1970 - Wall, Jeff - Berlin Dada and The Notion of Context PDF
1970 - Wall, Jeff - Berlin Dada and The Notion of Context PDF
1970 - Wall, Jeff - Berlin Dada and The Notion of Context PDF
by
Master of A r t s
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Department of
The U n i v e r s i t y o f B r i t i s h Columbia
V a n c o u v e r 8, Canada
Date
i i
ABSTRACT
I. B E R L I N DADA AND T H E N O T I O N O F C O N T E X T
i t i q u e of p o l i t i c a l economy,philosophy.
B. Ideas are created from p r a c t i c e .
C. A l l a c t i v i t y i s by d e f i n i t i o n s o c i a l i n the human world.
D. D i a l e c t i c a l c r i t i c i s m e s t a b l i s h e s existence as a process.
E. The nature of a r t i s d i a l e c t i c a l . The center of a r t i s process, revealed
through theory which describes context.
F. Account of the theory of i d e o l o g y . The o p p o s i t i o n of theory to i d e o l o g y .
G. Marx: Ideology = F a l s e consciousness.
H. Account of how ideology enters language; t r u t h and e r r o r part of s i n g l e
process of knowledge.
I. Language i s s o c i a l i n nature.
J. Ideology mediates between a c t i o n and language.
K. Ideology i s f u n c t i o n of c l a s s antagonism. Account of d i f f e r e n c e between
myth and ideology.
L. D i a l e c t i c a l c r i t i c i s m brings knowledge (true theory) out of f a l s e conscious-
ness through contextual awareness.
M. Knowledge destroys ideology.
H. A r t i s a f u n c t i o n of knowledge.
A. Culture i s s o c i e t y ' s d e f i n i t i o n ; i t i s a f u n c t i o n of i d e o l o g y .
B. Account of b o u r g e o i s - i d e a l i s t concept of c u l t u r e .
C. Post-bourgeois world a l t e r i n g b o u r g e o i s - i d e a l i s t c u l t u r a l ideology, moving
i t toward more p o s i t i v i s t i c viewpoint i n connection with t e c h n o l o g i c a l r a -
tionality.
D. A r t i s a p a r t i c u l a r k i n d of labour: i t i s the image of a l l labour.
E. B o u r g e o i s - i d e a l i s t concept of c u l t u r e remained d i a l e c t i c a l ; new ideology
denying d i a l e c t i c i d e a completely.
F. Marcuse's c r i t i c i s m of post-bourgeois c u l t u r a l ideology.
G. Account of new n o t i o n of "empty category" of Duchamp and B e r l i n Dadaists.
H. S o c i a l f u n c t i o n of a work of a r t e s s e n t i a l l y transforms i t s meaning.
I . In face of a n t a g o n i s t i c s o c i a l r e a l i t y , a r t s t r u c t u r e s a l t e r n a t i v e events,
generates an a l t e r n a t i v e language.
J . T h i s language and event i s u n r e a l ; the f a c t that i t proclaims i t s e l f as
a n t a g o n i s t i c to the e x i s t i n g i s the b a s i s of i t s s i g n i f i c a n c e .
1
"The ideas of the ruling class are, i n every age, the ruling ideas: i . e .
the class which i s the dominant material force i n society i s at the same time
i t s dominant intellectual force. The class which has the means of material pro-
duction at i t s disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental
production, so that i n consequence the ideas of those whollack the means of
mental production are, i n general, subject to i t . The dominant ideas are nothing
more than the ideal expression of the dominant material relationships, the dom-
inant material relationships grasped as ideas; hence of the relationships which
make the one class the ruling one, therefore, the ideas of i t s dominance. The
individuals composing the ruling class possess among other things consciousness,
and therefore think. Insofar, therefore, as they rule as a class and determined
the extent and compass of an epoch, i t i s self-evident that they do this i n i t s
whole range, hence among other things rule also as thinkers, as producers of
ideas, and regulate the production and distribution of the ideas of their age:
thus their ideas are the ruling ideas of the epoch. For instance, i n an age and
i n a country where royal power, aristocracy and bourgeoisie are contending for
mastery and where, therefore, mastery i s shared, the doctrine of the separation
of powers proves to be the dominant idea and i s expressed as an 'eternal law*.
The division of labour, which we already saw above as one of the chief
forces of history up t i l l now, manifests i t s e l f also i n the ruling class as the
division of mental and material labour, so that inside this class one part app-
ears as the thinkers of the class ( i t s active, conceptive ideologists, who make
the perfecting of the i l l u s i o n of the class about i t s e l f their chief source of
livelihood), while the others' attitude to these ideas and i l l u s i o n s i s more
passive and receptive, because they are i n reality the active members of this
class and have less time to make up ideas and i l l u s i o n s about themselves. With-
in this class this cleavage can even develop into a certain opposition and hos-
t i l i t y between the two parts, which, however, i n the case of a practical c o l l i -
sion, i n which the class i t s e l f i s endangered, automatically comes to nothing,
i n which case there also vanishes the semblance that the ruling ideas were not
the ideas of the ruling class and had a power distinct from the power of this
class. The existence of revolutionary ideas i n a particular period presupposes
the existence of a revolutionary class..."
"Every alienation of man from himself and from Nature appears i n the r e l a -
tion which he postulates between other men and himself and Nature. Thus r e l i g i -
ous alienation i s necessarily exemplified i n the r e l a t i o n between l a i t y and
p r i e s t , or, since i t i s here a question of the s p i r i t u a l world, between the
l a i t y and a mediator. In the r e a l world of practice, t h i s s e l f alienation can
only be expressed i n the r e a l , p r a c t i c a l r e l a t i o n of man to his fellow men. The
medium through which alienation occurs i s i t s e l f a p r a c t i c a l one. Through a l i e n -
ated labour, therefore, man not only produces his r e l a t i o n to the object, and
to the process of production as to a l i e n and h o s t i l e men; he also produces the
r e l a t i o n of other men to h i s production and his product, and the r e l a t i o n bet-
ween himself and other men. Just as he creates h i s own production as a v i t i a t -
ion, a punishment, and his own product as a loss, as a product which does not
belong to him, so he creates the domination of the non-producer over production
and i t s product. As he alienates h i s own a c t i v i t y , so he bestows upon the s t r a -
nger an a c t i v i t y which i s not h i s own."
BERLIN DADA
AND
THE NOTION OF CONTEXT
3
Certainly there have been periods of history i n which art was generally
integrated with the organization of society; the period of the twentieth century
since the beginning of the F i r s t World War has been i t s profound antagonism
As Marx says, the dominant ideas of an age can be seen as the "dominant
art-process.
i t s rationale askew. We s h a l l discuss how i t has been created out of, and i n
as oppressive.
ation can be seen as, i n certain terms, the results of standardized patterns of
i n fact one process. Marx maintains that the human being i s the only creature
on earth who "creates the world"; i f t h i s i s true, we must remember that at the
same time and i n the same action, he creates h i s language, and h i s language
creates him.
then a r t must exist i n a state of^tension with language. Much nineteenth and
art.
In the society with which Marx concerned himself the immediate ancestor
of our society the function of art and the role of the a r t i s t had undergone a
years since the beginning of World War I have witnessed the f i n a l stages of the
just as the factory, the open market, and rent were understood as the basis of
ent from the beginnings of the bourgeois-industrial world, but i t was not at a
workable l e v e l ; i t was articulated purely i n terms of the negative, and the ab-
t e l y away from the new society. Certainly by the f i f t h decade of the nineteenth
ence. I t was apparent that art had no place i n the new world or i n i t s concept-
They took him as a hero, understanding the implications of h i s vast and severe
"primitive" context, one i n which the emerging r e a l i t y had not yet attained a
ed; f o r many people, the 1914-1918 war was a summation. The war was an immediate
king, the cause.. The war was, f o r the Dadaists, the o b j e c t i f i c a t i o n of the fac-
tors i n European society vhich were most distressing. The Dada groups were faced
had established the d e f i n i t i v e rejection per se; i t was l e f t to the Dada groups
ingless: s i t t i n g quietly i n neutral Zurich, they may as well have been i n Harr-
"work" and ignore the implications; that i s , to enforce the context which i s
senbeck understood immediately that one cannot profess to admire "Rimbaud" and
What sets Dada apart from other " r a d i c a l " European a r t movements of the time
The position of Andre Breton i n the French Dada movement, and h i s attitude t o -
ward that movement, are important considerations. His early interest i n psychi-
become common knowledge. From the beginning of Dada i n Paris i n 1919 Breton un-
scious combined with a deep and, i t might be argued, rather " t r a d i t i o n a l " comm-
itment to the poetry of the French avant-garde mediated against the development
of the kind of overt and direct p o l i t i c a l action which characterizes the Dada
l y , post-war Paris was not quiet, but i t experienced nothing l i k e the immediate
the Spartakus Rebellion, and with word of the October Revolution i n Russia. The
a l ignorance, i n the manner of Zurich.** The Parisian Dada group had no connect-
take t h i s kind of action was Pierre N a v i l l e , who joined the French Communist
7
Party i n 1925 out of the Surrealist group. In Germany however, the Marxist
there, and before even the beginnings of the Zurich group. These two were i n
collaboration with the poets Franz Jung and Raoul Hausmann, and with the graphic
to Die F r i e Strasse during the war and entered the movement immediately upon
g
"idea" of Dada with him from Zurich, as Tzara took i t to Paris i n 1920. These
people who had spent the war years i n Germany were p a r t i c u l a r l y receptive to
year (February 26, 1916-January, 1917); he was ambivalent about the foundation
of Dada: on the one hand he recognized the depth of the issues which i t had
raised; on the other he was suspicious of the consciousness and therefore the
motives of some of the participants i n the Cabaret Voltaire and the Galerie Dada.
