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(c)Friedhelm Schulz
Mail art, as something you receive privately, tacitly revives a phenomenon
that has
been overlooked so far in art. It is the difference between two
forms of contents as known
from private conversation and official speech.
Perhaps the claim to truth and the expectation
of truth in a proclamation
has traditionally been connected with an especially official form for
a very
long time. Perhaps as only privileged, examined; chosen and elected people had
been
allowed to pronounce or legitimize such proclamations they were mostly
made in "elevated"
speech. On the one hand, when together with modern
artists of his time Nietzsche speaks as a
psychologist of the "pathos of
truth, " he hints at the false and pious little cloak with which
the pathos
of truth tries to cover up uncertainties, anxiety, doubts, and often strategic
intentions and lies, too. On the other hand, as a philosopher he knows about
and thinks of the
act of constituting any realized concept whatsoever as
truth by which the naive and credulous
people may be easily cheated in the
same way. In art, perhaps Michelangelo's "David" or
Picasso's "Guernica"
would be examples of official proclamation, whereas the "Shoes" by
Vincent
van Gogh or even the portraits by James McNeill Whistler could be compared to
private conversation. The difference between the two modes of speech cannot
be determined
in any grammatical or terminological way, but only from the
point of view of content; and in
art the two different forms cannot be
perceived by any specific colors or forms, but at most
merely by format.
Therefore it is very difficult to juxtapose clearly these two different modes
of expression, especially as they exist equaily in the realm of gesture,
attitude and clothing, as
well as in architecture. This is probably the
reason why the science of art has barely or only
marginally dealt with this
phenomenon as a topic.
Mail Art Is Private under All Circumstances
Signs
of attribution like language games, rhymes, stave rhymes and spells are another
formal element with a similar claim to truth, and of validity in every epoch
of art and culture.
the private and subjective aspect of Mail Art was
certainly the reason why this form of "West
Art" was not forbidden in the
countries of the East. This art form is not very striking, and so
the ruling
people were proud to be able to permit themselves the international flair of it
as
local color. Even in the early eighties I was allowed to attach my poster
to the Chinese Wall,
openly advertising copy and Mail Art action without
being misunderstood or harassed. The
question arises of what the difference
or the relationship is between the ideological aspect of
the private
utterance and the existing official or general validities. Post-modern
philosophy
regrets the loss of relationship as the end of any ideal, of any
culture and of any human
identity, and as the beginning of chaos and non-
involvement. Obviously, for Mail Art there is
no criterion of quality that
exists outside the realm of the single art object. From the point of
view of
art history, philosophy and even theology, the problem has not been solved yet
and
reaches deeply down into the structures of our perception. While the
second commandment
from the sixth century before Christ still had to forbid
the adore of a sculpture - that puts us
back into a time when picture,
number and even runic letters were transcendentally
significant signs - in
the Renaissance and Humanism the individual began not only to deal
with
Greek philosophy but also in a non-linguistic way with the above mentioned
formal
phenomena of the antique world of gods and idols. And, finally, in
modern times it is DADA
trying to tease and unmask the perhaps most
embarrassing aberration of mankind as nonsense,
as if there were a medium a
measure or a criterion of truth beyond Man and human
perception which we
could know about.
Undoubtedly, the aim of DADA and also of today's Mail-Art
is not religious, nor
moralistic and by no means aesthetic or arbitrary.
Besides all other aspects still discussed
nowadays because of the First
World War, DADA had a missionary trait, just as Mail Art had
it because of
the ideological catastrophe after the Second World War. It is this missionary
trait which tacitly revives the relationship between form and truth.
As
a matter of fact, it only appears that the speaker's desk makes the orator's
speech
true; it guarantees the truth as little as officiousness when it is
style of speech. The saying "He
lies as if it were printed, " however, shows
that in general printed publication is used to
falsely legitimize what is
printed, just as the modern pathos of truth serves to cover up what is
untrue. In most cases these manoeuvres are recognized as betrayal and
temptation. In the
course of the Renaissance and emerging science it was
basically the same phenomenon that
appeared in another style. From then on
it was harder to recognize, and therefore more
malicious. Now truth and
consistency are produced or legitimized by the object represented,
that is
by its congruency with the object or an "objective" idea or even a formula, as
if the
object or the idea could be proof of the rightness and consistency of
concrete or ideological
perception or representation. Finally, both can only
lead to kitsch and pretence. While it is
only by intuition that Modernism
gradually eliminates such empiricism as concreteness, and
of such Platonism
as idealism and ideology, the proclamations of DADA have already
reached
collective consciousness. Thus DADA has grasped the problem of form and truth by
ridiculing all ideals and "isms " as euphemistic pretence, and as totally
unjustified claims to
truth or as the prosthesis of truth, and this includes
even those it announces itself together
with all that is proclamatory,
officious and objective.
