
be possible to say that it was something of the creation of a
'spectacle', an in(ex)filtration of the social imaginary, that being
unresolved and anti-climactic, showed, in the form of the spectacle,
the simultaneous arousal and thwarting of desire that the 1'IS
identified as a facet of mediatised experience.
As a by-product
of their theory of the spectacle the 1'IS soon set a dangerous trap
whereby any publicised event, any social gathering, could be demonised
as being indicative of pacification. As Jean Barrot points out the 1'IS
were obsessed with forms – commodity, councils, spectacle, gallery –
and this blinded them to the content-element of the form, the social
relations that accrue in and around the forms. To this end the
reduction of social life to one mediated by images and its concomitant
reduction of sensory perception to a state of passive spectatorship
denied the 'modalities of being' and reduced affectivity to being an
inferior adjunct of knowledge. This played itself out in the exclusions
whereby participating individuals were seen as finalised 'forms' with
no scope for becoming; which in itself says something about the scope
of practice within the 1'IS. For the 1'IS – who continued to pillory
such people as Nash, Kotanyi, Godard, Lefebvre, Castoriadis – you were
one thing and always that one thing; social circumstances, only
changing at the moment of revolution, were, until then, static. In many
ways Debord's theory of the 'spectacle' encourages such a view, or is
the logical outcome of it, for it declares communication to be as
unilateral, as finished as a coherent theory. In describing the
ideological progression of capitalism Debord's theory of the spectacle
did not take account of the participatory aspect of all social life,
even those aspects of it which can be oppressive and harmful. This very
point had been raised by Jorn in the early years of the 1'IS and was
inimical to the activities of the BS. For Jorn, writing in The Critique
Of Economic Policy, the work of art was a "source of counter value".
This counter value was not dependent on the form that art took, but
hinged on those very 'modalities of being', the energies which persist
in a perceiving person, that the 1'IS denied by their reduction of
perception to passive spectatorship. One of the effects of Debord's
theory was, then, to deny the productive aspect of reception which Jorn
and the BS took for granted and which, as a result, opened up a field
for their practice as it shut yet another terrain down for the 1'IS.
The BS not only trusted the energies of the perceiving person, their
ability to think and act for themselves, but, with events such as the
Co-Ritus, aimed for the 'death of the spectator' by establishing and
instituting communicative fields rather than damning all communicative
fields as 'spectacular'. Jens Jørgen Thorsen, perhaps refusing to have
his activity determined by capitalist ideology, wrote that the
communicative phase in art has its basis in "the disappearance of the
spectator and his replacement by the participator. A communicative art
is an art which lives between. In the space between people" (51). This
space-between could be seen as indicative of social relations rather
than the classical forms of art and politics, of modalities rather than
representations, and it was this accent placed upon a situationistic
artistic activity by Thorsen and the BS, their opening up of spaces and
their encouragement of communicative participation through an
'anti-objectal' non-representative practice, that led Thorsen to offer
that the death of the spectator was simultaneously the death of the
'classic artist'. This point, used to criticise Jorn for "still working
as a classic artist on classic art according to classic perception",
was similarly indicative of why the 1'IS, aspiring to be 'classic
theorists', had fallen into a stupor of coherence. With the advent of
the theory of the spectacle and the turn to the functional,
propagandist use of detournement, the 1'IS was, despite its talk of the
supercession of art, still occupying the position of the 'classical
artist'. When Thorsen, in criticising the happening, stated that "the
public is sitting gazing like in a theatre or as of in front of a
painting looking for the true basic conception" he inadvertently hit at
a problem running through the 1'IS: their theory of the spectacle,
their coherence, was nothing other than a 'true basic conception', an
aspect of reality presented as an indisputable fact and communicated
unilaterally like any other 'classical' work. As the mouthpiece of
correct consciousness the 1'IS had no need to involve itself in
anything because it had nothing to learn from others. Thorsen said as
much when he offered of the 1'IS that "this rigid hate of action was
exactly the thing the Bordists were criticised for during the May
events 68 when they, like technocrats, spent their time in a restaurant
far away from the battlefields handing out pieces of good advice" (52).
Whilst this is not the place to go into the role of the 1'IS in the
occupations movement it is interesting to note that Rene Vienet, in his
book on the occupations, offered that the "SI explained the deepening
and concentrations of alienations by the delay of the revolution". This
strange statement offers somehow that the revolution, the great day,
resolves 'alienated' social relations rather than it being a case that
a change of social relations can help bring the revolution about. The
revolution is participated in by more than just ideologues, and
emanates from more than just one place. Whilst the coming revolution
was to have absolved the 1'IS from its alienating practice of
exclusions, the BS, as cultural revolutionaries interested in opening
up 'communicative fields', added to the general ferment for which no
one group or ideological brand was responsible, by occupying a pavilion
at the Venice Biennale. Having planned to do this with the co-operation
of Italian anarchists the BS, taking advantage of the withdrawal of the
Swedish delegation, managed to get past a cordon of police by using
fake press passes (supplied by Thorsen?) and joined up with a month
long occupation of the 'Academia de Belli Arte'. Although the Biennale
was subject to a concerted boycott and was besieged by anarchists the
BS decided in conjunction with a meeting of the World Anarchist Council
held in Stockholm the previous month, to send themselves in as a Trojan
Horse to establish a 'pavilion of revolt'. This had the effect of
symbolically creating a situation in which protest occurred both
outside and within the Biennale: the protest was 'everywhere' a process
of in(ex)filtration, it had caused the deployment of cordons of police
and yet had broken them. To accompany their action the BS issued a
Declaration. Signed by Nash, Thorsen and Caesar and titled Declaration
To Our Italian Artists And Comrades: Follow Courbet (53) the three
signatories outlined several stages of action. Beginning with an
outline of the planning of the occupation the Declaration proclaimed
that by sending in the BS as a Trojan horse it had revealed how the
"terror-police" defends "the art-police". The second stage was to call
for others to "leave the art academies". So the BS having been involved
in the planning of the protest outside, having broken in, now urged
others to break free of the "cultural concentration camp" that such
Biennales represent. The final stage, drawing upon the example of
Gustav Courbet's protest at the 1855 World Exhibition in Paris, called
for "permanent art barricades" to be established. The BS, with a nod to
their experiences within the 1'IS, finished their declaration with the
words "Divided We Stand", and thus, acknowledging participation and
process rather than mutually exclusive positions, it could be said that
they offered a new social relation of differences, a variability within
a unity, that not only assured participation, but offered practical
means to overcome the traps of individualism about which Jorn had
forewarned the Situationist movement: 'the idealist equation of
subjectivity with individualism'.