"The Galerie Dada capriciously exhibited cubist, expression-
i s t and f u t u r i s t pictures; i t carried on i t s l i t t l e art business
at l i t e r a r y teas, lectures and r e c i t a t i o n evenings, while the
word Dada conquered the world. I t was something touching to be-
hold. Day.after day the l i t t l e group sat i n i t s cafe reading
aloud the c r i t i c a l comments that poured i n from every possible
country, and which by t h e i r tone of indignation showed that
Dada had struck someone to the heart. Stricken dumb with amaze-
ment, we basked i n our glory. T r i s t a n Tzara could think of no-
10
s e l f , and therefore, never comprehended what Dada could mean. I t took the B e r l i n
and a university town. Mo-one was i n d i r e c t physical danger and the manner of
l i v i n g was not unbearable. The Cabaret Voltaire group was flushed with the ach-
the "cause" of abstract a r t (Arp), and even German Expressionism, through Huel-
i c h Dada, under Tzara, did not f i n d anything to oppose i n the state of avant-
The Zurich group might be seen, then, as a kind of "nascent" Dada, i n wh-
i c h the major themes of the movement were indicated. Both B e r l i n and Paris dev-
Spartakus Movement, which would aid i n bringing Germany to revolution, was fou-
ating i n the war, about which he obviously had very strong feelings; developments
i n Germany could not have escaped b i s attention. He could see the looming p o l i -
seems to have deeply despised. He made the connection between the psychological
15
reading of the C o l l e c t i v e Dada Manifesto ^in February, 1918, which attacks ex-
1
"simultaneity", and the "Static Poem" (which can be compared with Marinetti's
"Parole i n l i b e r t a " ) .
the Collective Dada Manifesto 1918: they are intolerant The function of the man-
diverging viewpoints are seen only i n the context of unstated assumptions and
18
arge that i t was nothing better than an attempt to blot out the outside world,
parts of this process the apparently s t a t i c conditions of the world and the
movement of the whole, between the form of the whole grasped by the mind, and
the events which both create the whole and participate i n i t . By accepting the
d i v i s i o n between the "inner" and the "outer" worlds, between the realm of theory
control, of alienation i n the sense that Marx applies the term to philosophy.
hend the world", but to escape from i t . Likewise, Marx assaults the i d e a l i s t
i t s other f a u l t s , h y p o c r i t i c a l :
and the other poor, f o r example, could not turn away from the world, f o r to do
so one must have resources. A poor man cannot follow the formulations of i d e a l -
a l of, not sorrmuch h i s "mind", but of, h i s very physical heart, which pumps blood
through his brain. Likewise, i t i s not the active bourgeois himself who leads
who belong to the group which, i n Marx's terms, "make the perfecting of the i l l -
the works of Hausmann, f o r example, does not e x i s t ; much of h i s work was util-
they were acting, so to speak, " i n the name of a r t " ; that i s , the understanding
from person to person; f o r example, Grosz, Herzfelde, Jung and Heartfield were
i n 1918.
inant culture, the bourgeois ideology. High a r t such as Picasso's had, by 1919
element, although they seem to operate on such a broad level of acceptance and
such a high level of abstraction that they appear unquestionable. In this sense
art media can be seen as analogous to Roland Barthes' notion of language as
horizon;
statement was made, one might f e e l that, i n the eyes of those holding the theo-
tentions, however, did not extend to those areas where the work of a r t becomes
the "work of a r t " i n the abstract, to the (necessarily) theoretical areas where
oup (to which only Duchamp had progressed by the same time.)
i t s s o c i a l sense. The man who privately renounces art i s seen very simply as not
21
ditions which exist through that art which i s necessarily i d e n t i f i a b l e with th-
a f f a i r . Art i s not seen as the force which can resolve these c o n f l i c t s , but as
the struggle to achieve conditions under which h i s art can be seen (which i s
ion.
The B e r l i n group used the techniques of avant-garde art because they comp-
could not stop there because such techniques, f o r a l l t h e i r " l i n g u i s t i c " radic-
able horizon was subsumed i n the recognition and acceptance of new a r t , more
art.
the other schools. Unlike, f o r example, the collages of Picasso and Braque,
the Dadaists do not attempt to "formalize" the elements. One of the most impor-
tant reasons f o r this i s the use to which these works were put.
of depiction and the question of surface. These are formal problems wholly with-
The technique of combining standard drawing and painting passages with the c o l -
lage elements aids as well i n integrating these new components into the normat-
ive schema of the art object. Naturally, then, cubist collages took t h e i r places
23
1918, were not intended f o r the gallery w a l l , but had a more " u t i l i t a r i a n " pur-
at was acknowledged to be (some breed of) art movement. The Dadaists exploited
both sides of the coin, impelled by the pressure of history and the desire "to
material onto the sheet not without care f o r the composition as a whole (the
collage), but rather are permitted to assert themselves, and to form a conglom-
arison, with the stunning foreign element worked i n nicely through the extension
of the painted areas, and thereby admitted into the pre-existing set of regulat-
44
or even something as "formal" as Hausmann's GURK. 1918, which appeared i n his
der Dada, consist entirely of these foreign elements colliding together without
about i t s status as art, as mentioned above. Painting aesthetics, and the corr-
ized, readymade material without any manual transformation. Also, by 1919, pho-
r e a l l y invented the mode, was thatBruitism was the expression of the nature of
Dada Manifesto, takes t h i s aspect of Bruitism into Dada: "The BRUITIST PGEM r e -
presents the streetcar as i t i s , the essence of the streetcar with the yawning
49
of Schulze the conductor and the screeching of the brakes." No "distancing"
beautiful. Just as the Dadaist collages rejected inclusion i n a high art aesth-
the entire spectrum of French poetic concerns since Rimbaud. Picasso's Demois-
gettable image i t a l l i e s the contemporary aspects of cubism and the new medium
26
Rimbaud.
This point i s made i n the l i g h t of the fact that the Parisian Dadaists en-
beginning of the Zurich movement, devices such as Negro music and masks, bala-
51
l a i k a music, chant-poetry and r i t u a l dancing are used to make the*effect.
were pursued. They read medieval prose, and Tzara ground out Negro verses which
he palmed o f f as accidentally-discovered remains of a Bantu or Winnetu culture,
52
again to the great amazement of the Swiss."
27
masks and the rest; however, the use of primitive devices which are to be spec-
which removes the immediacy of the c r i t i c a l aspects of the attack upon European
ute. Europe becomes the absolute error, and the only solution i n this case i s
to the myth of the noble savage, drinking h i s "liquor of molten metal", i n or-
h i l a t e Europe took the form of forcing consciousness back i n time. The poet
future seemed impossible: the present was beginning to be much too w e l l entren-
28
ehed.
