UnSearching for Rue Simon-Crubellier: Perec out-of-sync

2017
Darren Tofts

The Afterlives of Georges Perec, Rowan Wilken & Justin Clemens, 2017
Published by: Edinburgh University Press

This collection of responses to Perec's work includes Darren Tofts essay: 'What might seem like a surfeit of epigrams prefacing this tapestry that you are about to Unweave (essay, text, fly specs on a page or screen, the subliminal flicker of codified light), this assemblage of samples already performs what you are about to do in reading this text.' The tapestry referred to is 'Life, a User's Manual', Perec's masterpiece first published in 1978. Toft's rich response weaves in the work of many artists most notably Norie Neumark and Maria Miranda's project, 'Searching for Rue Simon-Crubellier' (2004) and Ian Breakwell's Unword (1970).

The Performative Gesture of Image and Text Juxtapositions

2017
Eve Kalyva

"As a method of analysis, examining the work's performative gesture offers the tools for both a synchronic and diachronic evaluation (that is both in its time and from todays standpoint). Understandig how a work communicates in context involves understanding how it, as a cultural artefact, engaged its environment, was historically produced and received; it also means understanding how the work as well as its critical potential are perceived today". pp 45, Image and Text in Conceptual Art, Palgrave Macmillan.

References to Unword (Breakwell and Leggett 1971) pp 63-66.

Resisting Definition

” Integral to the new language was what was rapidly becoming performance art: a mix of theatre, happening, and in the case of Ian Breakwell and Mike Leggett’s collaborations recalled in Leggett’s chapter, a kind of structural economics exemplified by the destruction of unsold sculptures. That challenge to ‘the monopolist position of broadcast television’, as Leggett refers to it, involved ‘a highly rational and calculated approach’ to destruction. It is this mocking, ironic application of a system comprising both methodical precision and sheer mess that has allowed, as Leggett notes with considerable originality, the documentation to take on a new role today. The ontological question of liveness – where precisely is the point when the ephemeral actually and terminally vanishes? – has its corollary in the question of what and how we recall.”
pp 6-7 in REWIND: British Artists’ Video in the 1970s & 1980s (2012), John Libbey, UK, ed. Sean Cubitt and Stephen Partridge.

NB. Jackie died, sadly just as the project was taking off following many years of planning and lobbying. Her Introduction to the publication remains both fresh and forthright.

2012
Jackie Hatfield

A Kick in the Eye: Video and Expanded Cinema in Britain

“Early television works in the 1960s in Britain (television that is, as opposed to video) were grounded in the apparatus and explorations of its use. The various Arts Lab experiments and events by John Hopkins, Malcolm Le Grice and Mike Leggett were more or less semi-private affairs for the cognoscenti. It was not until 1972….”
pp 137 in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film, (2011) Tate Publishing, London, ed A.L. Rees, Duncan White, Steven Ball, David Curtis.

This is sloppy research in my opinion. The option to record video (tapes, as artefacts is what Steve means), was restricted to but a few, one of whom was Hoppy (John Hopkins). However, he would endeavour to make CATS limited range of equipment available to artists planning to incorporate either CCTV or video recording into performances. Such was the case with Ian Breakwell and myself in Unsculpt (1970) and One (1971) described on this site and also in the REWIND publication. The videotape made of the Unsculpt event was played back to the audience at the end of the event but as tape was very expensive at this point no plans were made to keep it. The film and photographic record became the permanent recording, now in digital form (like all the later ‘videos’ made by later artists). As for ‘semi-private affairs for the cognoscenti’, at the Unsculpt performance, the place was packed. I guess Steve’s cognoscenti didn’t hear about it!

2011
Stephen Partridge