Gavin Grindon Surrealism Dada and The Refusal of Work Autonomy Activism and Social Participation in The Radical Avantgarde 1
Gavin Grindon Surrealism Dada and The Refusal of Work Autonomy Activism and Social Participation in The Radical Avantgarde 1
Gavin Grindon Surrealism Dada and The Refusal of Work Autonomy Activism and Social Participation in The Radical Avantgarde 1
gavin
Gavin Grindon
In the bourgeois era, as cultural production was enclosed by the market and art
was increasingly separated from the social institutions which had previously
supported and conditioned it, a theoretical tendency emerged which
conceived of art as self-governing and autonomous from other social
institutions: what is usually called the autonomy of art. The ideological
character of this autonomy, which is bound up with bourgeois ideas of a free,
independently rational subject, has been accounted for by a number of
Marxist critics.7 However, in writing on art and aesthetics from the
Romantic period onwards, this idea also began to appear to celebrate a
subjective freedom to, as well as a freedom-from, often variously aligned
with radical positions opposed to capitalism. One can sense this tension, for
example, in Mallarmes ambiguous assertion of arts autonomy via a
metaphor of social engagement, when he claims that in our time the poet
# The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press; all rights reserved
doi:10.1093/oxartj/kcr003
Gavin Grindon
can only go on strike against society.8 In the early twentieth century, these
divergent tendencies reach a point of crisis. The freedom implied by aesthetic
autonomy began to be taken to imply a freedom beyond the limits of
aesthetic production. This is the historical condition of possibility of the
avant-garde which Burger describes as the systemic self-criticism of art.9
This situation was a result of historical changes in the composition of the
role of artist. The aesthetic discourses above diagnose the artist as a
peculiar figure. As an ideal of genius and creation, the artist is celebrated for
a rejection of measure and fixity, and provides a refuge of non-normative
behaviour. In others words, the artist was a sovereign figure. But, in
Modernity, the class-relations which support this sovereignty altered and
threw it into crisis, in the separation which emerges between arts social
autonomy (artistic productions functional, institutional separation from its
earlier economic basis, in the move from aristocratic patronage to a market
system that is, a move into more openly performing a social role) and the
ideological value, or cultural capital, which remained around this work and
its products: its autonomy as a value.
Burgers Theory of the Avant-Garde defines the radical avant-garde as an attempt
to bring art into everyday life. However, Burger argues that this self-critical
Icarian vault is doomed by its historical inheritance. He characterises the
avant-garde as an attempt to dialectically realise the autonomous value of the
bourgeois artwork; an attempt which ended in tragic failure. Its subversive
anti-art works, intended as a refusal of art and of the commodity-form, were
bought up as artworks and commodities. After this, history repeats itself as
farce. The neo-avant-garde exemplified by Warhols pop art produces a
neo-Dadaism which repeats the rejection of art as art, in a manifestation
that is void of sense.10 The avant-garde has become impossible. He
concludes that the avant-gardes political strategies are dead. But it is possible
to locate an open element in this smooth dialectical narrative, a minor thread
which breaks with it. Burgers reading has been powerful and valuable in
identifying one set of limits to art that has attempted political critique or
counter-representation within the commodity-form, which the avant-garde
were first to experience. However, it does so by exclusively emphasising that
the autonomy of art is an ideological value which is a function of the
commodity-form. But it is possible to make a reading of this
autonomy-as-a-value which also emphasises both its positive content despite
its basis, and the re-articulation of this content in relation to non-commodity
social forms and relations. Such a reading throws positive light on other less
tragic strategies of the radical avant-garde.