Having, in the
1960 article The Adventure, doubted whether artists were capable of
concerted action together, the later years of the 1'IS, marked by the
disintegration of British, American and Italian Sections, are a sorry
tale of its organisational implosion. They are also the tale of how the
1'IS came to be indistinguishable from its main theorist, Guy Debord,
and how the sovereignty of individualism, ever present within it, came
to be explicitly inscribed into its final moments. Beginning with the
Minimum Definition Of Revolutionary Organisations, adopted by the 7th
Conference of the 1'IS in Paris 1966, the 1'IS sought to provide the
growing movement of contestation with a 'mission statement'. This
document, appearing in the third issue of Situationistisk Revolution in
1970, substitutes the 1'IS for a wider movement whilst professing to be
what it isn't. It is another moment in the accelerating appearance of a
'situationist ideology' that began on the steps of Silkeborg. From its
opening sentence, that has it that the "only purpose of a revolutionary
organisation is the abolition of all existing classes...", to the last
sentence, that claims any moment of 'victory' as its own, the 1'IS set
itself apart from the wider movement and advises others to do the same
(54). This text, which is the first to enshrine the 1'IS as a
revolutionary organisation, does nothing to say how that organisation
should function as a social relation and instead offers that its 'total
democracy' is conditioned by each member having "recognised and
appropriated the coherence of its critique". If 'total democracy' is
the mark of the organisation what need does it then have to define
itself as an organisation? Whatsmore, if a condition of participation
is 'recognising' and 'appropriating' the critical coherence of the
1'IS, and if, as has been hinted, this coherence is nothing more than a
claim, a written expression of its idealised consciousness, then is it
that the 1'IS is claiming that participation in a revolutionary
organisation is tantamount to a faith, a belief in the coherence of
that organisation? Both these aproria's, themselves expressive of
"ideology as a separate power", are indicative of the bid for
posterity, the vanguardism of the 1'IS, its need to appear in
conformity to its 'self-image'. The pride of place given to its
'coherence' also bears out Jacques Camatte's contention that theory can
turn into repressive consciousness: "theory, instead of helping
establish contact with reality, becomes an agent of separation, of
removal, and in the end is transformed into a protrusion, an ejection
from the world" (55). With the publication of Debord's Society of The
Spectacle just around the corner and with Vaneigem's book delayed to
appear at the same time, there is a sense that the 1'IS was gearing-up
to stake its claim to be the avant-garde of the revolution. The Minimum
Definition text was thus essential to enable a presentation of these
'coherent' works of theory as being expressions of an organisation
greater than their individual authors. However, in the report to the
Paris Conference, Guy Debord touched upon various organisational
aprorias that were neither further addressed by him nor by other
members. In this report, the same one that assesses the practical
activity of the 1'IS as being poor, there are vague inklings given as
to remedies and reasons. Without explaining the sacralizing exclusions
Debord is momentarily critical of a purely theoretical practice that he
offers indications that 1'IS texts could be misinterpreted as
'grandiose' and 'prestigious'. He also urges the 1'IS to develop an
unalienated communication via a "recapturing the faculty of speech".
All the same he cannot stop himself from littering this report with
exhortations of an idealised notion of practice that is trapped in the
shadow of 'coherence' i.e. 'real common practice', 'real common
activity', 'really possible activity'. With this report it is almost as
if Debord has a dim recollection of what he had previously written on
the 'construction of situations', but for him and others these
'situations' had become superceded not only by moments of insurrection
and scandal, but by organisational issues. The 'construction of
situations', moving away from its original innovatory formulation as a
means of overcoming alienation through inter-subjective communication
and investigation into the 'everyday' – the reforging of social
relations and community – had become a means of carrying out a once
criticised militant activity under another guise. The 1'IS's call for a
reactivation of the workers councils, in which the working class
expressed its constituting power, became a substitute for the
'construction of situations', which, with their affective component,
had become too closely associated with the 'sphere' of art. Its turn to
'councilism', first mooted in Instructions For Taking Up Arms, was a
way that the idealism of the 1'IS was exacerbated and not abated.
Rather than seeing the councils as an historic expression of the
working class movement, the 1'IS saw the councils as an idealised
practice, as a transcendent form of ideal organisation: "this is where
the objective conditions of historical consciousness are reunited. This
is where direct and active communication is realised" (56). To suggest
that communication can be 'realised' at some distant point or by means
of a specific form, is to maybe suggest, like Vienet above, that
communication is not a process, an inter-relational practice, but a
possession proper to individuals.
After the May
Events, throughout which the 1'IS had called upon the working class to
form workers councils, the last issue of Internationale Situationniste,
published in 1969, contained another essay on organisation that was to
set the tone of their practice until their demise in 1972. This text,
an 'authentic' version correcting those versions of it that had been
circulating without the 1'IS's permission, again seemed concerned with
putting the record straight for posterity. Wanting to distance
themselves from being seen as Anarchists, this text, The Organisation
Question For The SI, was written by Debord in April 1968 with a
postscript added in August 1969 and became known as the 'April Theses'.