The attitude toward primitivism and Bruitism held by the B e r l i n and Paris
poetry. The character and source of this work had to be seen i n the context of
the immediate environment: these savage-sounding chants and screams were not the
the p o s s i b i l i t y of the impact of the work leaking away into a fascination with
e x i s t i n g culture takes place i n the name of a culture which could not be immed-
The analysis of the B e r l i n movement was from the beginning aimed at the
an, to move through the era of myth or ideology, into a very different kind of
world. This intention made i t possible f o r them to relinquish the desire to con-
meanings, the results of determinate acts by particular human beings, are given
the character of absolute meanings. They become the abstract horizon which i s
art into existence i n the moment i t destroys the mystification of a r t , the mom-
into direct r e l a t i o n s i p with the process which created i t . The existence of the
product i s never denied, but i t s independent status outside the range of human-
religion:
In the same sense does art remain after i t s apparent "negation" in the
product. Therefore, i t is controlled, by the mind and the context and never att-
is concerned only with mountains, deserts, glaciers and oceans. "Art", for Huel-
senbeck or Duchamp, really does not exist. What does exist is a certain kind of
art process. In a very similar way does society exist, not as an abstract "Soc-
iety" which stands apart from the individuals who compose i t , but instead as the
57
erated.
sness i n h i s t o r y . In the same way, the art which Duchamp and the B e r l i n Dadaists
amp' s Fountain or Bottle Rack are anti-icons, shot through with the subversive
knowledge of what goes into making an icon. This i s the source of the scepticism
the art work are seen as natural productions, c l e a r l y i n the realm of the pra-
Headymades, as context becomes content. The work of art has no existence except
the beautiful object nor of that of the message from the beyond. I t s r e l a t i o n -
as a polemical t o o l only i n a d i a l e c t i c a l s i t u a t i o n of c o n f l i c t . ^
34
components are, the more deep and acute the encounter w i l l be, and the more f u -
other functions at other l e v e l s , whose role appears more neutral because of the
est that there are possible but not necessary, as Duchamp demonstrated inter-
ely opposed factors are not s i g n i f i c a n t as opposites, but rather as simple asp-
between object-shape and depicted image i n Frank S t e l l a ' s work) from the l e v e l
by the fact the s p e c i f i c content can be obliterated by the mere fact of art-ex-
on
36
on, and focus attention upon the work as a representative, i n a manner of spea-
king, of the category "work of a r t " , a construct of d e f i n i t i o n s , a result of
65
the "metaphoric" nature of mental a c t i v i t y . At t h i s point, what art i s i s the
66
"art condition"; the a r t process i s seen as a limited system i n a p a r t i c u l a r
cedure (see p p . 8 f - 8 Z ) .
37
the edge, the interfeace where that which i s within the l i m i t interfaces with
would argue that the existence of art i n this contextual state depends ultimat-
l y . That which i s A i s simply, by the fact of i t s being, something not only ot-
i t is not.^
As Kosuth suggests, each art work, by presenting i t s e l f as the " d e f i n i t i o n " (or
eously with the following of p o s s i b i l i t i e s within the context and the redefining
38
that i t does not go f a r enough. While the s p e c i f i c content of " l o g i c " as a pro-
cess i s not under question, the process as & process. i n a certain sense as a
able connection of thought with "empirical f a c t " . Again, t h i s does not deny the
and that t h i s separation must be seen as conscious and deliberate and therefore
are the works and definitions which operate within i t . Like any language, how-
ever, context acts as the "unquestioned horizon" i n which particular acts seem
and perceive c r i t i c a l l y .
39
that, unlike the work of a r t , there i s nothing i n the manifesto which can be
separated from the immediacy of direct contextual concerns. Where the a r t work
a l l s p e c i f i c content. The manifesto not only does not participate i n the "art
no thesis, no argument; instead i t remains " i t s e l f " , within the context, and any
polemical aspect the work might have emanates from t h i s state. No matter how
ant-garde out of which any c r i t i c i s m , carried out i n the name of art, would be
" t r a d i t i o n a l view", a view which had to be destroyed i n order to form a new con-
75
ception of "art as moral and s o c i a l phenomenon." Note that Tzara i s not asser-
crete reasons, and that these reasons are beyond the control of a r t i s t s just as
they are beyond the control of the bourgeois and the masses. To do so would be
ture as they are. To accept this would mean ultimately to envisage a different
affirmation of the " a r t i s t " (which obviously means the a r t i s t as he exists) ab-
an Tzara had been one of the f i r s t to grasp the suggestive power of the word
Dada. From here on he worked indefatiguably as the prophet of a word, which on-
77
l y l a t e r was to be f i l l e d with-a concept." In this context, Tzara's "DADA NE
a l position because they never take up a true c r i t i c a l method. The Dada Manife-
sto 1918 or the Manifesto on feeble and b i t t e r love of 1920 are cases i n point:
Tzara's manifestoes i n fact tend toward that which i s the very antithesis
the beginning of the Zurich a f f a i r , as had been those of the rest of the Cabar-
selves. Huelsenbeck's disillusionment with Zurich and the Cabaret Voltaire seems
ety, a lack of skepticism i n the sense used above. Huelsenbeck knew that to be-
poetic ideas, from the sense of absolute revolt engendered by Rimbaud, to the
notion of " d i f f i c u l t y " and aestheticism, which i s part of the program of the
his manifestoes down to the d e t a i l s . After the Dada Manifesto 1918, which was
presented at Waag H a l l , Zurich, July 14, 1916 ), the writings take on a more
XII
ladies and gentlemen buy come i n and buy and do not read you
w i l l see the man who holds i n h i s hands the keys of niagara the
man who limps i n a blimp with the hemisphere i n a suitcase and
his nose shut up i n a Japanese lantern and you w i l l see you w i l l
see you w i l l see the stomach dance i n the massachusetts saloon
the man who drives i n a n a i l and the t i r e goes f l a t the s i l k
stockings of miss a t l a n t i s the trunk that navigates the globe 6
times to reach the addressee monsieur and h i s fiancee and h i s
sister-in-law you w i l l f i n d the address of the carpenter the
frog-watch the nerve shaped l i k e a paper-cutter you w i l l learn
the address of the minor pin f o r the feminine sex and the address
of the man who furnishes the king of greece with f i l t h y photo-
graphs and address of action francaise.
XIII
Dada i s a v i r g i n microbe
Dada i s against the high cost of l i v i n g
Dada
a j o i n t stock company f o r the exploitation of ideas
Dada has 391 different attitudes and colors depending on the sex
of the chairman
I t transforms i t s e l f affirms simultaneously says the opposite
i t doesn't matter
screams goes f i s h i n g .
Dada i s the chameleon of rapid, interested change
Dada i s against the future. Dada i s dead.
Dada i s i d i o t i c . Hurrah f o r Dada. Dada i s not a l i t e r a r y schbol roar
Tristan TZAEA 82
This outlook takes over completely by 1918; the three l a t e r manifestoes can
45
The examination can be closed with the reproduction of one of Tzara's poems
from the 1916 c o l l e c t i o n , Vingt-cinq Poemes, published at the time of the Caba-
84
ret V o l t a i r e .
2
avec tes doigts crispes s'allongeant et chancelants comme l e s
yeux
l a flamme appelle pour serre
es-tu l a sous l a couverture
les magasins crachent l e s employes midi
l a rue l e s emporte
3
vent desir cave sonore d'insomnie tempete temple
l a chute des eaux
at l a saute brusque des voyelles
dans les regards qui fixent l e s points des abimes
a venir a surpasser vecus a concevoir
appellent l e s corps humains legers comme l e s allumettes
dans tous les incendies de l'automne des vibrations et des
arbres
sueur de petrole
21
le f o o t - b a l l dans l e poumon
casse l e s v i t r e s (insomnie)
dans l e puits on f a i t b o u i l l i r les nains
pour l e s v i n et l a f o l i e
picabia arp ribemont-dessaignes
bonjour
tinuing series of manifestoes from the pens of Marinetti and the group of Futur-
see that the l i t e r a r y element i s dominant with Tzara. In being so, i t removes
85
One may maintain i n the face of t h i s that Tzara's method is, c r i t i c a l , and
theatre i s , as with Brecht f o r example, an art form and nothing else. I t i s not
ism i n 1925 and 1926 of a reasonable and effective position regarding the pr-
bourgeois. The break with bourgeois cultural dicta was not effected with any sy-
thinking was created principally by Naville, Breton, Eluard, Soupault and Ara-
gon around 1925. In this sense, the Parisian Dada movement can be characteri-
i a l l y from within one of i t s most prized definitions, they were doomed to social
be sure, but these were produced within mangeable limits f o r the social organi-
ation as a whole.
c r i t i c a l to understand that this cessation could not really take place; that i s ,
the Berlin Dadaists could not just do nothing. It was imperative to use art ag-
ainst art, to continue to make art, but only i n order to exacerbate the conflict,
ent that Marxist ideas were involved i n the position of Dada i n Berlin. The
uation of great d i a l e c t i c a l tension, truly at the breaking point. Art was seen
as a social "product" and, insofar as i t was unconscious of this and the contra-
48
Unlike the Parisians, the Berliners held out no hope that a r t could be the
was not something to be believed i n ; i t was something to work with. The import-
ance of art lay i n the contextual assumptions made by the bourgeois audience.