It is possible to sketch a brief genealogical reading of this
autonomy-as-a-value and its positive content. The autonomy of art held a
positive sense of embodied autonomous labour-power. This positive sense of
arts autonomy was already present in nascent form in earlier articulations
of aesthetic autonomy. The establishment of aesthetics as a separate sphere of
knowledge, and a conception of artistic production as an activity distinct
from all other social production, is articulated through a complex dialectic
between notions of work and play, purpose, and disinterest. There is not
space to explore this fully here, but it perhaps finds its clearest articulation in
Schillers 1795 Aesthetic Education of Man, in which he argues that artistic
production and aesthetic contemplation resolve the rational and sensuous
aspects of man in the form of a play drive. This harmonious free play of ones
faculties embodies the autonomy of art such that man . . . is only fully a
human being when he plays.11 This moral function attributed to play owes
82 OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011
Gavin Grindon
Having earlier written that there is no use being alive if one must work,21
Breton attempted, in the Second Surrealist Manifesto, to reassert the
centrality of this refusal even as it slipped from view:
es, even in the workshops, in the street, the seminaries
There are still today, in the lyce
and military barracks, pure young people who refuse to knuckle down. It is to them and
them alone that I address myself, it is for them alone that I am trying to defend
Surrealism against the accusation that it is, after all, no more than an intellectual
pastime like any other.22
The Surrealists would also codify their refusal of work partly through a
dis-identitarian pantheon of those who assert I am an other, from cultural
84 OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011
figures such as Rimbaud and Sade; Chaplin the clown and Fantomas the
criminal; to a celebration of contemporary lumpen vagabondage, in their
own heroes of the art of living, Arthur Cravan and Jacques Vache. This
tendency persisted elsewhere, too. Aragon later presented his Treatise on Style
not as an aesthetic guide to writing, but an ethical guide to living in which
it is necessary to study the episodic forms of rebellion.23 This Surrealist
emphasis on the refusal of work was a product of autonomy-as-a-values
systemic self-criticism of the role of the artist. Neither was this an
aristocratic gesture of personal retreat or of pure negation. Instead, as I will
argue below, this rhetorical refusal to participate in the production of
capitalist values was one side of the avant-gardes positive participation in
composing alternatives. Most negative accounts of the bold claims of the
avant-garde for arts potential to change society, by focusing on recuperation
and commodity-fetishism, overlook the other labour which often lay behind
the refusal of work.
Aesthetic Composition
To examine this other labour, I would like to place the radical avant-garde in the
context of the history of labour studies. This might seem an unusual
perspective,24 but framing these issues in terms of the changing role of what
Marx called labour-power25 rather than the critique of ideology reveals
another possible narrative of the avant-garde.26 We can read the radical
avant-garde from this perspective by drawing on the notion of class
composition in autonomist Marxist thought. There is a long, albeit
fragmented, critical discourse on work and its composition. Marx uses the
term the composition of capital to account for capital as, at any one point,
made up of a particular organisation of the ratio between living and dead
labour. Autonomists have since proposed to view things from the other side,
asserting the composition of the working class against capital. Class
composition27 rejects the idea of a working-class perspective valid for all
human history28 or that this perspective could be identified with a particular
philosophical method. Instead, it attempted to measure the actually existing
form of the working class. The term denotes two antagonistic forces. On the
one hand, technical composition the shaping of the working class by the
demands of capital, for example, by management discipline and economic
restructuring. On the other hand, political composition the composition
from below of the working class as a force against capital, in the everyday
emergence of new forms of work-refusal, subversion, and organisation.29
This analyses places in Marxist terms what Foucault termed subjection and
subjectification30 labouring participation in the making of ones identity
and social relations.
This attention to labour and identity is intended to address a methodological
gap. Though art history is sensitive to subjective aesthetic encounters with
objects and performances, its social extension of these has mostly addressed
them through ideological critique. Conversely, the potential agency of
performances and objects in ordering the social world has been explored by
anthropological studies of material culture, but these have tended to be
structural and macropolitical. This is even more so the case for Sociology,
despite focusing a specific field of studies, for example, on the culture of
social movements. Addressing art in terms of labour studies, and class
composition specifically, allows us to appreciate the moving aesthetics of such
encounters, whilst also exploring the connection between affect and social
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Gavin Grindon
Thereafter, the forms of social movement art become those we are most familiar
with, associated with the urban crowd. Like Saint-Simons notion of an
avant-garde, the forms which developed, whether banners and posters;
parades and marches; or even barricades, borrowed from the existing
religious and military arts of disciplining, ordering, and composing a mass of
people as much as from eighteenth-century popular folk culture.