Despite the experiences of the May Events this text alarmingly reveals
the problems that had beset the 1'IS since the exclusion of the
Nashists in 1962 and thus since its 'supercesion of art'. As it had
offered in 1960, the 1'IS was still a "group based upon the complete
freedom of individuals", but now this was a freedom valued in relation
to the expression of a critical theory in which "everyone is
responsible for what he does personally without any reference to an
organisational community" (57). This statement, based upon a
ratification of sovereign individualism above that of social relations,
not only equates critical theory with contemplative individuals rather
than with a practical assemblage, it effects a simultaneous isolation
of any individual member of the 1'IS at the moment that they are
admitted to the organisation, and thus pre-empts the development of any
social relations inside the 1'IS as an organisation. With social
relations being at best conducted through the intermediary of text, the
1'IS, in fetishising its organisation as a symbol of revolutionary
actuality, was, in part, fetishizing its own organisation as an
educational establishment; a competitive environment in which members
were called upon to "demonstrate their abilities" and show "real
capabilities". Worse than this perhaps, and attesting to a sovereign
'state of exception', it becomes a matter of the 1'IS being declared as
an organisation only when it suits Guy Debord; for if 'everyone is
responsible for what he does personally without any reference to an
organisational community', then could the 1'IS be said to exist as an
organisation? It follows from this that the 1'IS was very much an
'obscure object of desire', a phantasm that blocked any expression of a
situationistic group subjectivity, by having those subjectivities
cathect the imaginary entity of 'coherence'. By thus incarnating an
idealised consciousness, based upon sovereignty of individualism (and
therefrom upon a proprietorialism, a right to possession and
exclusivity), the 1'IS, even after, and perhaps as part of the burn-out
of the May Events, could never hope to regain a practical foothold – in
its stead there arises an almost metaphysical desiring, a transcedence
of time and space: "The SI must now prove its effectiveness in a
subsequent stage of revolutionary activity" [emphasis added]. Like a
similarly paralysing tautology at point seven of this text – "truth is
verifying itself" – what is demanded of much needed participants is a
propensity to discipledom that, in a similar deflective operation to
that attending the excludees, is rejected scornfully as the passive
idolatry of the 'contemplatives' in its ranks. If anything could secure
the 1'IS as an actually-existing entity then it was the exclusions, but
even these were seen as a way to avoid the practical antagonisms of
contradiction as they were, for Debord, "responses to objective threats
that existing conditions hold in store for our actions". The exclusions
were a defence against a threat to the idealised self-image, means of
removing its connection to reality and enabling the 1'IS, as Camatte
suggested, to "frame reality with its concept". If for Debord the
1'IS's 'concept' was the spectacle... for Vaneigem it was coherence
itself that had become the 'concept': the "expulsions and breaks are
the only defence of an imperilled coherence" (58). To establish
coherence as the benchmark of participation is tantamount to dictating
that inter-subjective relations within an organisation be carried on in
an atmosphere of fear and reserve and whilst, in the 'April Theses',
Debord offers that "coherence is acquired and verified by egalitarian
participation in the entirety of a common practice, which
simultaneously reveals shortcomings and provides remedies", he neglects
to consider that when that 'common practice' (already deemed
superfluous) is absent, when there is meretricious competition
enshrined within an organisation, then any resultant practice can only
base itself on revealing the 'shortcomings'. Under the terms of this
logic it seems that the 1'IS only existed as a 'common practice', as an
organisation, when it was expelling someone and that this steady stream
of expulsions became not only a way to artificially create antagonisms
within the group, but to seek to present the exclusions as a
revolutionary practice itself (e.g. the issuing of a tract on the
expulsion of Atilla Kotanyi in 1963). So, when Debord candidly wrote in
the 'April Theses' that "the exclusions have almost never marked any
theoretical progress in the SI: we have not derived from these
occasions any more precise definition of what is unacceptable" he is
not only drawing attention to the way that the removal of
contradiction, the test of practice, impaired the 'theoretical
progress' of the 1'IS, he is articulating once again the 'sovereign
power' that exists abstractedly in the 1'IS: the 'unacceptable' cannot
be made any more 'precise' because it is the (repressed) preserve of an
individualism (that cannot be questioned), a sovereign freedom
unrestrained by social relations, a matter of 'exceptional' cases who,
gathered together under the illusion of 'common practice', came to form
nothing more than an 'ideological model of socialisation' (58a).
Although the
'April Theses' were intended as a discussion document Debord added at
their end that "in order to make the form of this debate consistent
with what I see as their content I propose that this text be
communicated to certain comrades close to the SI or capable of taking
part in it, and that we solicit their opinion on this matter." Aside
from the meretricious tone that suggests that some phantom
'capabilities' are needed in order to attend a debate on organisation,
this text seems to ask for participation at the same time that it
inbuiltly rejects it. Debord, who was to complain of his increasing
centrality in the 1'IS, perhaps gives an indication here as to why this
was so: he not only infers here that he has provided the content for a
form, but that the content he has provided (the 'April Theses') should
determine the form that the debate should take. There is nothing new in
ascribing an authoritarianism to Guy Debord, but it is maybe also a
case, in view of the theoretical leanings of the 1'IS, its
contemplative tenor, that the most contemplative would come to assume
the role of leader. But with the 1'IS we are not so much dealing with
the problems of a leader, but with what Jorn, in criticising Isodore
Isou and the Lettrists, called the "personification of the anonymous"
(59). The problem with an organisation that is simply the collection of
a group of individuals who are sovereign over their own ‘private
consciousness’, who thus have no concern for the space between people,
and consequently for an unrepressed activation of social relations as
the situationistic formation of what Thorsen called a ‘communicative
field’, is that the organisation they have formed projects in front of
them a mask to cover over a rampant individuality grounded on an
unstated repression (the ‘unacceptable’ that cannot be made any more
‘precise’). One facet of such an individuality is that it not only
seeks itself as its own ideal, but it projects its ideals forward
before it as an unresponsive disavowal of intimate communication that
helps it protect the sovereignty of its own experience. Thus, with the
April Theses, Debord could call for a debate and pre-empt it. His
individual expression substituted itself for a group articulation and,
under the guise of the 1’IS, became anonymous. This is to say that
Debord identified so absolutely with the 1'IS, came to represent it,
that what has been called here its 'self-image' would eventually be
indistinguishable from his own. Guy Debord, rather than being the
leader of an organisation, was, as its foremost contemplative, the
author of its main theory, the ideal of that organisation. His