The attack upon context was the attack upon art and, by obvious implication, up-
Unlike the attack on culture made by Rimbaud, that of B e r l i n Dada was medi-
as they existed. As Sartre has said, " I t i s always true of course, that to f i g h t
something one must change oneself into i t ; i n other words one must become i t s
88
true opposite and not merely other than i t . "
By f a l l , 1920, the war had been over two years and i t was obvious that the tab-
ula rasa,for which Swiss-German Dada was s t r i v i n g could not be-achieved. The
for which i t i s now known." This fact does not contradict the preceeding d i s -
example ). In Germany, no Surrealism was apparent, and Dada simply ceased op-
erations.^ 2
process, i s but one part of the necessary analysis. We have established that to
in the same breath so to speak, the basis of the context of art itself. The f r -
note 71), the result of determinate actions and relationships. Society preci-
sely analogous with language is the horizon under which a l l these relationsh-
ips take place and resolve themselves; yet, at the same time, society is compl-
the real actions of real men create the horizon in the same time as they live
phenomenon. In the same process in which men create society and language, these
practice, the issue of language and art does not arise except i n a s o c i a l ambi-
ence .
"...we f i n d that man....possesses 'consciousness*; but, even
so, not inherent, not 'pure' consciousness. From the start
the ' s p i r i t * i s a f f l i c t e d with the curse of being 'burdened*
with matter, which here makes i t s appearance i n the form of
agitated layers of a i r , sounds i n short, of language. Lan-
guage i s as old as consciousness; language i s p r a c t i c a l con-
sciousness, as i t exists f o r other men, and f o r t h i s reason
i s r e a l l y beginning to exist f o r me personally as w e l l ; f o r
language, l i k e consciousness, arises only from the need, the
necessity of intercourse with other men. Where there exists
a relationship, i t exists f o r me: the animal has no ' r e l a t -
ions' with anything, cannot have any. For the animal, i t s
r e l a t i o n to others does not exist as a r e l a t i o n . Conscious-
ness i s therefore, from the very beginning a s o c i a l product
and remains so as long as men exist at all."95
ously much has been said on the topic, and i t i s not my intention to add to a
explication i n h i s c r i t i q u e of p o l i t i c a l economy.
develops, becomes more complex and so on. "The sum t o t a l of these relations of
ness."^
ected with time-and self-consciousness, becomes, i n the eyes of those with the
which labour was already organized along the l i n e s indicated above, i n which
land and the major means of production were already i n private hands. I t i s f r -
could not presume to be c r i t i c a l because i t could not move beyond the basic ass-
The basis of the difference (and the c o n f l i c t ) between the two major c l a s s -
i n motion. Alienation might seem to be, then, only the province of the worker,
mines whether or not he w i l l work at a l l , and a f t e r that, where, how long, how
Marx's gaze the non-propertied groups, the groups more f u l l y dependent upon
of labour.
that we understand Marx when he says that man creates the world, creates nature.
But man carries out this process a l l the time, alienated or not. I t i s not a l i -
enation which stops him from carrying out the a c t i v i t y of creating nature. But
f i n i t e antagonism exists between the product and the process i . e . the worker
finds his product standing opposed to him as an object over which he has no con-
worker and h i s s p e c i f i c product into more general realms. The relationship which
lationship between the general worker man, and h i s general product nature,
ered (see p. 2). Instead of creating a continuum, i n which labour and i t s prod-
uct l i f e and nature are totally interrelated, the industrial world creates
Furthermore, alienation i s not just the property and quality of the prod-
uct, i t does not become apparent only i n the post-labour state. For, i f at the
conclusion of a particular action of work, the worker i s faced with the object-
i f i e d product of his labour, and i f this work i s totally out of his control, i t
must follow that the entire process of creating this product was the process of
ganic essence", from his "species l i f e " . This species-life "has i t s basis i n
the fact that man (like animals) lives from inorganic nature, and since man i s
more universal than an animal so the range of inorganic nature from which he
59
105
l i v e s i s more universal." Por man, the entirety of the world outside h i s bo-
inorganic body: (1) as a direct means of l i f e ; and equally (2) as the material
As we have seen, alienated labour removes man from nature, or nature from
man, and man from himself. I t must, by a perfectly v a l i d movement, alienate him
from i n d i v i d u a l other men and from a l l other men the "species". " I t makes sp-
nature. "iWhile Marx p a r t i a l l y retains the common nineteenth century view that
ionship between man and nature; he knew that part of man's relationship with
nature was passive, and very consciously so; i n a certain sense t h i s passivity
The object of labour i s the creation of the world. This statement should
mother i n what sense h i s poetry meant "what i t said": "exactly and i n every
epts as "God" and "Nature", which are seemingly timeless, i n the development of
are used defines the context of t h e i r use, and therefore defines them. We s h a l l
The relationship of man to nature, and hence to other men, we have seen, i s the
ined and sophisticated: what might have been seen as an "arithmetic progression"
i s encased i n history while being the motive force of history. The production
That Marx would concur e s s e n t i a l l y with such ideas i s made obvious by the
following:
place the acknowledgement of this with the idea that the material world i s f o r -
med from the concept, which exists p r i o r to any actual thing, and which informs
the structure of the material world as i t s essence. This i s the basis of the
cannot venture.
l i f e of man; the senses therefore, do not really exist i n this society; their
by organized alienation.
In the alienated world, society, i n Marx's sense of the term, cannot exist;
the universe shows i t s face as foreign and antagonistic, and the soundest ad-
vice comes from Beckett: "don't wait to be hunted to hide." In society, as Marx
not exist. The l i f e which does exist is of a distinctly different kind. The in-
ion. If the consciousness of the chasm between the potential and the actual is
the measure of the state of conflict in which a human individual exists in our
world, we must begin to recognize as the Berlin Dadaists did, the inherent ten-
sion in art. It makes no sense to insist that the "essence" of art is not alien-
judgements render the society imperfect or worse does not change t h i s fundamen-
between men. The knowledge of this implies c r i t i c i s m , and we have noted Marx's
role i s secular and r a t i o n a l , and does not allow the obscurity of abstraction.
explains a l l that was explained by the o r i g i n a l system, and which explains the
67
sees the world i n a state of constant development and change. This change i s not
Marx not when revisions are made i n the configuration of a context f o r example
context i s redrawn.
ole does so. Art's breath of l i f e i s constant change; "Only the present blows
120
only through practice, through the creation of new works of a r t . "Art" as a pu-
reduced from the existence and function of actual works of art and, i n the ref-
lexive manner outlined above, moves into the r e a l i t y of the process to inform
appearance of concrete works of that a r t , but followed from the realm of fact
role of the facts i s irrevocably changed: the truth of theory makes the world
Theory and " a r t i f a c t " stand together; the question of primacy between them i s
meaningless. The most d i f f i c u l t area of any work of art painting, novel, son-
The value and truth of theory i s to illuminate this edge, to bring i t into foc-
us, to show the r e a l i t y and consequences of the process with which the product
e v i t a b i l i t y " regarding the achieved state of f a c t . Theory reveals the truth that
i n process, or practice.
While the term "ideology" originated with the attempt to found a ^science
eteenth centuries i n France, Marx and Engels i n the middle of the nineteenth
121
century transformed i t s meaning. Their meaning was twofold: on the one hand,
as that of the French ideologues had, " i t came to denote a phenomenon the theory
122
given epoch and society. For example: The German Ideology." On the other,
the term was used to designate a process of thinking which, f o r various reasons,
ext. This "false consciousness" can be seen as, i n a certain sense, the narrow
process which can be known by, and which i s , true consciousness. This purpose,
There i s only one truth about history, and only one c r i t e r i o n f o r judging the
discrepancy between what men are and what they might become; this c r i t e r i o n i s
this r e a l i t y . Yet Marx also held that thellphilbSpphy of every age i s the 'ideo-
airs?" 1 2 4
physics, retained this view. This can be seen as the basis of h i s Hegelianism.
the fact that "there i s not as Feuerbach had thought a single universal hu-
man standpoint from which to judge the alienations imposed by history; there
and the conditions created are "mirrored" i n the varying modes of thought. "Th-
Lichtheim explains:
to indicate that i s was the period of human a f f a i r s when reason had not yet
overwhelm the "realm of freedom". In e f f e c t , the history with which Marx was
concerned was not yet "human" history at a l l , because the basis of the human
can be seen as the analysis of that which i s not yet i n existence, i n that what
ry", when men are i n c o n f l i c t with the material world, when i t i s out of t h e i r
s p e c i f i c a l l y transcendent idea:
This does not deny the existence of non-verbal, "private" states of consci-
ousness; i t simply indicates the realm of t h e i r s i g n i f i c a n c e, and the sources of
131 A
alienated thought,or thought formed within the alienated context which estab-
world i s " predicated upon the d i v i s i o n of labour, reaches i t s apex with the d i v -
achment from process i t s e l f , and creates what seem to be "theories" (and i n ce-
note 107, and p. 1) i n that, due to the irrevocable attachment, abstract idea-
Theses on Feuerbach.
matter what i t s nature, tends to become " r e a l " ; that i s , once set i n motion, an
Ideology r e f l e c t s back upon praxis and holds the power to influence subse-
x i s , that action determines what people say. Nevertheless, i t i s only when act-
ions are moved to the l i n g u i s t i c realm that they become genuine s o c i a l property.