Modernity represented a new high-point of technical composition. The war
encouraged the rapid development of a mechanised factory system and a new
wave of technological development. In 1911, Frederick Taylor published his
Principles of Scientific Management, which extended the logic of Fordist
production into the micro-control of working subjects. We can read this text
as a capitalist reiteration of governmental discourses of subjection. Taylors
text develops a particular Modernist discourse on performance and identity
in the field of business strategy. Taylor understood the identity of worker not
as a fixed status but as a role which may be more or less well performed.
His process management38 and its attempt to control workflows tied the
gestures and movements that make up the performance of the role of worker
to the economic performance of a company as a whole. In this discourse,
performance was a synonym for success or failure: a term of measure of
surplus value and exploitation which could be either high or low. The
greater the increase in Fordist machine-production and the attunement of its
various parts, the smaller the affective play-element of works performance
became. Taylorisms micro-discipline made the subjective refusal of work a
primary, if rarely documented, class battleground. The linear ground of
performance as a measure was opposed by performing otherwise, refusing
the role of worker by developing other techniques producing valorisations
other to that of capital. Taylors work was archetypal of another utopian
imagination of the future: an intensified pace of rationalised social
performance after World War I. This discipline of the identity of worker
coincided with a turn to address use in culture, as maintaining the effective
or efficient performance of social roles. Following Taylor, and in France
Henri Foyol, there was an attempt to shape the performance of free time
outside of work in rational managerial governmental terms. Society, too,
was a factory that required management. Many began to imagine a culture
expressing this industrial logic in machine-metaphors, against accounts of
culture as without use. Courbusier would famously rethink the architecture
of the home as a machine for living.39 Others would apply the lessons of
management-discipline to government, education, healthcare, advertising and
consumer behaviour, city planning, and urban-space management. In culture,
such strategies often approached affect on the side of capital, not least in the
work of Edward Bernays, or Walter Lippman and his 1922
performative-industrial metaphor of the manufacture of consent.40 But
these social changes led some artists to examine the function of their work in
terms of the social role it performed, whilst taking an anticapitalist line on
the role of dreams, desires, and feelings in the production of social roles.
The Manufacture of Dissent
Gavin Grindon
the situation was more open: the industrial division of labour was far less
developed, whilst Communism was endeavouring to recompose the working
class as part of a new society, from debates on playful/machinic movement
to the free-time-as-labour of subbotnik.41 Among Russian avant-garde
artists, there was both a clear rejection of the role of artist and an iterative
play with naming which established a queer status with regard to art and
political institutions and discourses. The identity of artist became liminal in
relation to various recompositions of artist constructor, artist engineer and
artist inventor:
Things are hard for the constructivist production artist. Artists turn their backs on him.