authority, then, comes with his being the admixture of his own written
idealism and with his status as the ego-ideal for the other 1'IS
members. So instead of the ‘unalienated communication’ that they
sought, Debord and the 1’IS gave succour to a modality of individuality
– the narcissistic idealism of a ‘private consciousness’ – that came to
fill the spaces between people with an air of defensiveness,
proprietorship and mutual reproach. This enshrining of alienation
(repression) within the group, assured by the ever impending practice
of exclusions, was also the continual reinforcement of its duplicitous
take on organisation and ‘common practice’: if the ‘unacceptable’ could
not be made any more ‘precise’ then, Debord, as sovereign, as ego
ideal, could exercise a ‘state of exception’ at anytime, against anyone
and for anything. Perhaps, then, it is little wonder that individualism
within the 1’IS would intensify to such a self-protective and
narcissistic degree, that the organisation would slowly come to freeze
over with mutual fear and accusation. So, when Debord complained of
people being simply proud to be members of the 1’IS without their doing
anything, rather than look into the reasons for this and discover an
unsubverted sovereign power, an ego ideal governing the interplay of
relations, he once more projected out the ideal-image of the 1’IS (his
own self-image, his ego-ideal) which, with less and less people to
exclude, he would later turn onto the pro-situ milieu. In other words
the individualist deficiency enshrined within the 1’IS – its idealism,
its image of itself, its alienated relations – was projected onto
others rather than being confronted as an inescapable facet of shared
social life under capitalism. And so, the conflicts that occurred in
its final years seem to have, instead, centred around those pertaining
to the organisation of the 1’IS into national sections. At the
Delegates Conference held in Wolsfed and Trier in 1970, J.V.Martin is
reported as denouncing "the complete and scandalous lack of interest of
the whole international about the Scandinavian area" (60). Martin is
also reported at being dissatisfied with the "faulty communication from
the French section" and some disgruntlement with what was perceived as
French centrism was levelled at the 1'IS from the American section who
in turn referred to the 'infantilism of the sections'. With this
obscuring of sovereign individuality and with exclusions thus
proceeding unabated until the dissolution of the 1'IS in 1972 it is
difficult to agree with Jean Barrot when he, drawing out the
ramifications of the 1'IS's councilism, says that for the 1'IS the
"revolution appeared as the extension of inter-subjective situations to
the whole of society" (61). From many points of view, including that of
J.V.Martin who enquired at the Trier Conference into what was happening
with "our best weapon i.e. construction of situations", the
Situationist project, as expressed by the 1'IS, floundered precisely
because it could not explore the very dynamic of group subjectivity, an
exploration that may have revealed to it the narcissism, idealism,
avant-gardism and repressive consciousness that made an organisation
into an individuality, a personification of sovereign power. Raoul
Vaneigem who was closest and yet most distant from this exploration,
who could offer that "the project of participation enhances the
transparence of human relationships" also offered a cause for the
malaise, in the 1972 postscript to his book, as being due to radical
theory becoming "independent of the self-movement of revolutionary
consciousness". Collective practice, the shifting of the ego-ideal, the
relational ground of individuality, is conspicuous by its absence,
replaced by an ideal and autonomised consciousness.
The same year
that the 1'IS dissolved, the BS, having made an intervention at the
Royal Danish opera house the year before by blowing whistles and
hurling leaflets from the balconies, made one of their art barricades
outside the Documenta exhibition in Kassel. Called
Anti-Documenta-Art-Work this formless collection of junk, an
'anti-object', greeted visitors as they approached the Museum
Fridericianum. Whether or not the piece they assembled is considered as
an art work or as a social action, a moment of communicative urbanism,
it is still some kind of testament to the persistence of the BS. This
is one group that seems not to have disintegrated into acrimony and
this is perhaps a result of the fact that it never saw itself as
something it could never be; it did not work under the shadow of
posterity and only began to turn its attention to its historification
as a means of making sure that it did not become invisible to later
generations. Busy making actions and interventions the BS only rarely
concentrated on theoretical production and, as with the collaboration
between Nash and de Jong, the end result was always provisional, always
seen as an adjunct to its activities rather their defining moment. As
with Jorn, the BS were theoretical expressionists. So, if the BS could
be seen to be growing towards Anarchism, then it was not an Anarchism
of position, one that could be used to provide them with answers
fitting neatly into language, but an Anarchism that was consulted to
bolster and politicise their cultural-revolutionary practice. In other
words stressing "experiment through action, through creating or
intervening in situations" (62), the practical activity that haunted
the 1'IS was the motor of the BS. Having experienced the hot end of the
exclusions the BS were well aware that their organisation could be a
'communicative field' itself and that this 'field', potentially
instaurated anywhere and at any time, was dependent upon a new social
relation that could come to expression by means of the group
functioning as a social organism. Of Drakabygget Thorsen wrote: "Nearly
all the new collectivities base themselves upon group marriage thus
transforming the collectivities into sorts of pagan monasteries. The
Bauhaus Situationniste on the contrary has only one goal: to achieve
freedom for everybody on the place. Freedom to work, to come or leave,
join or not join" (63). Whilst this plays a little into the traps of
'lifestylism' that Jean Barrot criticised the 1'IS for, it is
nonetheless a matter of the BS creating the form and movement of their
own liberation. To his credit Debord saw this same movement as best
expressing the content of the workers councils in which "the
proletarian movement is its own product and this product is the
producer himself" (64). However, Debord restricted this very
'becoming', this situationistic activity, to the workers councils as a
superior form of organisation, whereas the BS were able to extend this
'productive co-operation' to the full spectra of life, a mixed
semiotic, rather than having it rest on an historically determined form
that was rapidly being supplanted by a developing capital. These
developments – variously termed over the years as 'real domination of
capital', as 'anthropomorphosis and escape of capital', as
'biopolitics' etc. in which more and more of life falls under the
determinations of capital, in which individuals become the colonies of
capital – were hinted at continually in the early years of the 1'IS,
but their ramifications, the situationistic construction of new social
relations and communicative fields, came less and less to motivate the
1'IS. If anything they became part-and-parcel of the individualism
enshrined within the 1'IS. Vaneigem, described as its weakest point by
Jean Barrot, was perhaps more like the one 'charged' with expressing
the group's 'unconscious': "Oppression is no longer centralised because
oppression is everywhere. The positive aspect of this: everyone begins
to see... that first and foremost it is themselves that they have to
save, they themselves that they have to choose as centre..." (65).
