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Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship - autonomous ...

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social sadism made explicit<br />

answer was concise: ‘an act <strong>of</strong> social sadism made explicit’ (un acto de<br />

sadismo social explicitado). 21 This allusion to <strong>the</strong> psychic mechanism <strong>of</strong><br />

sadism has both visual <strong>and</strong> economic overtones, <strong>and</strong> makes Masotta’s<br />

subsequent interest in Lacanian psychoanalysis entirely fi tting. 22 In his<br />

seventh Seminar, The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Psychoanalysis (1959– 60), Lacan draws<br />

upon Sade as an alternative model to Kant, encouraging analys<strong>and</strong>s not to<br />

compromise on <strong>the</strong>ir unconscious desire in <strong>the</strong> face <strong>of</strong> social <strong>and</strong> familial<br />

pressure (<strong>the</strong> ‘big O<strong>the</strong>r’). 23 In both <strong>the</strong> Happening <strong>and</strong> his post- mortem <strong>of</strong><br />

it, Masotta seems to establish a different ethical framework for leftist<br />

performance art, one whose territory is informed more by <strong>the</strong> anti- humanism<br />

<strong>of</strong> Lacanian ethics – in which ‘<strong>the</strong> only thing one can be guilty <strong>of</strong> is <strong>of</strong><br />

having given ground relative to one’s desire’ – than with a normative ethics<br />

in <strong>the</strong> tradition <strong>of</strong> Aristotelian modesty <strong>and</strong> temperance. 24<br />

Masotta’s title, To Induce <strong>the</strong> Spirit <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Image, was a direct reference to<br />

Jean- Jacques Lebel’s Happening, To Exorcise <strong>the</strong> Spirit <strong>of</strong> Catastrophe<br />

(1962), discussed in Chapter 3, although <strong>the</strong> works could not be fur<strong>the</strong>r<br />

apart in character; if anything, Masotta seemed only to desire an international<br />

reference point for his work. Lebel’s event referred to Cold War<br />

politics <strong>and</strong> sought collective emancipation through nudity <strong>and</strong> sexual<br />

expression, which Masotta emphatically rejected. 25 A more pertinent international<br />

reference point was an event by LaMonte Young that Masotta had<br />

experienced in New York earlier in 1966, which had also used a continuous,<br />

unaltered sound at high volume; Masotta reported that <strong>the</strong> work produced<br />

‘an exasperating electronic endlessness’ that ‘penetrated one’s bones <strong>and</strong><br />

pummelled one’s temples’ to <strong>the</strong> point where it became a commentary ‘on<br />

<strong>the</strong> continuous as continuous, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>reby induced a certain rise in<br />

consciousness with respect to its opposite’. 26 This aggressivity towards <strong>the</strong><br />

audience in US Happenings, despite <strong>the</strong>ir prevailing lightness <strong>and</strong> good-<br />

humoured unpredictability, was central to Susan Sontag’s reading in<br />

Against Interpretation (1966), with which Masotta’s reading group were<br />

familiar. 27<br />

However, <strong>the</strong>re were o<strong>the</strong>r, more local, points <strong>of</strong> reference for Masotta’s<br />

aes<strong>the</strong>tic <strong>of</strong> social aggression. The novelist Roberto Arlt (1900– 42), on<br />

whom Masotta had published a book in 1965, was a fi ction author whose<br />

edgy, unromantic stories frequently focused on <strong>the</strong> lives <strong>of</strong> criminals,<br />

outsiders <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> poor. 28 Ano<strong>the</strong>r point <strong>of</strong> infl uence was Alberto Greco<br />

(1915– 65), whose series <strong>of</strong> photo works Vivo- Ditos (Living Finger) (1962–<br />

64), involved <strong>the</strong> artist encircling passers- by with chalk <strong>and</strong> signing <strong>the</strong>m<br />

as ‘living sculptures’. Without exception, Greco always encircled <strong>the</strong> poor<br />

<strong>and</strong> down at heel. Greco had also employed people to be present within one<br />

<strong>of</strong> his gallery installations: Mi Madrid querido (My Beloved Madrid), held<br />

at <strong>the</strong> Galería Bonino in Buenos Aires in December 1964, included two<br />

shoeshine boys hired to sit in front <strong>of</strong> canvases with shoe polishes, inks <strong>and</strong><br />

brushes. Ano<strong>the</strong>r artistic precedent was Minujín’s Suceso Plástico (25 July<br />

111

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