Industrialists wave him away in annoyance. The man in the street goggles.42
Recent scholarship has explored this new identity and its labour.43 Elsewhere,
performative subject-formation found direct expression in participatory mass
spectacles in which new identities were literally performed. A new calendar
of secular Communist holidays was introduced. Pre-revolutionary
demonstrations that had been civil disobedience were reiterated as
institutional urban festivals and Proletkult theatre such as The Mystery of
Freed Labour. Most famously it was possible for Nikolai Evreinov to have
8 10,000 people restage the storming of the Winter Palace on its third
anniversary in November 1920, watched by another 100,000; whilst Arseny
Avraamovs 1922 Symphony of Factory Sirens recomposed the machines and
labour skills of an entire city as flags and pistol-shots conducted an orchestra
composed of huge choirs, factory sirens, two batteries of artillery, the
foghorns of the entire Soviet Caspian flotilla, hydroplanes, and a
specially-built giant steam whistle playing, among other refrains, the
Internationnale.44 These festivals manufactured myths of (not-yet unitary)
revolutionary identities, as the Peoples Commissar for Enlightenment put it,
in order to acquire a sense of self the masses must outwardly manifest
themselves.45 He saw these revolutionary-state festivals as the telos of the
popular festivals of the French revolution, themselves partial
institutionalisations of rough music.46
Dada and the Art of Social Movement
The scholarship on Constructivism reveals that the troubling of the role of artist
by collective social engagement was clearest where there was a concomitant
cycle of working class struggles troubling work more generally. Though it
has been less examined in these terms, this was also the case among the
Dadaists in Weimar Berlin, in a period of mass strikes and violent street
battles, the Spartakist uprising and an attempted fascist putsch. Here too
there was a reiteration of names and identities which reflected an attempt to
forge a new presentation of selfhood and a new social role for artists. John
Heartfield and George Grosz stamped many of their works mont,
meta-mech, or meta-mech constr. Haussman explained, The term
translates our aversion at playing the artist, and, thinking of ourselves as
engineers . . . we meant to construct, to assemble [montieren] our works.47
Meanwhile, Johannes Baader neglected his job as a trained architect and gave
himself over to, in the words of his collaborator Haussman, an activity
which is difficult to define,48 yet continued to use the title Architekt,
employing architectural construction as a metaphor for building a new
society analogous to the Constructivist artist-engineer.49 The role of names
88 OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011
in this attempt to be otherwise was also important for the mythical composition
of revolutionary organisations and the mimicry/mockery of the party-form
which became common among Dada, Surrealist, and associated groups; from
the Dada Central Office of the World Revolution; The Anti-National
Committee for Unpaid Workers; Dada Advertising Company, Christ GmbH;
a tendency which continued later in Paris with the Surrealist Party and the
Bureau of Surrealist Research. But alongside this focus on revolutionary
identities, Dadas renaming was at the same time open and less focused than
Constructivisms, for example, in their paradoxical and nebulous
self-definition in terms of a broad way of acting:
Dada is not limited to any art. The bartender in the Manhattan Bar, who pours out
Curacao with one hand and gathers up his gonorrhoea with the other, is a Dadaist. The
gentleman in the raincoat, who is about to start his seventh trip around the world, is a
Dadaist.50
Gavin Grindon
all the world; or . . . a propagandist and defender of the revolutionary idea and its
partisans.53
Disobedient Performance
Much has been written on Grosz and Heartfields production of montages and
drawings for political newspapers, but there were other more artistically novel
entries into social movement production among the Berlin Dadaists. The
increased visibility of social movements at the turn of the century had
multiple formal influences on avant-garde art internationally, and not least of
these was on Dadas turn to performance. In Tzaras retrospective account,
Dada in Zurich re-imagined the role of the artist by drawing on the
traditional forms of social movement performance, In the presence of a
compact crowd Tzara demonstrates, we demand the right to piss in different
colours, Huelsenbeck demonstrates, Ball demonstrates . . . .54 Tzara codified
it, the new artist protests, he no longer paints.55 Albeit indoors with a
paying audience, Dada took a protest-form. Their particular imagination of
protest was indebted to the language of libertarian nineteenth-century
working-class movements. These movements tended to account for protest
and direct action in reactive terms of incitement, provocation, outrage, and
offense, even after the vogue for propaganda-by-the-deed, dynamite, and
assassination had passed. This language of the radical break influenced
Modernists more generally, but working in these negative terms, the
measure of success for these demonstration performances was to produce
an agitated crowd the very same unruly and irrational mob feared by
bourgeois social critics. For the Dadaists, the artist organiser was replaced
by the artist agitator, whose symbolic assault on Culture also had
precedents in social movement practices, most recently in suffragette attacks
on art during 1914. Later, a Parisian Dada event at the Universite Populaire
du Faubourg Saint-Antoine combined this form with a working-class
audience, but things did not go as planned. Tzara was unable to agitate the
crowd by attacking poetry. When this merely elicited polite requests for
explanations, he struck out against Lenin and Marx. This the workers refused
to accept and though they did not break out in a riot, they held the Dadas
for hours, forcing them to explain their position again and again.56
But, in Berlin, this mostly formal artistic play with social performance moved
out of the cabaret and into the relations of social movement production from
which it had initially been drawn. Huelsenbecks formulation also took
protest as a performative model:
The abstract artist has become . . . a wicked materialist . . . Dada is German Bolshevism
. . . The technical aspect of the Dadaist campaign . . . was considered at great length.
