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128 Rachel Weiss

Provisional’s carnivalesque, faux-groupie play was masterfully impish in its

dismissal of the “very good” artist, the simple, silly gesture farting on myth

at several levels: the art student’s adulation of fame, the anti-imperialist position

of the Cuban national institution, the “Indian’s” warm embrace of the

conqueror, the “universality” of the language of art. Meanwhile Menéndez’s

cooler response might be read as not so much mimicking as over-identifying

with the Cuban public’s role as habitual receptor of weighty orations.

As witty and amusing as these works of Provisional’s may have

been, they are misleading in reading the group’s actual work. More than a

producer of art, Grupo Provisional was the mischievous ghost in the machine,

the undifferentiatable substance that seeped into and transformed the whole

system of artist-audience-power. Their absolute refusal of stable authorial

identity (even to the point of consecrating a nine-year-old schizophrenic child

as a full member) and their total rejection of Wxed, conventional, artistic borders

framing the group was a de facto declaration of the unspeakable corollary:

this is not just an argument between artists and institutions. Everyone

is involved.

Arte Calle is often considered to have been both aesthetically

more conservative (having started out as grafWtti muralists) 85 and considerably

more positivist than Grupo Provisional: its message was that of “Revive

the Revolution . . . , a positive message from a contentious, rebellious language,

but there was still a possibility, it was believed, that we could work

FIGURE 5.2. Grupo Provisional, Very Good Rauschenberg. Photograph by Adalberto Roque.

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