Antonin Artaud
Kaira M. Cabanas
Frederic Acquaviva
Teresa Velazquez
Veronica Castillo
Natasha Goffman
Language and the arts in the 1950s. The exhibition aims to situate the influence of artist and writer Antonin Artaud (Marseille, 1896 - Paris, 1948) on the postwar avant-garde movements. The show includes some works by Artaud and also by visual artists, writers, poets and composers from the US, France and Brazil, mainly, similarly concerned with language, the body, and spectator participation.
Curated by Kaira M. Cabañas and Frédéric Acquaviva
Coordinated by: Teresa Velázquez, Verónica Castillo and Natasha Goffman
Museo Reina Sofía opens next season’s exhibition programme with Specters of
Artaud. Language and the arts in the 1950s, opening on September 18th. Curated by
Kaira M. Cabañas and Frédéric Acquaviva, this thesis exhibition aims to situate the
influence of artist and writer Antonin Artaud (Marseille, 1896 – Paris, 1948) on the
postwar avant-garde movements. The show will include some works by Artaud and
also by visual artists, writers, poets and composers from the United States, France and
Brazil, mainly, similarly concerned with language, the body, and spectator participation.
Specters of Artaud will be structured in several sections and will explore this creator’s
legacy, from his reinvention of language to his criticism of the psychiatric institution,
which he suffered as a patient throughout his whole life.
Artaud was a playwright and a theater critic, as well as a poet, novelist, drawer,
draftsman, painter, translator, actor, essayist and director. In 1938 he published The
Theater and its double, a collection of essays where he developed the concept of the
Theater of Cruelty, based, on the one hand, on the impact over the spectator over the
plot and transcending language with extravagant sounds or onomatopoeia; on the
other, on abandoning the conventional dispositions and structures of the mise en
scène. Thanks to this contribution, Artaud still remains one of the most influential
figures in contemporary drama theory.
To date, Artaud’s importance for the arts has been largely overlooked owing to the
centrality of neo-Dada in the exhibition and historiography of post-war art. The present
show thus hopes to shed new light both on Artaud and on his multifaceted reception in
the second half of the 20th century.
Comprised of some three hundred works, the exhibition will show, as the curator,
Kaira M. Cabañas, explains, that “Artaud’s desire to move beyond the confines of
language, understood as both writing and speech, lives on in the work of [other]
artists”. By including varied means of artistic expression —painting, photography,
music, film and poetry— and an exceptional group of documents —manuscripts,
letters, leaflets, magazines and facsimiles— the show will route several fronts in
which the thought and influence of Artaud can be tracked in the works of Gil Wolman
or François Dufrêne, members of the lettrist movement, that had its main
development in Paris; the adoption of his precepts by some prominent figures of the
American post-war avant-garde such as John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, pianist
David Tudor or writer and poet Mary Caroline Richards; or the appearance of
concrete poetry and expressive geometry in Brazil, with works by Lygia Clark,
Ferreira Gullar or Hélio Oiticica. Besides, the show will also explore two sides of the
anti-psychiatry movements through photographs, books, magazines, facsimiles and
audiovisual material.
EXHIBITION
Specters of Artaud begins with an audio piece, recorded by Artaud himself, in which he
recites his poem Alienation and Black Magic, written in 1946, and two small graphic
pieces by the author.
From letters to bodily sounds
One of the main sections is the one dedicated to lettrism. Founded by Isidore Isou and
Gabriel Pomerand in 1946, this movement whittled down poetry to the letter in order
to reinvest poetic language, with new signifying potential. Artaud’s proposals were
reformulated and developed in lettrist poetry in works like Gil Wolman’s
Mégapneumies (1950) or François Dufrêne’s Crirythmes (1953); and in cinema with
the main lettrist films, produced by Isidore Isou, Wolman, Dufrêne and Maurice
Lemaître. Thus, one of the exhibition’s main aims is to postulate lettrism as a crucial
mediation of Artaud’s legacy in the Parisian post-war context. This area will display
graphic and documentary materials, drawings, publications and manuscripts, posters,
leaflets and audiovisual and sound recordings.
Also included are lettrist films. These productions pursued a “direct” cinema that
explicitly moved from the space of representation to the event itself. The exhibition
rooms will display François Dufrêne’s Tambours du jugement premier (“Drums of the
First Judgement”, 1952/1973); Isidore Isou’s Traité de bave et d’éternité (“On venom
and eternity”, 1950–1951); Maurice Lemaître’s Le Film est déjà commence (“Has the
film already started?”, 1951); Gil Wolman’s L’anticoncept (“The Anticoncept”, 1951) and
a fragment of Yves Klein’s conference at the Sorbonne in 1959, in which he broadcast
a “very nice scream” by Artaud.