Our best instrument consistent of big demonstrations at which . . . everything connected
with spirit, culture and inwardness was symbolically massacred.57
But as this suggests, not only did the Berlin Dadaists draw more specifically on
the art forms of social movements, of public parades with music, costumes,
banners, stickers, and posters; but the functional framework of these forms
became that shared by social movements. We might frame this in terms of
their engagement with the ideas of the anarchist Gustav Landauer. Herzfeld,
editing the proto-Dada Neue Jugend, published Landauer, and Jung had been a
member of the Tat-Gruppe, a local branch of his Sozialistischer Bund. Landauer
saw not work, but the state, as a matter of performance, The state is a
90 OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011
By the time they reached Potsdamer Platz, they had sold every one of their
7,600 copies, before spotting the arresting officers on Alexanderplatz.
Herzfelde received four weeks in prison and a fine. Their collaborators
escaped by losing their identity: the two-horse carriage covered the Jedermann
. . . posters on its sides while the musicians left their instruments and
disappeared into a nearby pub. Pageants and funeral-protests in particular
were a longstanding form in social movement art but rather than a funeral
for a specific figure, this played with the form, incorporating and parodying
elements of the nationalist military funerals given to Freikorps members,
which were regularly visible on the streets of Berlin at the time (the band
played the Preuenlied, the national anthem of the early nineteenth-century
Prussian Kingdom; I Had a Comrade, a military funeral-lament of the same
period; and the popular song The Grassy Bank by my Parents Grave).
However, travelling East they also repeated the general route of the Spatakist
Karl Liebknects funeral parade towards Friedrichsfled cemetery a month
before, which had involved 40,000 people. According to Herzfeld, their own
OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011 91
Gavin Grindon
parade was joined by a few sailors. The social impact of Dada street actions is
difficult to gauge now, but they were often reported in the press,62 their lives
were threatened by the Freikorps and their announcement of a Dada-Republik
of Berlin-Nikolassee led to the local council having a regiment of soldiers ready
to protect the district (this taking place after the failed Spartakist revolt and a
short-lived fascist putsch, and apparently reiterating Liebknechts 1918
announcement of a Free Socialist Republic from a balcony hours after the
official announcement of the Weimar Republic).63 Mehrings account above
notes a more positive impact as Every man his own football found itself
adopted by working class movements as a popular slogan.
While some aspects of the avant-garde have become central to
twentieth-century cultural history, this trajectory remains subaltern. Records
of the Berlin Dadaists performances are fragmentary, and virtually
non-existent when it comes to their actions in the street. Beyond the
context-based ephemerality of these practices, by engaging with the
art-forms and relations of production particular to social movements, they
lost the historical visibility of official cultural spaces of production and have
tended to pass out of art, and other, histories.
Rebellious Objects and Activist-Art
rituals. Against the fetish enacted by the commodity, these would encourage a
counter-fetish of comradely relations.66 In contrast, these Dadaists attempted
to fashion not comradely, but rebellious, objects. The forms born from the
limited material cultural resources of social movements: stickers, signs,
costumes, and masks, were often tools appendaged to bodily performances.
