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Performing Revolution 123

lies in Grupo Puré, which was formed in 1984. 48 Puré did not identify itself

as a political group, but rather as one that was “detecting,” and responding

to, “new situations, new problematic conditions that were not being

addressed or had been treated earlier but with very little depth.” 49 The

group “was born of the need to make a collective statement . . . [the] work

uses contemporary forms and media to express a critical and judgmental view

of [Cuban] society and times,” as they explained in the catalog for their Wrst

exhibition, “Puré Expone.” 50 Puré’s preoccupation with the popular and

quotidian linked them to their predecessors, but they felt that they were pushing

the question further: 51 the observations are more pointedly situated within

the daily tensions of life and stood as a kind of “critical empathy” 52 expressed

as scatological funfair.

As an example, Adriano Buergo’s interest in the ubiquitous Cuban

habit of material-mechanical improvisation inevitably placed emphasis on

the deteriorating conditions that necessitated such continual improvisation,

reworking Cuban art’s traditional preoccupation with representing lo cubano

to insert an indirect, but unmistakeable, critical voice. 53 Equally important,

the street and cartoon humor of Lázaro Saavedra and Ciro Quintana introduced

a new acerbity into artistic satire 54 at the same time that it opened

questions about mass culture that functioned, in their work, as a type of midground

between a quotidian and an ideological frame of reference.

Puré’s work served as a kind of bridge to a more explicitly political

critique that began about a year or two later, 55 mining the depth charge

latent in the registration of Cuban quotidian reality. While Volumen Uno’s

treatment of materiality (in Juan Francisco Elso especially, and also Ricardo

Rodríguez Brey and José Bedia) was related to Arte Povera, in which the

povera had some sense of ennoblement, Puré’s installations really were materially

impoverished (“squalid,” in Tonel’s words), a brazen, disorienting agglomeration—a

“demystifying Bronx cheer” 56 that had an element of aggression

in it that had been mostly absent in the gentler and more pleasing aesthetic

of much of the earlier group. 57 Puré also foregrounded what had been a tendency

among some in the Volumen Uno generation (especially Consuelo

Castañeda) toward a postmodern pastiche and appropriation, and that later

became a primary methodology for ABTV. Puré’s “brazen idea of exhibiting

their genealogy” as Tonel put it, “wearing their debts . . . on their sleeve,” 58

making “the borderline between plagiarism and quotation foggier than

ever” 59 struck another in a continuing series of blows against the modernist

conception of authorial, and individual, artistic identity.

Puré’s way of hanging shows, such that the works of all the different

artists intermingled and interpenetrated, 60 was central to their identity

as a collective and opened a fuller consideration of the group as a form of

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