Strangely enough, considering the accusations of self-interest hurled
at them by the 1'IS in 1962, the BS as well as Group Spur, continued
their activities well beyond the 1972 tidemark because their members
saw the significance of an ongoing 'combat against culture' rather than
its supercession and, crucially, could work together collectively.
Thorsen, writing in the first Co-Ritus manifesto of 1961, identified
individualism as a utopian leaning and went on to say that such
individualism had "produced the divide between the individual and the
group, between the ideal and the banal, between art and anti-art,
between the creator and the sheep" (66). The problem of individualism
that had wrecked the 1'IS, leading to its legacy being identified with
one person, had, through a continual ethos of 'inclusivity', made of
the BS a grouping that never sought to integrate its members to an
ideal-ego. Rather than thus make way for the sovereign domination of
personalities and a conflict of egos thinly veiled by a written
'coherence' that could be objectively judged by 'history' the BS,
pursuing the space between people and a mixed semiotic, were intent on
producing a non sovereign socialisation: "turning the possibilities of
art into the possibilities of social space"(67).
The 'realisation
and suppression' of art that was much vaunted by the 1'IS takes on,
when put against the activities of the BS, an individualist hue that
insinuates that the 1'IS were in 'possession' of art. When Vaneigem
offered that the supercession of art was "the actualisation of art and
philosophy in individual lived experience" he did nothing more than
reconfine creative activity to the bounds of the individual. Something
similar occurs when the 1'IS claims to have superceded revolutionary
theory: they come to possess the work of Henri Lefebvre, Socialisme ou
Barbarie and its offshoot Informations Correspondance Ouvrieres, and go
no further. Like any ownership without use the concepts they wield
become ornamental, a matter of style and whether or not the act of
plagiarism involved is a theft on behalf of the revolution, it is, in
the case of the 1'IS, wielded in an exclusive manner; it belongs to
them rather than to a wider movement. For the BS 'supercession' existed
as a generosity that extended to their own dematerialisation as artists
(the 'death of the classic artist'). Art was to be 'placed in new
relations', it was to be the spur for the creation of new social
relations in which individualism, the repressive barrier to
communication, was to be superceded and severed from the paradigm of
sovereignty. As if to drive this point home J.V.Martin and Jens Jørgen
Thorsen began to collaborate together on extemporised paintings and on
a statement entitled All Culture Is Collective. Rallying against the
individualist ideology of artistic creation and auteurism the two
write: "Down with art which is self-contented and ego-centric, which
contemplates its own navel! Up with generating everybody's art for all"
(68). Discussions between the two are reported to have fed their way
into Thorsen's project for a Situationist Antinational which was
publicised in a magazine of the same name in 1974. Some new such
Situationist grouping had been mooted by the BS as long ago as their
creation of the 'pavilion of revolt'. Here in an additional Declaration
intended to collect signatories of those groups sympathetic to
overcoming "aesthetical isolation" and the manipulation of cultural
life, it was further stated that the BS "was against the principal of
national representation and authorisation of art by which the process
of international artistic activation is suppressed" (69). Perhaps
overcoming the Nordic centrism that, in warding-off Group Spur, had led
to the project for a 2'IS to falter, Thorsen, with half an eye on the
disagreements between national sections within the 1'IS, saw a chance
to reaffirm an internationalism not based upon nationality but upon a
willingness to surmount such barriers. In his draft manifesto for the
Situationist Antinational, Thorsen asked what had become of the 1'IS:
"Why did it lead to a series of mutual exclusions and attacks, to the
passivating philosophism which forced the movement on its knees, made
it split into bits and alienated it in relation to its own existence,
transforming it into a new ideology?" (70). His answer to this was that
nationalism had developed within the 1'IS which in turn fed a fight to
be 'chief-ideologist'. Whilst it could be said that national
differences were more a means of covering over the individualism within
the 1'IS, Thorsen perhaps came closer to indicting such individualism
when he wrote that "we will have to exchange the theories of alienation
for the reality of realisation". The alienated communication within the
1'IS was not simply a matter of language barriers but the barrier of
language whereby revolutionary intent had been misleadingly signalled
first by 'coherent' theory, then by a theory of organisation and
finally, in the Veritable Split In The International (1972), by the
historification of the organisation. Dealing with this last book of the
1'IS by Debord and Sanguinetti, Jon Horelick, a member of the American
Section who had, around 1970, wanted to open up discussions about the
exclusions within the 1'IS, made a contribution to Thorsen's project
that deals incisively with the problems that led to the increasing
inefficacy and demise of the 1'IS. Earmarking the exclusions as "not
the source but the product of our problems" and continually drawing
attention to intersubjective difficulties within the organisation,
Horelick offered that the 1'IS had become an object of contemplation
that Debord and Sanguinetti possessed. The historification of the
organisation, already ensured by its long term bid for posterity, made
it a dead object, an art work, that, communicating unilaterally, was
shielded from any successors. For Horelick an "inert common activity
which had lost hold even of its theoretical prerequisites for creative
participation" had led to the 1'IS becoming nothing more than an
"organisational void" (71). Whilst Thorsen's Antinational Situationist
project, which was supported by Spur members Heimrad Prem and Helmut
Strum, did not get beyond the draft stage it is an apt antidote to the
official situationist historiography. Not only does it open out an
offer of participation – the manifesto is prefaced by an appeal for
comment before it is printed and distributed – it speaks of its
intended organisation as a 'new organism'. This is an interesting
choice of words for it implies that the Situationist Antinational was
to have been a 'social organ' rather than a bureaucratic organisation
which the 1'IS eventually became. Whilst Thorsen aligns these
'organisms' with Bakunin's theory of secret societies it is perhaps his
intention to infer that the organisms should function as 'situations'
for he has it that the new grouping should be based upon the "free
correspondence between autonomous groups and individuals". It is
perhaps that these secret societies are seen by Thorsen as a way to
investigate a subjective dimension, situations of 'full speech',
unencumbered by the need to appear sovereignly 'coherent'. As with Jon
Horelick's text which, picking up on the example of rampant
individuality within the 1'IS and echoing the work of the Italian
Autonomists, turns its attention to an examination of the "subjective
stature of the existing proletariat" rather than this class being the
repository of an objectified idealism, the project of the Situationist
Antinational was to be one that accepted the differences between people
as a motor of becoming: a group subjectivity, a collective assemblage
of enunciation that draws upon all manner of semiotic and emotional
material. That this impasse gave rise to a post situationist milieu of
the "full personal critique" as urged by Horelick is an indication that
the revolutionary project was moving towards a critique of
individuality and to a production of subjectivity that could elude the
very individualising function of organisations that, in conformity to
capitalism, had hitherto created dependent-subjects rather than
subject-groups. Key here would be to enter into a different modality of
relationship to language – a theoretical expressionism that drawing-on
other semiotic registers, a culture of affects, could overcome the
paralysing adherence to 'coherence' that elevates the sovereignty of
individuals such as Guy Debord into the stature of law-bearers,
ego-ideals that stifle the flow of desire between people and instaurate
a communicative censorship within groups. Aiming to break such a hold,
Thorsen, in his draft manifesto, repeated the BS slogan of "Divided We
Stand" and reaffirmed Jorn's ethos of 'variabilities within a unity' –
the encounter with others who are not mirror images of ourselves, not
screens for narcissistic projection, but potential precipitates, active
inhabitants of tangential subjectivities, is the means of creating new
social relations that refuse the reduction of social life to the meagre
size of easily isolated individualities. As if to emphasise a new
starting point, a reaffirmation of the construction of situations, both
Horelick and Thorsen end their respective texts with the same yearning
sentence: "The new anti-hierarchical groups which emerge today must be
like a factory of everyday life..."