Such objects were often important in Dada performances, but the Berlin
Dadaists also imagined new objects that modified the traditional objects of
such movements. The most well documented of these was their engagement
with the archetypal activist object of the pamphlet, in the form of Everyman
His Own Football, the paper distributed during the action described above.
Their re-imagination embodied a distinct aesthetic tension, between
Constructivisms Modernist industrial machine-aesthetic and the popular
folk-culture aesthetics of social movements. Both evoked performance and
use-value, but while folk-objects are usually tools for human performance,
Constructivist aesthetics evoked use as independently embodied in the
archetypal performative object, the machine. This tension was clearest in the
use of photomontage, publicly employed by them for the first time in this
publication.67 Although as montiers they thought of themselves as
engineers, rather than drawing or designing original machine-forms Dada
montage brought existing elements together, often from mass media, in
shapes whose brute visible stitching identified them with handwork and
popular skills rather than specialised machine-labour. This appropriation and
misuse was a cultural transposition of the mode of the sabot who threw his
traditional wooden shoe into the industrial machine. The Constructivists had
attempted to be engineers, but turning tools into weapons, these Dadaists
were first reverse-engineers. Reading this object, we might consider the
section of Marxs Grundrisse, in which he argues that the fixed capital of
factory machines materially embodies the general intellect68 of workers:
their aggregate social skill and knowledge. Not only does this vouch for the
primary compositional potential of general intellect, but it might prompt us
to wonder what other, anticapitalist machines the general intellect might
imagine and embody itself in. We might think of the objects and
performances of social movements as just such machines, embodying labour
otherwise. But the use of montage and parade-distribution of Everyman . . .
can be understood as an avant-garde experiment with the performative
potential of the social movement object of the pamphlet, projecting upon it
the independent performativity of a machine. Not just by engaging new
identities through the conventional symbolic hailing of posters and
manifestos69 but by materially embodying the performativity of rough music.
If Dadas activist performance was an affective self-dislocation of identity in
order to dislocate others, they also attempted to grant this performative
function to objects, which psychically implicated others in a mis-performance
of their own identity.
The four-page pamphlet/paper distributed during the parade described
above, Every Man His Own Football, used photomontage to visually re-engineer
the form of mass-media newspaper or advertisement to serve the aims of the
traditional social movement object of the pamphlet. As an object it
maintained a liminal position. Although it contained committed political
rhetoric, from its first page it appeared too ridiculous to be a straight
political pamphlet, but was difficult to classify simply as satire. Satirical
mock-newspapers were not new, but Everyman . . . s use of montage and
performative presentation disturbed the subject-position of its reception such
that it moved from a recognisable satirical genre to a tactical subversion of
OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011 93
Gavin Grindon
the objects social mediationa dynamic closer to, but more complex than,
that of fake news issued for black propaganda purposes (such as that
airdropped on Berlin during World War I).70 Its object-ambiguity was
founded on its use of photomontage to cut up and rearrange body, gender,
and political identity. Mimicking the format of a newspaper, its nameplate
incorporated a corresponding icon, of a dapper gentleman with cane and
spectators (actually Herzfeld) doffing his bowler hat in a nonchalant greeting,
seemingly not noticing that his body has been replaced by a football. Like
this first absurd hailing, in the paper incitements to governmental or fascist
terrorist political participation were reiterated in the form of the fatuous calls
for participation of advertising and headlines. A severe headline in a
traditional heavy gothic font demanded Competition! Who is the most
beautiful? Beneath, photographic busts of powerful male government and
military leaders were arranged like suitors upon a nineteenth-century style
ladies fan, placing their struggle for power on the camp terrain of a beauty
contest.71 Inside, it seemed a reactionary tendency had placed an advert,
calling players for their own counter-revolutionary performance: Attention
citizens! For a film-pantomime, Wilhelms Return, approximately 2,000 sturdy
German men are wanted immediately. Decorations preferred.72 This
reverse-engineering of mass media advanced its distributive possibilities
elsewhere by Dada adverts taken out within press publications. Meanwhile,
montages method was oriented in Every Man . . . toward issues of
identity-parody shared by the costumes and effigies of social movement art.