76
For example, an art work i s the product of practice, of the creative work of an
or not. As such, the creative process enters (or re-enters) the s o c i a l continuum,
Old problems, old points of view, old vocabularies....stand i n the way of the
135
new elements i n society and new approaches to i t s problems." The connection
i s apparent here.
one hand, as Lefebvre points out, they are general, speculative and abstract,
i n that they purport to formulate a comprehensive view of the world; on the ot-
Thus i t can be seen that the "class interest" aspect of ideology invol-
t e l y , because the world concept, i n a class society, cannot develop under any
ation, just as Marx and Engels "salvaged" the d i a l e c t i c a l process from the met-
i s clear that truth and falsehood, profundity and deception are linked together
i n these systems of thought i n a unique manner. True and false consciousness are
logy and "myth". We have seen (pp. 74-75) how ideology enters language, and th-
holds i t together i s force and the threat of violence, unless t h i s force i s re-
shaped and becomes an organic part of the productive organization of the socie-
ty. Those who rule must secure the consent of the ruled. This sounds suspiciou-
139\
the s o i l that nourished them, the beauty of which they represented to the eye
141
myths continue to operate. As components of the system, they advance the cause
duction (see pp. 71-72). This determined thought and action i s the necessary
which does not participate, as such, i n change. In just this sense we discussed
the whole and i t s parts, between "form" and "content". Context as a whole must
ext now a closed episode i n the history of the development of a larger context.
Any art work which creates a contextual rupture, such as the Readymades, begins
er obsolete.
which are "the negation of a r t " , as we speak of the Readymades. Just as Marx
on, but which quite suddenly extend beyond i t , thereby causing not just adjust-
of a r t , of which the Readymades are the f i n e s t example, can only come into e x i -
pre-existing context which i n fact produced them. Thus with the Readymades, as
ated. So we see the d i a l e c t i c a l process as being the art process, and art part-
tems have a. v a l i d existence only when they are created with f u l l recognition of
thought are revealed to him. In the case of the production of a r t , we see that
In the same way i n which concrete labour becomes abstract labour, and therefore
s i m i l a r commodity.
beauty, to goodness and- to truth are relations of immediacy." Unlike the pre-
abstract.
world, and at the i d e a l i s t concept of culture, which was segregated from social
sentially since the mid-nineteenth century, when Marx f i r s t formulated his ideas
on culture and ideology, and have likewise changed since 1 9 3 7 , when Marcuse wr-
Lichtheim notes, they have unfortunately (but not accidentally) become part of
150
r i a l society has grown out of the bourgeois ideology of the nineteenth century,
Society (1964). This must be considered read i n the following discussion. Basic-
ce with the preceeding discussion of ideology (and p. 1), the ideology of advan-
ion and control by the state. The abstract individual i n the c a p i t a l i s t labour
by operative ideology.
"Changes occur as soon as the preservation of the establish-
ed form of the labour process can no longer gain i t s end with
merely p a r t i a l mobilization (leaving the i n d i v i d u a l ' s private
l i f e i n reserve), but rather requires 'total mobilization',
through which the individual must be subjected i n a l l spheres
of h i s existence to the d i s c i p l i n e of the authoritarian state.
88
ion. The terms stated f o r t h i s examination were that art was to be seen as an
the labour process and discovered there the basis of a l l contradictions. Lang-
for, as Marcuse has established, the i d e a l i s t i c notion of culture has been fun-
i d e a l i s t i c ideology has been retained i n the new context, and this combines with
acted culture from the concrete world of necessity, the newer technological s t -
ructure i s effecting an apparent closure of the gap. "Art" and " l i f e " , while i n
a c t u a l i t y no closer together than ever before (and indeed i n many of the most
important ways never further apart) are being subsumed under a single category,
90
have made concrete the bourgeois abstract concept of freedom. The abstract equ-
91
a small number of men dispose of the purchasing power required f o r the quantity
of goods necessary i n order to secure happiness. Equality does not extend to the
158
conditions f o r attaining the means." For the reigning nineteenth century bou-
rgeoisie, just as today f o r the apparent new "multi-class majority", the abstr-
ty of a c e r t a i n group.
Marx stated that ideology could e x i s t only with the existence of the nec-
positioning of art outside the predicament of concrete labour and freedom can
s t r a c t i o n . Hegel's insistence that there was nothing i n the universe beyond the
powers of the i n d i v i d u a l mind asserted that man could know r e a l i t y ; the obvious
i n connection with the nature of theory (pp. 67-68). That which " i s there" i s
t o t a l i t y to which i t belongs.
ose subject remained "Ideal Beauty". Unlike theory, "the beauty of art i s comp-
a t i b l e with the bad present, despite and within which i t can afford happiness."^
even i n casual discussion about art even i n the immediate present need.not be
stressed.
i s foreign to i t and would destroy the r i g o r and purity that must adhere to i t
162
plining function." Therefore i d e a l i s m i n a s i n g l e a c t i o n creates d e s i r e , an
action and struggle and nothing more. They are arms abandoned on the f i e l d of
163
b a t t l e . What i s important i s now hidden elsewhere..." In the sudden awarene-
er periods. I t i s true to say that the significance of the Bottle Rack depends
objects i n the art of the twentieth century, though very few people have actual-
ea.
ess. The i l l u s i o n that art stood away from history, mastered h i s t o r y i n being
that art as art denied the fragmentary truth of ideology. The art context of
1919 was i d e o l o g i c a l , but the a r t i s t ' s consciousness became contextual when the
material world overwhelmed the organized truth; i n this sense the war was a ca-
t a l y s t f o r Dada. "Reality" and "Appearance" were thrown into sharp focus one
keable gap between the condition indicated by art and that of material society.
ence and the exploitation of man and nature ever more s c i e n t i f i c and rational."^'
ture.
task was to organize " f a c t s " . The f a c t s were seen as the data of immediate exp-
Thus, the world becomes, i n Wittgenstein's words, " a l l that i s the case."
marily i n terms of what can be done with them. Phenomena of the external wo-
l y liberated from questions regarding notions of substance and value. These qu-
tension, "saturated with concreteness", i n which "even the most monistic sys-
tem maintained the idea of a substance which unfolds i t s e l f i n subject and obj-
172
ect the idea of an antagonistic r e a l i t y " , the " s c i e n t i f i c " theory of modern
dematerialization of nature. As the external world i s made more and more an ob-
equations which, translated into technology, 'remake' this matter, the res ext-
173
table order." Comte's abstractions are reduced from the concrete s o c i a l and
ctions and action upon the understanding i s naturally entrusted to experts cre-
men are free by ignoring the existence of alienation i n the labour process. The
Like Lenin's famous " d i a l e c t i c a l " water-glass, the facts have existence as the
of one another, and the external world appears as immutably a l i e n and " d i f f e r -
forces i t reacts to "We are defining matter as a possible object of man's ma-
178
positive philosophy) has suggested that, although that which i s beyond language
must be passed over i n silence, this does not imply i n any way that i t does not
e x i s t ("There are indeed things which cannot be put into words. They make them-
179
nsequence .
on. However, i t i s Marx's claim that science has never existed per se, and that
phy, theology, ethics, etc., becomes ideological because the claims to purity
tends to oppose ideology. This, however, runs into cancellation when the entire
ojected and promoted a universe i n which the domination of nature has remained
elopment from such concrete r e l a t i o n s , and we have seen that the l o g i c of these
183
object f o r a subjectivity which provides the Telos, the ends." In t h i s cont-
ture and effective form." Unlikesearlier bourgeois structures, the world do-
es not appear the product of chance operations and blind necessity, but i t s l o -
anscended .
thought seems to separate subject and object, but r e a l l y destroys the dynamic
subsume the "object" the sensuous, external world i n a series of pure abst-
ractions; i n other words, creates the object only as an extension of the funct-
ion of the subject. Or (and at the same time) i t renders the subject as no more
185
guage previously. Marx's concept and use of language i s c r i t i c a l ; just as phi-
part ) i s based upon the fact that t h i s philosophical system proceeds to ana-
producing the world, society. Therefore, i t can never be " a l l that i s the case",
sense that the o r b i t of the moon, f o r example, can be so. The significance of
t i c use, the c r u c i a l sphere i s that which i s not stated, the "deep structure" of
18
osophic concepts aim at a dimension of fact and meaning which elucidates the
105
be at the same time a measure and the thing measured." Marcuse, as a Marxist,
and i t s subject from the universal medium of the formation of concepts and wor-
ds. "The philosopher, himself an abstract form of alienated man, sets himself
191
net 's Our Lady of the Flowers: "I l i v e d i n the midst of an i n f i n i t y of holes i n
language and everyday constructs "as a hidden dimension of meaning the rule of
192
194
ed to the status of " f i c t i o n " or "myth", and asserts that, i n accordance with
iousness cannot at times be pressured into the category of myth. This can occur
annihilated when the truth of the Marxian idea that theory and practice must
a l culture, ideas separated from practice i n fact serve the ideology by destr-
i t are changed.
