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

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artificial hells<br />

For Breton it was crucial that Dada should enter <strong>the</strong> public realm, breaking<br />

out <strong>of</strong> cabaret <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>atre conventions to create situations where <strong>the</strong> public<br />

would be confronted with a new type <strong>of</strong> artistic action <strong>and</strong> spectatorship: ‘We<br />

imagined guiding our public to places in which we could hold <strong>the</strong>ir attention<br />

better than in a <strong>the</strong>atre, because <strong>the</strong> very fact <strong>of</strong> going <strong>the</strong>re entails a certain<br />

goodwill on <strong>the</strong>ir part. The visits, <strong>of</strong> which Saint- Julien- le- Pauvre was <strong>the</strong> fi rst<br />

in <strong>the</strong> series, had absolutely no o<strong>the</strong>r pretext.’ 111 This desire for <strong>the</strong> audience’s<br />

attention implies a serious shift in Dada’s mode <strong>of</strong> audience relations to that<br />

point, which had been predicated on an antagonistic one- upmanship akin to<br />

<strong>the</strong> Futurist serate. Ra<strong>the</strong>r than operating within <strong>the</strong> proscenium frame, with<br />

all <strong>the</strong> connotations <strong>of</strong> escapism that this connoted, Breton implied that viewers<br />

should fi nd a continuity between <strong>the</strong> work <strong>of</strong> art <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir lives: ‘taking to<br />

<strong>the</strong> streets’ would thus be a way to forge a closer connection between art <strong>and</strong><br />

life. As such, Breton seemed keen to develop more subtle areas <strong>of</strong> social<br />

investigation, <strong>and</strong> to refute <strong>the</strong> chaotic anarchism that had been <strong>the</strong> hallmark<br />

<strong>of</strong> Dada to date. The new direction leaned instead towards more refi ned <strong>and</strong><br />

meaningful forms <strong>of</strong> participatory experience.<br />

Not that this new direction was unilaterally welcomed by <strong>the</strong> group. It<br />

was a source <strong>of</strong> anxiety for Picabia, who considered Dada to have nothing<br />

to do with beliefs <strong>of</strong> any kind; <strong>the</strong> use <strong>of</strong> a churchyard, for example, seemed<br />

to him to announce a ‘political clerical or non- clerical character’. 112 The<br />

event’s press release had never<strong>the</strong>less emphasised a lack <strong>of</strong> targeted critique:<br />

‘It’s not about a demonstration <strong>of</strong> anti- clericalism as one would be tempted<br />

to believe, ra<strong>the</strong>r a new interpretation <strong>of</strong> nature applied this time not to art,<br />

but to life.’ 113 This sentiment indicates <strong>the</strong> degree to which Breton was<br />

moving towards a Surrealist stance: conventional tourism was taken as a<br />

The Maurice Barrès Trial, 1921<br />

71

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