Howard Slater @ Break/Flow January - April 2001
Notes The reseach
behind this introduction springs from a week long continuous drift through
various archives in Copenhagen. Beginning as casual interest in the Scandinavian
branch of the situationist movement it soon developted into more fundamental
discussion and research regarding revolutionary strategies among avant
garde movements.
Joint
research by Howard Slater & Jakob Jakobsen.
Photos by Jakob Jakobsen
1. Found in a dictionary drift, histogenesis
means "the
formation of tissues and organs from undifferentiated cells".
2. Asger Jorn: Forms Conceived As Language. Translated
from Cobra No.2 by Sarah Wilson and taken from Situationist International
Online – http://members.optusnet.com.au/~rkeehan/
3. Asger Jorn's Artist Statement from Guy Atkins: Asger
Jorn, Methuen London, 1964.
4. Asger Jorn: Open Creation And Its Enemies, translated
by Fabian Tompsett, Unpopular Books 1994. This edition also contains translations
of Originality And Magnitude and Manifesto.
5. Asger Jorn: Open Creation, ibid, p38-39.
6. Spur: The Avant Garde Is Undesirable. Anon translation
taken from Situationist International Online.
7. See Jean Sellem: The Movement For A Scandinavian Bauhaus
Situationist – A Chronology in Lund Art Pess Vol2. No.3, 1992. Sellem's
research has been an indispensable guideline to this text. It shows a
Situationist presence in Scandinavia well beyond the 'official' 1972 shutdown.
Guy Debord, with an eye on the necessary periodisations of posterity wrote,
in The Organization Question For The SI (1968), that the years 1957-1962
"centred around the supercession of art". See Situationist International
Anthology ed. Ken Knabb, Bureau Of Public Secrets 1981, p298.
8. Jacqueline de Jong, Jørgen Nash, Ansgar Elde: Danger!
Do Not Lean Out! in Situationist Times No.1, 1962. Perhaps it is not so
much an 'outcome of the non-activity' of the four and more a matter of
the four practicing a mode of social relations based on individualism.
9. Definition in Situationist International Anthology,
ibid p112. It is interesting to note that Raoul Vaneigem makes a revealing
reference to the figure of 'the traitor' as appearing when "the spirit
of play has died in a group". He adds "selling out on play is the prime
treachery". See The Revolution Of Everyday Life (1963-65), Left Bank Books
& Rebel Press 1983, p201-202.
10. The Fifth SI Conference In Goteborg in Situationist
International Anthology, ibid p88. Lars Morell in his Poesien Breder Sig
– Nash, Drakabygget & Situationisterne makes reference to a demand for
the 'revision' of the SI movement coming at this conference from Debord,
Kotanyi and Vaneigem. The So Ein Ding project was here labelled as an
'art' film.
10a. Mikkel Bolt in conversation with Jakob Jakobsen.
11. Guy Debord & Pierre Canjuers: Toward Defining A Unitary
Revolutionary Programme (1960) in Situationist International Anthology,
ibid, p308. This text was the outcome of the SI's contact with Socialisme
ou Barbarie. In The Revolution Of Everyday Life, Vaneigem refers to the
"artistic spectacle", ibid p189... and to a core ambiguity of the practice
of art as that dividing 'lived experience' from 'aesthetic form', ibid
p84. It would be interesting to discover how this plays against Jorn's
findings in his Pour La Forme published under the auspices of the 1'IS
in 1958.
12. Jacqueline de Jong: Critic Of The Political Practice
Of Detournement in Situationist Times No.1, 1962.
13. See Giorgio Agamben: Homo Sacer – Sovereign Power
and Bare Life, Stanford University Press, 1998, p109. Agamben has it that
"the relation of exception is a relation of ban", ibid, p28. Are the exclusions
an exercise of the 'relation of ban'? It is interesting to note that Nash
and de Jong speak of the 1'IS as an "organisation which has absolutely
no rules", ibid.
14. Instructions For Taking Up Arms (1961) in Situationist
International Anthology, ibid p63. In his later denouncement of Vaneigem,
Debord at least credits Vaneigem with collaborative input into the anonymous
articles of this period. Could it be that the 'methods yet to be experimented
with' are 'situations'?
15. The Adventure (1960), ibid, p60.
16. Drakabygget Declaration: Situationist Times No.2,
1962. The declaration was signed by Nash, Thorsen, Fazakerley, Strid,
Larsson, Elde, De Jong and Patrick O'Brien. Gordon Fazakerley, from Widnes
in the North West of England, had been associated with Jorn and Nash from
the late 50s, helped build Drakabygget and was the secretary at Situationist
Times. He also published a book of poems under the auspices of the Bauhaus
Situationniste in May 1962 with an introduction – Hamletomania – provided
by Jørgen Nash. See Gordon Fazakerley: The Ferryboat, Lund Art Press,
ibid, p133-143. Patrick O' Brien was the pseudonym used by Guy Atkins,
Jorn's biographer.
