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[Blake_Stimson,_Gregory_Sholette]_Collectivism_aft(z-lib

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After the “Descent to the Everyday” 57

(mumei-sei), to borrow Akasegawa’s term, making HRC the last in the line

of Anti-Art collectivism. 33

POST-HRC COLLECTIVES

The end of Anti-Art was signaled by the termination of the “Yomiuri Independent

Exhibition”—the hotbed of Anti-Art—which was announced in

early 1964. In retrospect, as more artists and collectives sought to “descend

to everyday life” and explore “action” (koi) in their work, the “Yomiuri Independent”

was perhaps beginning to lose its importance, if not its relevance,

altogether. Conversely, its demise likely accelerated the departure from the

institutional conWnes. Thereafter the idea of action and collaboration more

explicitly informed collectivism in various manners.

Akasegawa Genpei after HRC

Theoretically, Model 1,000-Yen Note Incident (1963–74) hammered the last

nail in the cofWn of Anti-Art, with the artists themselves declaring that

Anti-Art was indeed Art. From the birth of a “nameless” existence that was

the facsimile 1,000-yen note fabricated for Akasegawa Genpei in 1963 to the

criminal investigation and trial of the artist for currency fraud to its aftermath,

the entire course of events unexpectedly became a gigantic collective

project. The artist’s money work followed a curious path of fate. Outside his

intention or control, the facsimile money accidentally attracted the attention

of the police, who were investigating a genuine and thorny counterfeit

problem. Once inserted in the real-life space, his money work—in one theory—fell

victim to the state’s mid-decade preparation for the coming Anpo

’70 struggle, and its creator was brought to the court of law as a “thought

pervert” (shiso-teki henshitsusha), a contemporary law-enforcement label reminiscent

of the wartime “thought criminal.” In a country where the interest

of public welfare and social trust must always and unequivocally override

constitutional rights, Akasegawa was found guilty in 1967, with his verdict

upheld by the Supreme Court in 1970. 34

In the investigation phase, when Asahi Newspaper, a national daily,

erroneously linked Akasegawa to the major ongoing counterfeit case in 1964,

HRC published the satirical Eyedrop Special Bulletin and took other “direct

actions” against the newspaper company. When he was indicted in 1965, his

colleagues gathered to form the 1,000-Yen-Note Incident Discussion Group

(Sen-en-satsu Jiken Kondankai), or Senkon in short, which became an important

agent of the Incident. In support of Akasegawa’s legal battle, Senkon

was responsible for aiding in his defense, publishing newsletters, and holding

public meetings and fund-raising events. SigniWcantly, the credit should

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