10.09.2015 Views

ARTIFICIAL HELLS

1EOfZcf

1EOfZcf

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

notes to pages 142– 5<br />

the Conceptual Art in Slovakia’, in Conceptual Art at the Turn of the<br />

Millennium, p. 26.)<br />

44 Filko, Mlynárčik and Kostrová, ‘Manifest Happsoc’, in Pospiszyl and<br />

Hoptman (eds.), Primary Documents, p. 87.<br />

45 Instructions for the action included going to the station for ten minutes at<br />

6 p.m. on 27 December, lighting a candle on 30 December, and so on.<br />

Rather than seizing the city as a ready- made, it requested a small- scale<br />

simultaneity of events from its participants. The schema is not unlike the<br />

small collective actions required of participants (sometimes an entire<br />

village) by the young Czech artist Katerina Šedá.<br />

46 Restany describes Mlynárčik’s move to the land as a question of spiritual<br />

survival under normalisation. (Restany, Ailleurs, p. 53.) US Land Art’s<br />

engagement with open, uninhabited spaces is exactly synchronous with<br />

Eastern European art’s move to the landscape, but motivated by quite<br />

different reasons (a desire to circumnavigate the commercial art world, to<br />

engage with the sublime expanses of the US landscape, and so on).<br />

47 These ‘hommages’ to assorted artists could be compared to the efforts<br />

made by Argentinian artists to recreate various Happenings from North<br />

America during the mid 1960s. But if the Slovakian artists operate on the<br />

basis of playful hommage to their international colleagues (which was<br />

not censored), the Argentinians are more analytical; performance reenactments<br />

(discussed in Chapter 4) became a way to analyse, criticise<br />

and surpass the works of their better- known contemporaries from the<br />

hegemonic centre.<br />

48 Chalupecký notes that the event ‘cost a small fortune. Mlynárčik didn’t<br />

have, as is usual elsewhere, anyone to fund him. He had to be a sponsor<br />

to himself. He realized a lot of decorative projects for architecture, paintings,<br />

sculptures, glass works and metal works and he dedicated all<br />

earnings to his manifestations, interpretations, games and celebrations.’<br />

(Chalupecký, Na hranicích umění, pp. 118– 19, translation by Tomáš<br />

Pospiszyl.) It was possible for artists to earn good money in the 1960s and<br />

1970s, particularly if they sold works overseas (Mlynárčik was unusual in<br />

having gallery representation in Paris). All artists were required to have<br />

a job, of which the highest paid was to produce monumental commissions<br />

for new architectural projects (Filko); other professions include teaching<br />

art (Koller), designing film posters (Knížák), and working in the zoo<br />

(Peter Bartoš) or museums (Kovanda, Štembera, Miler).<br />

49 See Henry Périer, Pierre Restany: L’Alchemiste de l’art, Paris: Editions<br />

Cercle d’Art, 1998, p. 335: ‘Then he handed out the presents; twenty<br />

works of art that Mlynárčik had requested from his artist friends around<br />

the world. Thus it was that an electrician and his wife who would have<br />

hoped for useful presents hailing from the West actually found themselves<br />

with a collection of César, Nikos, Niki de Saint- Phalle, Bertini,<br />

Hains . . . objects that were curious to their eyes, and which they didn’t<br />

326

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!