17. Nietzsche quoted by Pierre Klossowski in his Nietzsche
And The Vicious Circle, Athlone 1997, p14.
18. The seizure of Unesco was first mooted in the Situationist
Manifesto of 17th May 1960 and published the same year in Internationale
Situationniste No.4. See Asger Jorn: Open Creation And Its Enemies, ibid,
p44-47. For a full version of the Mutant leaflet see P.H.Hansen: A Bibliography
Of Asger Jorn's Writings, Silkeborg 1988.
19. Report of Guy Debord to The VII Conference Of The
SI in The Veritable Split In The International (1972), BM Chronos 1984,
p99-107. This far from perfect translation still serves as a key document
to understanding the unconscious aprorias of the 1'IS.
20. Situationist Manifesto in Asger Jorn: Open Creation,
ibid. A similar hope for participation is contained in the Vaneigem-inflected
Instructions For Taking Up Arms: "People's creativity and participation
can only be awakened by a collective project explicitly concerned with
all aspects of lived experience", ibid.
21. Jean Barrot: Critique Of The Situationist International
in What Is Situationism, Unpopular Books 1987, p33. Reprinted in What
Is Situationism? ed. Stewart Home, AK Press 1996.
22. Alexander Trocchi: A Revolutionary Proposal – The
Insurrection Of A Million Minds in City Lights Journal No.2 1964, p33.
Trocchi's proposal appeared in International Situationniste No.8 (1963)
and was a wide-ranging and ambitious attempt to revolutionise culture.
It had an axial role in the British counter culture of the 60s, diffusing
into initiatives such as the Arts Lab, the London Anti-University and
the Artist Placement Group. As part of the Sigma Portfolio an essay on
'The New Experimental College (Denmark)' was planned.
23. Jean Sellem: Harry Strid's Work in Drakabygget No.6-7-8,
1982. This article briefly covers the activities of the BS up to the decapitation
of the 'Little Mermaid' in Copenhagen Harbour in 1964.
24. Jørgen Nash and Jens Jørgen Thorsen: Co-Ritus Interview
in Aspekt No.3, 1963. As a long term participant in the BS, Jens Jørgen
Thorsen has been a key figure in documenting their activities. See Friheden
Er Ikke Til Salg, Bogan 1980.
25. Jean Sellem, ibid.
26. Jørgen Nash: Who Are The Situationists? This article
first appeared in The Times Literary Supplement of September 1964 and
is an edited and reworked version of the 1962 Declaration which also includes
excerpts from the Mutant-manifesto. In the same supplement Michele Bernstein's
contribution speaks of "the situationist label" being "usurped by certain
intellectuals who have been expelled by the IS... e.g., the followers
of Nash in Sweden". For reprints of the Nash and Bernstein articles see
An Endless Adventure ed. Iwona Blazwick, ICA/Verso 1989, p61-62.
27. Drakabygget Declaration (1962), ibid.
28. Jørgen Nash, ibid. Nash mentions four such groups.
One "on the Hallandsasen in southern Sweden and two more in Denmark and
Sweden". We have already mentioned Alexander Trocchi and his oft thwarted
plan to establish a Sigma Centre. The project had a twin in Holland energised
by Simon Vinkenoog. There was also the Dutch Provos around Constant and
in the later 60s, Kommune1 in which Dieter Kunzelmann of Group Spur was
involved. Another 'Bauhaus' had existed in the USA since the 30s – The
Black Mountain College that drew on the participation of a former Bauhaus
lecturer, Joseph Albers.
29. Drakabygget Declaration (1962), ibid. Asger Jorn,
more speculatively, saw the very existence of a pseudo socialist nation
as the death knell of a creative, revolutionary working class, able to
"represent the most pure human value". For him "With the establishment
of the socialist ideology within a fixed geographical system, this value
is transformed into a quality, and that quality in turn into a spatial
quantity. The vision of the world proletariat passes over into its opposite,
that of absolute property with the absolute disappearance of all availability,
of all the proletarian values".See Critique Of Economic Policy (1960)
in Transgressions No.4, 1998, p33. Jorn saw the 'social provocations of
youth' as taking the necessary risks to reassert the 'pure human value'
which may have inspired the 1'IS to give notice of R.Keller's and R.Vaneigem's
project to "introduce the aggressivity of delinquents onto the plane of
ideas". See The Bad Days Will End (1962) in Situationist International
Anthology, ibid, p87.
30. Bjorn Rosendahl: Bauhaus Situationist In Sweden –
A Retrospective in Lund Art Press Vol2 No.3, 1992, p26.
31. Pierre Klossowski playing-out along with Nietzsche,
ibid, p4. Klossowski, musing on letters Nietzsche wrote when he mistakenly
thought that the Louvre had been destroyed by insurrection in 1871, highlights
a whole pathology of guilt about culture: "As long as culture implies
slavery and is the product of (unavowed) slavery, the problem of guilt
persists", ibid, p11.
32. The following draws upon a text by Anneli Fuchs called
Asger Jorn And Art History.
33. The Situationist Times drew upon this method in at
least two issues. No.4 focussed on the Labyrinth and No.5 on Rings and
Chains.
34. Asger Jorn: Critique Of Economic Policy (1960), ibid,
p21.
35. The Situationist Frontier (1960) taken from Situationist
International Online. For a more detailed discussion of the 'construction
of situations' see Howard Slater: Towards Situation, Break/Flow – Occasional
Documents, 2001.
36. The Avant-Garde Of Presence (1963) in Situationist
International Anthology, ibid, p110. The stipulations here are tantamount
to finishing-off the ‘construction of situations’, banning its practice
by anyone else except 1’IS members. Interestingly, Jean-Luc Nancy has
offered that sovereignty “is the power of execution or the power of finishing
as such”. See his Being Singular Plural, Stanford University Press 2000,
p120.
37. Raoul Vaneigem: The Revolution Of Everyday Life (1965),
ibid p153.