True consciousness and therefore true language study makes the established
195
tly historical.
s t o r i c a l . The task facing Duchamp and the B e r l i n Dadaists was to take the e n t i -
rety of the art context as t h e i r subject-matter. They were producing the new
ion, or, i n Peckham's terms, an empty category, one which i s f i l l e d with the
ions which can be made out of i t (which necessarily generate both c r i t i c a l and
i t e ; the notion of the empty category might, on the other hand, generate a lim-
work:
" E a r l i e r I mentioned that Morris has....transcended....
Duchampian strategies rather than revert to Duchampian
forms. Quite obviously no one can choose another u r i n a l .
Such an act carries not one i o t a of recognition ( i . e . ,
re-evaluation of the art s i t u a t i o n ) . But there are other
choices that can be made. One i s the act of 'bracketing'
a l l art sub-sets so that art i s demonstrably seen to be
a closed and exhausted category. When i t i s demonstrated
that the art structure merely demands that a r t i s t s i n -
vent a new sub-set or sub-sub-set ( i . e . , environmental
systems, fabricated objects, p i l e s of materials, paint-
ings, sculptures, f i l e cards, motion pictures, or any
other e n t i t y ) then once and f o r a l l the art category i s
closed. Perception of art's structure, as Levi-Strauss
implies, dissipates art's s o c i e t a l function. Once the
l i m i t s of the category are understood, or bracketed, c@
then a l l further a c t i v i t y i s r e s i d u a l , merely e x i s t i n g
108
operation of t h i s society: denial not only of the alternatives, but also of the
makes society run, which runs the process of production. A r t , as long as i t en-
tains f l e x i b i l i t y through i t s method. Art does not manage to stand against soc-
ain or of Hausmann and Huelsenbeck s Central European tour of 1920 i s not repe-
1
ated i n connection with the "revolutionary" art of today. The context has s h i f -
had been revealed as other than the world: the Fountain or the Bottle Rack ind-
icate the depth of the ingression of praxis into verbal l i f e the degree of
osed.
Marcuse maintains that the nature of art as art makes i t possible f o r art
acted, self-conscious l e v e l .
110
at the same time i t insured that the negative aspect of the remoteness would
survive.
true that the nature of the a r t ' s entry i n t o language determines the i n f l u e n c e
reference.
says, Duchampian s t r a t e g i e s motivate the most advanced a r t of our time. The cr-
time, "The best works of a r t America has produced are her plumbing and her b r i d -
112
ges."; the removal of art from the movement of concrete culture was to be dest^
royed.
But we see that culture and i d e o l o g y have shifted ground considerably. The
integration of art into life has become now a function of ideology. Duchamp's
"success", and that of artists carrying out programs related to him (for examp-
le, Johns, Rauschenberg, Warhol and M o r r i s ) must be seen in the light of the
fact that the creation of extreme self-consciousness in the art-object (an ach-
The mode of alienation has changed; in society, the more the art object resem-
bles the landscape of everyday life the better. The impetus to "get art out of
pant becomes the true subject of culture, is an absolute necessity i n the atte-
mpt to destroy alienation from the cultural arena. To achieve this, the passive
the museum a n d similar institutions redefined. However, the moving of art "into
stifle the living aspects of art, old a n d new, it protected, in the bourgeois-
idealist sense, that remoteness. Therefore, i f art is to move further into the
and for good reasons. The art was completely absorbed, its content was absolut-
a b i l i t y to ingress into the domain of the factual with the awareness of that
has become.
of a r t :
erature communicate the break with communication. With Rimbaud, and then with
203
past meaning i n a context of refusal." The closed categories reappear i n new
l i k e the art which preceeded i t , that of Duchamp and the Berlin Dadaists, i n
Morris' words, uses "structure....to build events. In this sense i t draws clos-
204
own terms: to establish i t s own "apparent fact,!' with a model of i t s own version
of the history of facts. Huelsenbeck and Hausmann, i n their "Grand Tour" of Dada
(Berlin, Leipzig, Prague, Karlsbad, etc.) created the most extreme "environment-
The negation of art by art i s the work of the art of total alienation. As
The "Duchampian strategy" created the fundamental methodology for art, a totally
so for some time to come. Por, i n contrast to Kosuth, Duchamp did not set up an
impulse "for an art context only", and which therefore leads inevitably to the
out from a multitude of actual occurrences and events, rather than systematic-
ans that no abstract categories remain beyond the movement of actual practice.
from alienation.
des and the rest i s no longer an issue. The society out of which they emerged
l e c t i c a l reflexiveness of consciousness.
h i s t o r y , means contingency.
eological world is, therefore, to be resisted, and this resistance comes "natu-
nditioned consciousness.
society, but their meaning persists in the consciousness of history. This hist-
and practice, as Marx outlined. This alliance itself can be seen as the negat-
ion of contemporary ideology. The possibilities for this connection in the con-
temporary world are subject for other and further discussion. In art, this a l l -
iance does exist, but only as an image, a presentation of "in fact" unreal ev-
ents.
Burroughs). Events generate language, and, as stated above, the task of art sin-
ce Duchamp and Berlin Dada is to generate events which proclaim their antagon-
ism to the structure of events which produced the conditions for their creation.
The events built by art are unreal, and necessarily so. Therein lies their neg-
NOTES
1. -Marcel Duchamp, "The Creative Act", paper read at a Session on the Creative
Act, Convention of the American Federation of the Arts, Houstion, Texas, Ap-
r i l , 1957; published i n Robert Lebel, Marcel Duchamp, Trianon Press, Paris,
Grove Press, New York, 1959, 77-78.
2. -see Arnold Hauser, The Social History of Art, Vintage Editions (Random House),
New York, 1964.
3. -Arthur Rimbaud, "Mauvais Sang", from Une Saison en Enfer, 1873, i n Oliver Ber-
nard, ed. and trans, from the French, Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, 1962, 302-
303.
4. -Richard Huelsenbeck, En Avant Dada: Eine Geschichte des Dadaismus, P. Steege-
man, Hanover, 1920; translated as En Avant Dada: A History of Dadaism i n Ro-
bert Motherwell, ed., The Dada Painters and Poets: An Anthology, Documents of
Modern Art no. 8, George Wittenborn Inc., New York, 1951 > (hereafter referred
to as DPP), 29.
5. -Huelsenbeck, DPP, 41.
6. -For relevant information regarding the distributions of publications by the
Parisian group, see Herbert S. Gershman, The Surrealist Revolution i n France,
The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1969, 140. Regarding the d i s t -
ributions of publications by the B e r l i n group, see Hans Richter, Dada: Art %
and Anti-Art, Thames and Hudson, London, 1965, 110-112.
7. -See Maurice Nadeau, H i s t o i r e du Surrealisme. Editions du S e u i l , P a r i s , 1942,
vol. 1, ch. 7, which refers to Naville's essay,"La revolution et l e s i n t e l l -
ectuels: mieux et moins bein", 1927, a l a t e r publication of a previous paper,
"Que peuvent f a i r e l e s surrealistes?" of 1926, published i n La Revolution
Surrealiste. no. 9-10, October, 1927. For a f u l l e r description of the dialog-
be tween N a v i l l e and Breton at t h i s time, see Gershman, 86-91 and notes.
8. -see Richter, 102, 110-114, regarding the periodicals Neue Jugend. edited by
the Herzfeldes, and Die Friet Strasse, edited by Hausmann and Jung.
9. -regarding Baader, see Richter, 123-127, DPP, 45-47, 148-152
10. -Huelsenbeck, DPP, 32-33.