Indeterminacy: Theater Piece #1
Before the Living Theatre championed Artaud’s work and before the publication of the
English translation of The Thèatre et son double [The Theater and Its Double] by M. C.
Richards (1958), Artaud was the subject of a robust transatlantic exchange between
Pierre Boulez, John Cage, David Tudor, and Richards. In the summer of 1952 at Black
Mountain College, Richards gave a reading of her translation-in-progress, which
inspired Cage’s Theater Piece #1. Generally described as the first happening, the work
maintains mythic status because of its scant archival documentation. The exhibition
traces the importance of Artaud for Theater Piece #1 through the presentation of works
by Robert Rauschenberg and Franz Kline in addition to extensive documentation,
including letters, photographs, program notes, and musical scores.
Concrete Impurities
Under the influence of Artaud, Swedish poet Öyvind Fahlström published the first
concrete poetry manifesto in 1953. In São Paulo in 1952, Augusto de Campos, his
brother Haroldo de Campos, and Décio Pignatari formed the Noigandres group. These
poets were interested in the efficiency of communication, yet their poetry reveals
impurities through redoubled meanings and bodily references. In neighboring Rio de
Janeiro, poet and critic Ferreira Gullar was reading Artaud. The encounter would
further Gullar’s visual deconstruction of discourse, and he would eventually spatialize
language and physically activate the reader in works such as the poemas espaciais
[spatial poems]. Artists Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica similarly explored the work of
art’s embodied reception. By the mid-1970s, Oiticica even claimed to be the “son of
Nietzsche and stepson of Artaud.”
The show will also outline Antonin Artaud’s heritage in the international artistic ground
beyond the three main focuses that articulate the show. This is the case of Swedish
writer Öyvind Fahlström, who, under his influence, developed the first concrete poetry
manifesto in 1953, that will also be on display.
On the exhibition’s epilogue, two sides of the anti-psychiatry movements are depicted.
First, the one in Brasil lead by Nise da Silveira. The doctor knew Artaud’s work and
opened a painting workshop in order to stimulate her patients’ creativity. In 1952,
thanks to her impulse, the Museu de Imagens do Inconsciente (“Museu of Images of
the Unconscious”) was founded. This gallery will relate this tendency with the work of
Lygia Clark, who in the seventies made therapy a material for her art. On display there
will be photographs, letters and documents, press cuts and audiovisual material, such
as the documentary Memória do Corpo (“Memoria del cuerpo”, 1984) or Leon
Hirszman’s trilogy Imagens do Inconsciente (“Images of the Unconscious”, 1986).
Another gallery will show the anti-psychiatry movements, lead by the lettrists after
Isidore Isou’s forced institutionalization in 1968. After his reclusion, Isou published
Antonin Artaud torturé par les psychiatres and Maurice Lemaître founded La revue de
psychokladologie et de psychothéie. On display there will be some examples of the
posters, leaflets, pamphlets and books that were part of the lettrist campaign against
the psychiatrist that treated both Artaud and Isou, Gaston Ferdière. Writer and
pedagogue Fernand Deligny developed an alternative therapy based on
dramatization, play and creative activity. Also shown, the film Deligny shot in 1971, Le
moindre geste (“The slightest gesture”), whose main character is an autistic child that
flees the psychiatric hospital, presenting mental illness with no melodrama. The
exhibition closes with another record by Artaud, Les malades et les médecin (“The
patients and the doctors”, 1946).
As the curator explains, “Specters of Artaud seeks to establish an alternative
genealogy, a hauntology, that charts the comings and goings of Artaud’s ghost in the
1950s, a time when visual artists, poets, writers, and composers drew eclectically and
selectively from his work. Another way of understanding the heritage of the historic
avant-garde after the end of World War II is at the core of this exhibition. In the 1950s
Artaud’s theories intersected with a burgeoning field of interdisciplinary practices that
developed alternative models of modernism at midcentury. By incorporating Artaud’s
ideas into their work, these artists demonstrate the importance of rethinking the history
of art and the place of Artaud’s specter within it.
On occasion of the exhibition, Museo Reina Sofía will publish a catalogue that will
include, besides texts by the curators, Kaira M. Cabañas and Frédéric Acquaviva,
essays by Denis Hollier, Lucy Bradnock, Hannah Feldman, Antonio Sergio Bessa
and Ferreira Gullar.
Press contact: Concha Iglesias
prensa1@museoreinasofia.es - prensa2@museoreinasofia.es 91 7741005 / 06
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia
Santa Isabel, 52 Madrid
Hours: Mon-Sat 10-21, Sun 10-14.30
Admission: 6 euro, 3 concessions