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

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artificial hells<br />

I. Provocation, Press <strong>and</strong> Participation<br />

In <strong>the</strong> light <strong>of</strong> subsequent innovations in twentieth- century <strong>the</strong>atre, it is<br />

commonplace to think <strong>of</strong> Futurism’s approach to performance as conventional,<br />

based as it is on a proscenium division between performers <strong>and</strong><br />

audience, with roles clearly allocated between <strong>the</strong> two. However, it is<br />

important to remember that what was being presented in this context were<br />

not traditional plays but brief actions in a variety <strong>of</strong> media that anticipate<br />

what we now call performance art: <strong>the</strong>se serate (Italian for ‘evening party’<br />

or soirée) usually included recitations <strong>of</strong> political statements <strong>and</strong> artistic<br />

manifestos, musical compositions, poetry <strong>and</strong> painting. 1 The fi rst serata<br />

took place on 12 January 1910 at Politeama Rossetti in Trieste, but it was<br />

not until <strong>the</strong> third serata (on 8 March 1910, at <strong>the</strong> Chiarella in Turin) that<br />

visual artists were involved: Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carrà <strong>and</strong> Luigi<br />

Russolo appeared onstage during this event, having met <strong>the</strong> poet Filippo<br />

Tommaso Marinetti (1876– 1944) less than a month before. It is telling that<br />

<strong>the</strong> literature on Futurist serate pays less attention to <strong>the</strong> individual<br />

performances than to <strong>the</strong>ir overall effect on <strong>the</strong> audience: verbal descriptions<br />

convey <strong>the</strong> impression <strong>of</strong> complete chaos, as do visual records – such<br />

as Boccioni’s Caricature <strong>of</strong> a Futurist Serata (1910) <strong>and</strong> Gerardo Dottori’s<br />

Futurist Serata in Perugia (1914), in which paintings are shown on stage<br />

amid a fl urry <strong>of</strong> projectiles from <strong>the</strong> audience. However, <strong>the</strong> evenings<br />

were not without structure. The Gr<strong>and</strong>e Serata Futurista, held at <strong>the</strong><br />

Teatro Costanzi in Rome on 9 March 1913, was divided into three clear<br />

Gerardo Dottori, Futurist Serata in Perugia, 1914. Ink on paper.<br />

42

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