11. -Connections: " B a l l and I had been extremely active i n helping to spread
expressionism i n Germany; B a l l was an intimate friend of Kandinsky, i n c o l l -
aboration with whome he had attempted to found an expressionist theatre i n
Munich. Arp i n Paris had been i n close contact with Picasso and Braque and
was thoroughly convinced of the necessity of combatting n a t u r a l i s t conception
i n any form. Tristan Tzara....brought with him from Rumania an unlimited l i t -
erary facility....Through Tzara we were also i n r e l a t i o n with the f u t u r i s t
movement and carried on a correspondence with Marinetti.", Huelsenbeck, DPP,
24. The poetic concepts of simultaneity and bruitismwere b a s i c a l l y taken f r -
om futurism.
12. -For example, Huelsenbeck can point to the manner i n which Dada accepted i t s
demise. In Germany, Dada was over by 1922, finished by i t s members without
unnecessary lament, while i n Paris Tzara kept Dada together as a movement
118
through mid-1923, with the Coeur a barbe soiree on July 6, and published h i s
"Conference sur Dada" i n Schwitters' MERZ i n January, 1924. The i n f i g h t i n g of
the Paris movement (Bretpn-Tzara, Picabia-Breton, Picabia-Tzara, etc.) i s ;>~
well-documented, and a study of Breton's a c t i v i t y makes i t apparent that the
r e a l thrust of Paris Dada had been spent by the time of the "Proces Barres"
of May 31, 1921; a f t e r t h i s event the theoretical c o n f l i c t between Breton and
Tzara rendered following Dada episodes e r r a t i c and quarrelsome. This i s not
to suggest that the B e r l i n movement did not experience s i m i l a r d i f f i c u l t i e s .
From the beginning i t was beset by f i e r c e competition between Huelsenbeck and
Hausmann f o r influence, and certainly Huelsenbeck seems to have had l i t t l e
use f o r Baader ("...a Swabian p i e t i s t who at the brink of old age discovered
Dadaism and journeyed through the countryside as a Dadaist prophet to the
delight of a l l f o o l s . " , En Avant Dada. DPP, 26-27.). However, no member of
the B e r l i n group attempted to keep i t i n existence f o r i t s own sake, under*
standing that to do so would be e s s e n t i a l l y an anti-Dada gesture, " . . . i n
1922, when the power of the f a i t h began to wane and all-too-human c o n f l i c t s
began to appear, these same people....began to lose t h e i r sense of common
l o y a l t y . Baader turned against one RH, who, i n h i s turn, deserted and sland-
ered the other RH, or else t r i e d to outdo him i n power and status. No longer
moved by the enthusiasm that sprang from t h e i r shared experience, the i n d i v -
i d u a l personalities were worth what they and t h e i r anti-art were worth, and
no more....By the beginning of 1923, a l l of the 'storm' had been stressed
out of Sturm und Drang.", Richter, 134.
13. -Huelsenbeck, DPP, 26-27.
14. -Huelsenbeck, DPP, 39-
15. -Dada publications i n B e r l i n after 1917 included: Die Blutige Ernst, edited
by Carl Einstein; Jedermann Sein Signer Fussball ("Every Man His Own Foot-
b a l l " ) , c o l l e c t i v e l y edited and distributed, (see note 6); der Dada. edited
by Raoul Hausmann; Club Dada, edited by Huelsenbeck, Jung and Hausmann f o r
one issue only. Also published were: Dada-Almanach. edited by Huelsenbeck;
Dada Seigt, a c o l l e c t i o n published by Malik-Verlag i n 1920, and several oth-
er single issue ventures, often closely-pursued by police and censors; such
as The P i l l . The Cudgel. Rose-Colored Spectacles. Adversary. Bankruptcy and
Germany Must Perish. For detailed information on numbers, contributors, etc.,
see Herbert S. Gershman, A Bibliography of the Surrealist Revolution i n F r -
ance, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1969.
16. -Motherwell (DPP) mistakenly dates t h i s work as 1920 (242-246); Richter re-
produces a l l four pages of the o r i g i n a l publication(105), showing the corr-
ect date, 1918.
17. -Richter, 103, quoting Huelsenbeck's speech at the "Saal der neuen Sezession"
B e r l i n , Bebruary, 1918.
18. -That i s , a system of thought which permits dissent, but which, i n the very
act of permitting, labels that which i s permitted as deviant. Herbert Marcuse
has analyzed t h i s s i t u a t i o n i n h i s essay "Repressive Tolerance" i n Critique
of Pure Tolerance (with Robert Paul Wolff and Barrington Moore, J r . ) , Beacon
Press, Boston, 1965, and this essay i s evident i n the following discussion.
19.-Huelsenbeck, DPP, 40.
119
3 8 . -Wescher, p l a t e 1 6 .
3 9 . -Wescher, p l a t e 1 0 .
4 0 . -Richter, plate 6 3 .
4 1 . -Richter, plate 4 9 .
4 2 . -Wescher, 1 3 7 .
4 3 . -Wescher, 7 1 .
4 4 . -Richter, plate 6 5 .
4 5 . -Scharf, p. 1 3 7 , Don't WorryHe's A Vegetarian. 1 9 3 9 -
4 6 . -Scharf, f o r example, Don't WorryHe's A Vegetarian, 1 9 3 9 .
63. -See, for example, the writing of John Cage: Where there's a history of org-
anization (art), introduce disorder. Where there's a history of disorganiza-
tion (world society), introduce order. These directives are no more opposed
to one another than mountain's oppoesed to spring weather. 'How can you bel-
ieve this when you believe that?' How can I not?", from "Diary: How to Impr-
ove the World (You Will Only Make Matters Worse), 1965, in A Year From Mon-
day, Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, Conn., 1969, 19-20.
64. -Marcuse, "Repressive Tolerance", 89. It is important to note that Marcuse
does not invoke a form-content dichotomy to explain the fact that he work of
art can transcend problems in its content. The distinction is rather in lev-
els of abstraction.
65. -see C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards, The Meaning of Meaning, Routledge and
Kegan Paul, London, 1949.
66. -Joseph Kosuth, "Art After Philosophy, Part I", Studio International, vol. 78,
no. 915, October, 1969, 135-
67. -Kosuth, 136.
68. -see Terry Atkinson, David Bainbridge, Michael Baldwin, Harold Hurrell, ed.,
Art-Language, vol. 1, no. 1, May, 1969.
69. -It is necessary to indicate that i t is an essential part of the nature of
dialectical struggle that each opposing component comprehends that its iden-
tity is in no way independent from that of its opponent. The poles of a cont-
radiction do not exist separately from one another, and dialectical "resolu-
tion", or synthesis is not a victory of one pole over the other, but rather
the fission of the combined energy of the two creating a totally new situat-
ion.
70. -Kosuth, 136.
71. -This distinction, when made without explicit recognition that i t is a syn-
thetic proposition, creates a dualistic reading which produces tensions whi-
ch are unresolvable. This is because of the non-dialectical nature of Kosu-
th 's construction; leftover contradictions are "problems" in the system. With
Kosuth this problem manifests itself in the attempt to reject the material
aspect of art: "All my work exists when i t is conceived because the execution
in irrelevant to art....the art is for an art context only;.." (Statement f r -
om PROSPECT 69 exhibition catalogue, quoted in Jack Burnham, "Alice's Head:
Reflections on Conceptual Art", Artforum, February, 1970, 43.)Burnham notic-
es the "irony of Kosuth's that he is forced to produce i t physically..." (43)
suggesting that the "true medium" for conceptual art is "telepathy". He also
says that "The reification is invariably mistaken for art. As pure conceptu-
al investigation Kosuth implies that his subject-matter is substantially i r -
relevant, but that its assumptions provide meaning or context as art. By the
act of giving definitions (tautologies) for terms other than 'art', Kosuth
creates art and therefore functionally defines it."(43).
It is not irrelevant to the thesis as a whole to point out that Burnham
has misused the term "reification" here, at least by implication. The impli-
cation is that, in the relationship between the "mental" and the "material"
worlds, the basic existence of the material is a "reification" and there-
123
f o r e , an a l i e n a t i o n . T h i s i s completely i n c o r r e c t . I f a thought-system i s t a -
ken as an a p r i o r i , i t s d e l i b e r a t e , h i s t o r i c a l nature i s ignored. Kosuth's
art-system i s t o t a l l y w i t h i n h i s t o r y i n i t s existence as a r t . Kosuth takes a
context as an ay p r i o r i . Context always e x i s t s ; a r t i s a r t " f o r an a r t cont-
ext o n l y " . Context i s not grasped as a f u n c t i o n of h i s t o r y i n Kosuth's work.