But against the often serious, unitary declarative hailing of nineteenth century
social movements, the front page of Jedermann . . . privileged apparently
incoherent false calls for participation above sincere demands. This Dada
montage employed the growing access to modern mass-reproduction
alongside a remobilisation of the polyphonous folk-cultural approaches
associated with popular culture since the sixteenth-century, of laughter,
obscenity and absurdity. This was perhaps because nineteenth-century
movements had often become dominated by attempts to form
party-leadership organisations, whilst Dadaist montage arose in the context
of the more autonomous movement of the Spatakists, and made possible a
return to the popular aesthetics evident in earlier forms such as rough music.
Although less well documented, this political identity-play through a
conjunction of parades and pamphlets was also employed by Baader, in
releasing a special issue of the one-off publication The Green Corpse by
showering it on the press boxes of the National Constituent Assembly before
leading a childrens procession around the statues of Goethe and Schiller,
figures of both disinterested spiritual aesthetics and national pride.
Like some early Futurist paintings, montages busy use of text amid
jumbled bodies recalled a demonstrating crowd. The 1920 First
International Dada Fair extended this aesthetic into physical space, placing
social movement art forms in a gallery. Their montages were dwarfed by
large slogans and exhortations on placards, which the Dadaists were also
pictured raising by hand: Down with art, Dada is on the side of the
revolutionary proletariat!73 The common folk and protest form of a
sacrificial effigy hung on the ceiling: a soldier with a pigs head bearing a
sign round its neck, hung by the revolution, whilst flyers and radical
newspapers were strewn about the gallery. In another photograph, the
Dada Fair is presented in the form of a walk-in demonstration that
ironically placed its audience as the absent crowd, lifting the effigy above
their heads and surrounding themselves with placards in a protest
94 OXFORD ART JOURNAL 34.1 2011
reflexively turned inside-out. Visitors chairs placed in the centre of the room
solicit just this position.74 Other involuntary performances were elicited by
more modest rebellious objects, now lost, in the form of antagonistic-gifts.
Heartfield sent carefully wrapped presents to soldiers on the front, two
shirt fronts, one white, the other flowered, a pair of cuffs, a dainty
shoehorn, a set of bags of tea samples, which, according to hand-written
labels, should arouse patience, sweet dreams, respect for authority and
fidelity to the throne.75 Later in May 1919, Baader, with a tone of less
sympathetic antagonism, donated a large portrait of Schiller to the
National Assembly via its President, inscribed with a prophecy that the
Weimar Republic will be destroyed for despising the rights of the Spirit.76
Berlin Dadas cultural reverse-engineering provided influential innovations
in the art of social movements. Both performances and material objects,
rather than simply adopting an oppositional identity or attempting to speak
from a position of authenticity or power, hybridised the roles of activist
and artist, machine, and folk culture, in claiming ironic identities not
to use them, but to implicate others in, and elicit, a misperformance of
their own identity. This avant-garde activist-art emphasised
material-affective, rather than simply ideological, agitation. Though they
were little adopted at the time beyond the Dadaists circle, these objects
and performances were a model of creative aesthetic experiment with
re-performing and expanding the potential of what social movement
theorists would later variously term the repertoires of collective action,
framing mechanisms, or constituent power of social movements.77 This
reading of Dadas liminal art-activist practices stands in opposition to a
reading of Dada as pure negation or disempowered gesture, or of Berlin
Dada as a political aberration which was no longer art. Instead, it was a
coherent extension of Dadas trajectory, albeit different to the more
institutional moves of Balls Galerie Dada or Tzaras establishment in Paris.
Conclusion
Gavin Grindon