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Tamás St.Auby |
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The IPUT (International Parallel Union of Telecommunications) is interested in what it calls the "Third Method", which deals with any type of subject not in a correspondingly contradictory way, as the conventional "Second Method" does: "making is competing", but in a complementarily mutating way: "acting is st.riking". (rem.: the "First Method" is simply drifting.) I, the deliberate voluntarist , thought that the Prague Spring was a successful result of a social mutation, the maturity of the majority's consciousness, so it ended the class-struggle and let free speech and uncensored creativity flow from every direction of the outdated Socialist Democracy directly into Direct Democracy finally, as it was planned by the anarchists, autonomes, and for a while by the Leninist soviets also some decades earlier already. On the day of 21 of August 1968, not knowing yet about the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact armies during the dawn, Anastasia (gr. Resurrection), my girlfriend, the daughter of the Greek communist partisan evacuated to Hungary by the Kremlin during the civil war in Greece, and I were sunbathing together at the lake Balaton, hoping that the Kremlin would not dare to destroy the Neo Socialist System. There was a portable radio with us – and suddenly we heard the news about the awkward, crazy, criminal act. We jumped up and hitchhiked back to Budapest, ran to Cafe Hungaria to meet my friends, and saw some old, renegade communists weeping on their little marble tables there. Although 72 Czech and Slovak civilians were killed and hundreds were wounded by the armies of the „friendly, socialist countries” during the invasion, the people did not resist with „Second Method“ weapons, but invented many „Third Type Methods” for disrupting the military actions: like changing the signposts to disorient the troops, or switching the street-names and house-numbers in order to block the arrests, etc. When a military decree prohibited the people from listening to the radio, a recipe was invented, and since it did not request talent, skill, knowledge, mastership, virtuosity, etc., anybody could make it in the sense of Fluxus, many people realized it: "Listen to a newspaper-covered brick on the street!". So, the soldiers confiscated thousands of this non-art-art pieces all around the country. The Czechoslovak Radio 1968 was made in 1969 following the original recipe slightly changed to a portable memorial against war as homage to the natural inventiveness of the people: "Listen to a sulphur-covered brick on the street!". It is an unlimited multiple, I made several of them occasionally during the following years. (I don't know if it was made later by someone else also.) An important aspect of the given procedure is that although these types of non-art-art pieces have inevitably different formal realizations by different people on different occasions, like for example any food made according to a recipe, the objects are essentially the very same in respect to their „bottom up” origin, function and aim. The other important aspect of them is the mutation of the art, more precisely the mutation of Socialist Realism to Neo-Socialist Realism: "non-art-art for and by all". „(…)The Portable Trench for Three Persons (1969) treats the subject similarly with the ‘Third Method”, it is a mutation of the montage, a sort of ‘united montage’ by interbreeding the trench and the stretcher where one can not separate the component parts in the compound anymore as it can be done in the classical montage-mixture. The Trap – hommage à Prague – (1969) environment constructed not entirely beforehand as it used to be, but during and by an interbreeding action itself, related also to the break-down of the Prague Spring’s political/economic/cultural change. (…)” (Anna Stomosis: Intermedia and Interaction, 2000) MRF: What reaction was there in Hungary at the time to political works such as Czechoslovak Radio 1968 and Trench for Three? It was enough to be an "Abstract" during the 40s-50s and Pop artist, Actionist, Conceptual artist in the 60s-70s, – and although the mentioned non-art-art pieces had no „Second Method“, direct, poster-like political meanings either –, one became banned as heretic and even a subject of chargeable offence by the degenerated military-mercantile bureaucracy. The monolithic mass-media was servile, it denounced, condemned and censored all the new type of regroupings of the given, especially the slogan of IPUT: „All prohibited is art! Be prohibited!“. Evidently, the majority of the people were in the drift of the „First Method“, they did not see and were not aware of this ridden „non-art-art-history“-process, the above mentioned action-objects did not compete with, for example, the competitive, „Second Method“ sports. The Brick was shown in a private place, so it was not followed by immediate punishment, the group-show – where the Trench was presented – was banned after three days, the Trap-environment was closed down immediately after its opening at the show-room of the Association of Young Communists (the Stalinist „Second Method“-equivalent of the Hitler-Jugend) of the Central Research Institute for Physics, and idiotic interrogations and repressive-intolerant punishments as abuses of administrative authority followed them. Anyway, all this is for the glory of: everybody is interested – instinctively at least – in the general program defined by T. Leary and adopted by IPUT: „SMI2LE!“ – Space Migration, Intelligence Increase, Life Extension! – then and now and ever. Budapest, 2 March 2008 ST.AUBY Tamás
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Maja and Reuben Fowkes |
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