Therefore, it_ i s what i s " r e i f i e d " , and i n a sense we can turn Burnham's wo-
rds around a l i t t l e : " T h e a r t i s i n v a r i a b l y mistaken f o r r e i f i c a t i o n " . R e i f i -
c a t i o n takes place when a b s t r a c t r e l a t i o n s are placed i n c o n t r o l of the con-
crete r e l a t i o n s which produced them; the concrete r e l a t i o n s thus "serve" the
a b s t r a c t r e l a t i o n s . Kosuth's a r t serves a context; a tautology i s i r r e v o c a b l y
t i e d to a p a r t i c u l a r l i n g u i s t i c s t r u c t u r e , without which i t cannot e x i s t . I
would suggest that t h i s problem i s b a s i c to Kosuth's work and Burnham's und-
erstanding of i t . Therefore, Kosuth's p a t r o n i z i n g d e n i g r a t i o n of Walter de
Maria (see note 23 to "Art A f t e r Philosophy, Part I", 137) should be seen
c r i t i c a l l y : " . . . h i s (de Maria's) i n t e n t i o n s are very p o e t i c : he r e a l l y wants
h i s work to change men's l i v e s . " The c o n d i t i o n of a l i e n a t e d thought i s that
of fragmented, p a r t i a l thought; the ultimate i n fragmentation must be the r i -
g i d separation of " i n f l u e n c i n g other a r t i s t s " from "changing men's l i v e s " .
72. -Huelsenbeck, DPP, 44.
73. -see Tzara's comments on the " c u b i s t and f u t u r i s t academies" i n h i s Dada Ma-
n i f e s t o 1918. DPP, 77.
set i n type by Marinetti i n 1913, which, along with Alcools and Marinetti's
manifestoes, was a strong poetic influence i n Paris after that date. I t i s
important to note that by 1913 Marinetti had established the theoretical-cr-
i t i c a l basis f o r Parole i n l i b e r t a . which began the "typographic revolution"
(Second Manifesto of Futurism, May 11, 1913; see E. C a r r i e r i , Futurism, Ediz-
i o n i d e l Milione, Milan, 1966, 82-84), and about t h i s time h i s ideas about
type-setting and page composition underwent a r a d i c a l change. The layout of
Apollinaire's manifesto i s an example. However, i t i s important to note that,
unlike A p o l l i n a i r e (the content of whose manifesto was r e l a t i v e l y unimport-
ant), Marinetti continued to present a cogent c r i t i c a l program i n the manif-
esto format. Apollinaire's The Futurist A n t i t r a d i t i o n might be seen as simi-
l a r to Tzara's i n the position i t takes regarding the nature of i t s own role
vis a v i s the c r i t i c a l context. As w e l l , i t might be seen as a more or less
direct influence on Tzara.
86. -A developed understanding of this question must be attributed to Andre Bre-
ton, who, i n the f i r s t years of the 1920s, wrote i n a "Dada Manifesto", "DA-
DA attacks you with your own idea. I f we reduce you to maintaining that i t i s
more advantageous to believe than not to believe what i s taught by a l l the
r e l i g i o n s of beauty, love, truth and j u s t i c e , i t i s because you are a f r a i d
to put yourself at the mercy of Dada by accepting an encounter with us on the
t e r r a i n that we have chosen, which i s doubt."(Three Dada Manifestos, DPP, 204).
And l a t e r , presumably i n 1923: "My friends P h i l l i p p e Soupault and Paul Eluard
w i l l not contradict me i f I say that we have never regarded 'Dada' as any-
thing but a rough image of a state of mind that i t by no means helped to c r -
eate.... In an a r t i c l e of that period, which was not published and i s known
to few persons, I deplored the stereotyped character our gestures were assu-
ming, and wrote as follows: 'After a l l there i s more at stake than our care-
free existence and the good humour of the moment. For my part, I never aspi-
re to amuse myself. I t seems to me that the saction of a series of u t t e r l y
f u t i l e "dada" acts i s i n danger of gravely compromising an attempt at l i b e r -
ation to which I remain strongly attached. Ideas which may be counted among
the best are at the mercy of t h e i r too hasty vulgarization.'"("After Dada",
1923(?), DPP, 205.)
In this frame of reference i t i s important to notice that Breton has at
a l l times understood the nature of the d i v i s i o n of poetry from c r i t i c a l act-
i v i t y . His work i s c l e a r l y separable into classes of "poetry/literature" and
" c r i t i c i s m " . The F i r s t Manifesto of Surrealism of 1924 i s a case i n point.
I t i s a " c r i t i c a l essay" (with occasional lapses), i n which Breton, l i k e Mar-
i n e t t i , attempts to delineate a method and a construct i n conscious d i s t i n c -
t i o n from the work of art i t s e l f . See, f o r example, the section i n the F i r s t
Manifesto, "Secrets of the Magical Surrealist Art" (Richard Seaver and Helen
R. Lane trans., 29-30: "After you have settled yourself i n a place as favour-
able as possible to the concentration of your mind upon i t s e l f , have writing
materials brought to you..."). Breton outlines, poetically to be sure, the
methodological structure of Surrealist l i t e r a t u r e . Yet, the essay never bec-
omes that which i t i s t a l k i n g about, though there are areas where c l a r i t y
s l i p s . Nevertheless, the work i s conscious of i t s e l f as c r i t i c i s m and equal-
125
132. -Marx develops t h i s ideas i n The German Ideology, i n connection with the
c r i t i q u e of Feuerbach's concept of essence:
"As an example of Feuerbach's acceptance and at the same time
misunderstanding of existent r e a l i t y . . . . w e r e c a l l the passage
i n the Philosophie der Zukunft, where he develops the view
that the existence of a thing o r , a man i s at the same time i t s
or h i s essence, that the conditions of existence, the mode of
l i f e and a c t i v i t y of an animal or human i n d i v i d u a l are those
i n which i t s or h i s 'essence' f e e l s i t s e l f s a t i s f i e d . Here ev-
ery exception i s expressly conceived as an unhappy chance, as
an abnormality which cannot be a l t e r e d . Thus i f m i l l i o n s of
proletarians f e e l by no means contented with t h e i r l i v i n g con-
d i t i o n s , i f t h e i r ' e x i s t e n c e ' does not i n any way correspond
to t h e i r 'essence', then, according to the passage quoted, t h -
i s i s an unavoidable misfortune, which must be borne q u i e t l y .
The m i l l i o n s of proletarians and communists, however, think
d i f f e r e n t l y and w i l l prove t h i s i n time, when they bring t h e i r
'existence' i n t o harmony with t h e i r 'essence' i n a p r a c t i c a l
way, by means of a r e v o l u t i o n . " (54-55.)
This c r i t i c i s m i s twofold, o r , at l e a s t , i t s subject manifests i t s e l f i n two
ways. E i t h e r , as above, "essence" i s i d e n t i f i e d with existence so that the
notion that existence i s i n any way f a l s e i s not permitted to develop, or e l -
se the realms of essence and existence are r i g i d l y separated. In t h i s a c t i o n ,
which w i l l be discussed more f u l l y further on, the realm of essence i s remov-
ed from h i s t o r y and established i n a timeless realm where i t i s supposedly
free from the corruption of contingency, e t c . This area i s c o n t i n u a l l y d e s i g -
nated as the " s p i r i t u a l " , or the "abstract" and so on, as i n Thomistic p h i l -
osophy.
The r e s u l t of the separation of the two notions i s i d e n t i c a l to the bind-
of them together: i n e i t h e r case the existent r e a l i t y i s rendered immune to
negation and transformation, on the one hand because " r e a l i t y " i s a p r i o r i
i d e n t i c a l to "essence", and on the other because the " r e a l i t y " was rendered
129
143. - l e f e b v r e , 8.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1 . BOOKS
2 0 . -Lichtheim, George, The Concept of Ideology and Other Essays. Random House,
New York, 1 9 6 7 .
134
2 . ARTICLES
5 2 . -Lippard, Lucy R., "Dada Into Surrealism: Notes on Max Ernst as a Proto-Sur-
r e a l i s t " , Artforum. September, 1 9 6 6 , 1 0 - 1 5 .
5 3 . -Morris, Robert, "Notes on Sculpture, Part IV: Beyond Objects", Artforum,
April, 1969, 5 0 - 5 5 .
5 4 . -Mueller, Gustav E., "The Hegel Legend of 'Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis'",
Journal of the History of Ideas, v o l . XIX, no. 3 , June, 1 9 5 8 , 4 1 1 - 4 1 4 .
5 5 . -Rose, Arthur R., "Four Interviews: Barry, Huebler, Kosuth, Weiner", Arts
Magazine, February, 1 9 6 9 , 5 7 - 5 9 .
136
56.-Sartre, Jean-Paul, "Interview", The New York Review of Books, March 21, 1970,
24-29.