38. Ideologies, Classes And The Domination Of Nature
(1963), in Situationist International Anthology, ibid, p107.
39. Jacqueline de Jong: Critic Of The Political Practice
Of Detournement, ibid. Asger Jorn would concur with this: "All life is
an alternation between activity and passivity... production and consumption...
through giving oneself alternatively to both situations with equal abandonment
there arises a new creation, the dialectical result of apparently incompatible
oppositions." Quoted by Graham Birtwistle in his Living Art: Asger Jorn
(1946-1949), Reflex 1986.
40. No images or written accounts of Jan Strijbosch's
work are featured in the RSG-6 brochure that accompanied this 'collective
manifestation of the Situationistisk Internationale'.
41. The Counter Situationist Campaign In Various Countries
(1963) in Situationist International Anthology, ibid, p111.
42. Guy Debord & Pierre Canjuers in Situationist International
Anthology, ibid, p308.
43. The SI And The Incident In Randers (1966). Translated
by Reuben Keehan and taken from Situationist International Online.
44. Raoul Vaneigem: Revolution of Everyday Life, ibid,
p74. The problem of language was raised by the 1'IS in the article All
The Kings Men (1963) and by Mustapha Khayati in Captive Words: Preface
To A Situationist Dictionary (1966).
45. Guy Debord: The Situationists And The New Forms Of
Action In Politics And Art (1963), in Situationist International Anthology,
ibid, p 317. This avant-gardism (or simply vanguardism) was taken up in
The Revolution Of Everyday Life (1965) by Vaneigem when he offered that
the 1'IS: "will supply a model for the future organisation of society",
ibid, p211. Likewise in The Organisation Question For The SI (1968), Debord
offered that the 1'IS's task as an organisation was to "unite and radicalise
scattered struggles", ibid.
46. Guy Debord: The Organisation Question For The SI
(Note added August 1969), ibid, p301.
47. Guy Debord: The Situationists And The New Forms Of
Action In Politics And Art, translated in full by Ken Knabb and taken
from the Not Bored website.
48. See Jens Jørgen Thorsen (aka Bamber Gosling): First
Underground – First Rebels in Situationister 1957-70, ibid. For Black
Mask and Up Against The Wall see the anthology of material recirculated
by Unpopular books in 1993. There is only scant information about the
Mexican Situationists. Similarly for the Japanese Zengakurren movement
who made contact with both situationist currents in Europe. The latter,
in the persons of T.Kurokawa and Toru Tagaki, met the 1'IS in September
1963. See Situationnistes Chronologie in An Endless Adventure ed. Iwona
Blazwick, ibid, p20.
49. Minimum Definition Of Revolutionary Organisations
(1966) in Situationist International Anthology, ibid, p223.
50. The Counter Situationist Campaign In Various Countries,
ibid.
51. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: The Communicative Phase In Art
in Situationister i Konsten ed J.Nash, H. Strid, J.Thorsen. Bauhaus Situationniste
1966.
52. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: First Underground – First Rebels
in Situationister 1957-70 ibid. The 1'IS produced their own documentation
outlining their involvement in the May events and in the atmosphere that
preceded them. See Rene Vienet: Enrages And Situationists In The Occupation
Movement (1968), Autonomedia/Rebel Press,1992. Not unsuprisingly Vienet
blames a "backwardness of theoretical consciousness" for the movement's
failure whilst providing the 1'IS with the ideological alibi of "implacable
coherence".
53. Both Declarations are reproduced in Situationister
1957-70, ibid.
54. Minimum Definition Of Revolutionary Organisations
(1966), ibid.
55. Jacques Camatte: The Wandering Of Humanity, Black
& Red 1973, p41.
56. Guy Debord: Society Of The Spectacle (1967) – Theses
116, Black & Red 1983.
57. Guy Debord: The Organisation Question For The SI,
ibid, p300.
58. Raoul Vaneigem: The Revolution Of Everyday Life,
ibid, p211.
58a. See Jean Baudrillard: For A Critique Of The Political
Economy Of The Sign, Telos 1981, p95 n7. This rich phrase, neither coined
by Baudrillard in relation to the 1'IS nor any further developed by him,
perhaps suggests here that the example of 1'IS can provide us with insight
into the ideology of individualism and the individualising effect of ideologies.
59. Asger Jorn: Originality and Magnitude (1960) in Open
Creation And Its Enemies, ibid, p18.
60. Report From The Delegates Conference held in Wolsfeld
and Trier (1970). Taken from Not Bored website where it's sourced as being
reproduced from Pascal Dumontier: Les Situationnistes et Mai 68 – Theorie
et practique de la revolution 1966-1972, Editions Lebovici 1990.
61. Jean Barrot ibid, p 20.
62. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: First Underground – First Rebels,
ibid.
63. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: Drakabygget in Situationister
1957-70, ibid.
64. Guy Debord: Society Of The Spectacle, Theses 117,
ibid.
65. Raoul Vaneigem: The Revolution Of Everyday Life,
ibid, p188.
66. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: Co-Ritus Manifesto (1961) in
Friheden Er Ikke Til Salg, Bogan 1980.
67. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: Communicative Phase In Art (1966),
ibid.
68. Jens Jørgen Thorsen & J.V.Martin: All Culture Is
Collective in Antinational Situationist, 1974.
69. Declaration On The New International Solidarity Amongst
Artists (1968) in Situationister 1957-70, ibid.
70. Jens Jørgen Thorsen: Draft Manifesto of The Antinational
Situationists in Antinational Situationist No.1 1974. The draft manifesto
was recommended by Jørgen Nash, J.V.Martin, Patrick O'Brien, Tom Krojer,
Ambrosius Fjord, Andres King, Yoshio Nakajima, Liza Menue, Heimrad Prem,
Mette Aarre, Heinz Freitag, Liz Zwick, Novi Margni and Helmut Strum.
71. Jon Horelick: Beyond The Crisis Of Abstraction And
The Abstract Break With That Crisis – The SI in Antinational Situationist
No.1, 1974. As if to emphasise the role of Debord as an ego-ideal for
the group even this critical text refers to the "excellence and stature
of G.Debord".
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