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[Blake_Stimson,_Gregory_Sholette]_Collectivism_aft(z-lib

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After the “Descent to the Everyday” 69

“collaborative collectivism” reveals no tidy linear progression. This is particularly

true with the pioneers. Gutai played a central role in devising

innovative exhibition formats in its early phase, yet it reverted to more conventional

exhibition practices after 1958. Among a few sporadic exceptions

was “International Sky Festival” in 1960, in which paintings were Xown in

the sky, hanging from ad balloons. For Neo Dada, the important protagonist

in early Anti-Art, its exhibitions were a manifestation of the camaraderie

its members and associates cultivated at their often boisterous gatherings at

the “Artists’ White House”—member Yoshimura Masunobu’s residence designed

by the young architect Isozaki Arata—and its street demonstrations

were a further extension of these action-packed evenings. In the case of Hi

Red Center, which launched “collaborative collectivism,” collaboration preceded

exhibition. Its “ofWcial chronology” 66 includes two collaborative projects

in 1962 as integral elements of the group’s history, although not all three

primary members were involved in them: Dinner Commemorating the Defeat

in the War (Akasegawa et al.) and Yamanote Line Incident, staged by Takamatsu

and Nakanishi, among others, on Tokyo’s commuter railroad-loop. These

two projects were followed by a panel discussion among Akasegawa, Takamatsu,

and Nakanishi, on the topic of Yamanote Line Incident, organized for

the art magazine Keisho (Form) by its editor Imaizumi Yoshihiko, who was

instrumental in uniting Akasegawa and the other two. 67 These activities culminated

in HRC’s Wrst exhibition in 1963, “The Fifth Mixer Plan,” which

formally announced the group.

It is tempting to see a source of post-1945 collectivism in the persistent

Japanese social mores of “group orientation,” which dates back to

Prince Shotoku of the seventh century, who famously proclaimed that harmony

was of foremost importance. However, the often short-lived existences

of such small vanguard collectives as Neo Dada and HRC points to a freespirited

“collectivity without conformity.” There was no need to prolong the

life of a group for the sake of prolonging it. This decidedly separates the small

vanguard collectives from the established model of the art organization

(which was exploited by the wartime regime in the name of nationalism),

or Gutai’s exceptional case (which ended with the powerful leader-mentor’s

death). In a sense, their collectivism constituted an individualism in the

guise of groups.

Why, then, did these artists pursue collectivity? One reason was

the power of multitude, which has always informed collectivism. There were

particular twists in the 1960s, however, when artists took their projects to the

public sphere and interrogated the modern institutions of art. Zero Dimension,

which routinely gathered about thirty people or more for each of its

rituals, exploited the number to create a substantial presence in the urban

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