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164<br />

Whereas the principle <strong>of</strong> maximum contrast as in the case <strong>of</strong> the work Lolita,<br />

however, becomes a kind <strong>of</strong> visual polemic that continues to apply half a<br />

century later. This principle can also be found in Lurie’s late texts.<br />

07<br />

“WITHOUT FAIL /<br />

After reading Peter<br />

Weiss’s Auschwitz, / I<br />

must eat ice-cream.”<br />

Boris Lurie in:<br />

Geschriebigtes / Gedichtigtes:<br />

Zu der Ausstellung<br />

in der Gedenkstätte<br />

Weimar-Buchenwald,<br />

Volkhard Knigge,<br />

Eckhart Holzboog,<br />

Dietmar Kirves eds.,<br />

1947–2001, Stuttgart/<br />

Bad Canstatt, 2003,<br />

p. 179.<br />

II<br />

“3. August 1997 UNBEDINGT Nach Peter Weiss’s Auschwitz-Lesen,<br />

muss ich Ice-Cream essen.” 07<br />

In the late nineties, a slender envelope <strong>of</strong> printed matter with “NO!” stenciled<br />

on it in red fell into my hands: a collective concoction from the surroundings<br />

<strong>of</strong> the art academy in Karlsruhe. <strong>The</strong> very first picture already<br />

made the position clear: a urine stain on the outside wall <strong>of</strong> the academy<br />

building, then a copy <strong>of</strong> a backside, cut-up sneakers. A pin-up collage with<br />

“NO” printed over it is positioned alongside the child’s drawing <strong>of</strong> a horse,<br />

above which it is possible to read “Mein Plan” (My Plan) in clumsy lettering. A<br />

late greeting to New York, with the dedication: “boris lurie, sam goodman,<br />

stanley fisher, gertrude stein usw. no!”<br />

With soir critique at the Academy <strong>of</strong> Visual <strong>Art</strong>s Leipzig in 2001, Inga<br />

Schwede, Till Gathmann, and I initiated an event series that—as we wrote in<br />

the first invitation—endeavors to foster unease and to turn to society and<br />

its art in critical reflection. Following a kick<strong>of</strong>f event about Guy Debord’s<br />

critique <strong>of</strong> the spectacle for the summer term 2002, we organized talks on<br />

the history and reception <strong>of</strong> the NO!art movement (in retrospect it comes<br />

as a surprise that the contemporaneity <strong>of</strong> Situationist International and<br />

No!art did not grab our attention). None <strong>of</strong> us had seen the 1995 neue Gesellschaft<br />

für bildende Kunst exhibition at the Haus am Kleistpark and the<br />

rooms on Oranienstrasse in Berlin, but we were familiar with the superb<br />

catalogue, which makes what was missed quite clear.<br />

Matthias Reichelt was part <strong>of</strong> the group organizing the exhibition. We<br />

met him at Dietmar Kirves’s apartment in the Graefe neighborhood <strong>of</strong> Berlin.<br />

Kirves is responsible for the no-art.info website and sees himself as both<br />

a chronicler <strong>of</strong> the movement and an activist. And thus the question is also<br />

raised: is NO!art the practice <strong>of</strong> a small group—which was naturally a child<br />

<strong>of</strong> its time—that has come to an end and was limited to a particular period?<br />

Or is it still a lively movement in whose name artists time and again work,<br />

exhibit, and publish, and which forges a path through history that, starting<br />

from the cooperative gallery on 10th Street on the Lower East Side, branches<br />

out into the present, similar to the underlying line <strong>of</strong> Dada to the Situationist<br />

International to punk that Greil Marcus draws in his book Lipstick<br />

Traces?<br />

What interested us was NO!art in New York between 1959 and 1965, perhaps<br />

the first artistic movement to directly address the Shoah. In this we<br />

EIKO GRIMBERG

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