Mail Art as an Existential Sign
It is difficult
to recognize this as evil and to understand clearly its gradual conquest
merely as development. The reason for this is that the formal aspect of the
officious or of the
declarative on the one hand, but also of the conceptual
in general, has to be distinguished
from the similarly formal aspect of a
private statement on the other hand. But even then one
could or should not
simply judge the officious form as wrong, untrue or false, and the private
form as the only true and right one, or as being more true and right than
the other one; just as
Mail Art cannot and must not be considered as
exclusively right in contrast to all other art
forms as basically wrong.
That would be a relapse into a state that has just been overcome,
and where
one clings to given standards of truth; a cheap, normative state, which is
especially
seductive because of the highly proclamative character of Mail
Art. Normally, such
judgement should likewise be true the other way round,
just as the proclamative trait of
Michelangelo's "David" and the declarative
trait of Picasso's "Guernica " do not represent
something that is wrong or
inappropiate, but, on the contrary, as statements they provide the
reality
of perception as well as of the perceived, and at the same time equally the
consciousness of it all. Only today with the help of Gerold Prauss
philosophy can these forms
be understood as structures of perception; and
only today can they be retraced in their right
and possibly wrong
relationship to each other. As a matter of fact, a charlatan will always be
able to use this or that form of disguise for betrayal. But modernism
intuitively overcomes the
naive dependency on these forms of perception and
expression.
This holds equally true for the language and language games of
which Robert Rehfeldt
in East Berlin had gathered a fine collection from the
era of the GDR. They show the great
achievements of the GDR for Mail Art,
increasing the wealth of its reflexion. In this case, too,
the great
grandfathers of DADA are masters of unmasking when ridiculing the idea that
pathos and forms of rhyme or stave rhyme could guarantee truth or produce
truth. Or the idea
that, inversely, they could or would have the right to
legitimize lies as truth, or change error
into truth by mere confirmation We
do not fear for our culture in spite of all the clever and
nonsensical
sayings which appear in whatever form with so-called postmodernism as they
did, and as they were possible during DADA times and in Mail Art, too. For
DADA as a name
is equally a confession of infantile speechlessness, and at
the same time a hint at the pre-
conceptual of perception, just as Modernism
as a name is a hint at the fashionableness of
validities, and just as in
Mail Art the idea is not the end. Just as Modernism cannot be the end
of
modernists or of DADA and Mail Art. Just as Impressionism - and any -ism at all
- was not
the end of Impressionists. But up to now self-discovery and
representation has only been an
alchemical search for and testing of what
perception, consciousness, freedom and culture is or
may be. Thus the
ancestor of our Mail Art, DADA, calls any flashy utterance a pure and
original sign of existence. As such, it is not only a baby's claim to
attention, but an essential
sign of any concept and statement, be it in
music, art or culture in general. Since the early,
pre-historic rock
drawings we have experienced every work of art as a sign of existence. We
are still hardly aware of the fact that this is exactly what we are looking
for as legitimation.
In the process of man's secularization, soon splitting
up into almost six billion single
validities, Mail Art is not at all the
high school of communication with only one address and a
friendly and
open-minded sender. But as a quasi ornament, as a stamp and sticker, each form,
each content and each -ism rather submits to this origin of communication
which that sign of
existence is. This has never been more obvious than when
mail came from the Soviet Union,
from Hungary, Bulgaria, Romani from China
or the GDR.
You may object that the above mentioned aspect is only partly
and accidentally visible
in DADA's flashy attitude and that Mail Art's
manipulations of what can be formed find their
limitations in the conditions
set by a small envelope and the postal fee for the copy. It is
obvious that
the mode of appearance is thus influenced and restricted.
But Mail Art's
affinity and basic parental relationship with the new medium Internet -
where storage capacities and transmission techniques change data quantities
of some hundred
or thousand pages of theory or philosophy into the ornament
of a personal E-mail message
without the possibility of deriving or
legitimizing a bugbear of dignity or a claim to truth from
this fact - this
shows the trend as the logical and right development. It is by no means an end
of our culture. The first whimpers of DADA were just the first notes of a
new beginning.
Friedhelm Schulz, 1996
beginning,
German,
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