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Lonzi Self Portrait

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Car\a lonz\

Accardi Alviani Castellani Consagra


Fabro Fontana Kounellis Nigro
Paolini Pascali Rotella Scarpitta
Turcato Twombly
10 allison grimaldi donahue

here that means presenting the realities of 1960s Italian


speech and the legacy of patriarchal-colonial Eurocentrism
that it evidences.
At the beginning of the text Lonzi, Accardi, Fabro and
Kounellis discuss the role and behaviour of the critic - he
is always male, bourgeois, power-hungry. The artist is also
always assumed to be male: men compare themselves to
other men, whether that's Consagra talking about Raphael, or
Fontanta discussing Manzu, or the great pride with which he
talks about Manzoni's experimentalism, and his own. While
in my own writing I use 'they' as a third-person singular, I
felt it was important here to retain the 'he', both for histor-

Se\t - port ra \t
ica! accuracy and to highlight the ubiquity and normativity
of machoism in Lonzi's world. By pushing back against this
impersonal 'he', Lonzi shows us what she was up against. She
was attempting to dismantle the idea of the male artist-genius:
showing the artists' ignorance is integral to that process.
There are some factual errors that have been carried
over from the original; these have been reproduced in vari-
Carla Lonz,
ous editions and I have kept them as they are - they represent
the way a given artist (mis)remembers something, and as this
is a recording of a conversation, I remained true to that con-
versation and the inaccuracies of spontaneous speech.
It goes without saying, perhaps, that this translation -
like all translations - is an iteration. It reflects my reading and
inhabiting of Lonzi's work over many years, and the process
of solidifying my own understanding of the text over time.
The work remade the shapes of my particular language, and
thus remade me. Lonzi is a complex writer, a complex figure,
and I wanted to be as true to her voice and pursuit as possible,
and, in my own way, to participate in it.
Allison Grimaldi Donahue, October 2021
\ntroduc\\on
This book emerges from the collection and rearrangement
of discussions with some artists. Yet the conversations did not
originate as material for a book: they respond less to the need
to understand than to the need to spend time with someone
in a fully communicative and humanly satisfying way. The
work of art felt to me, at a certain point, like a possibility for
meeting, like an invitation to participate, addressed by the
artists to each of us. It seemed to be a gesture to which I could
not respond in a professional manner.
Over these years I have felt my perplexity grow about
the role of the critic, in which I've noticed a codified alien-
ation towards the artistic fact, along with the exercise of a
discriminating power towards artists. Even if the technology
of recording isn't automatically, in and of itself, enough to
produce a transformation in the critic, for whom many inter-
views are nothing hut judgements in the form of dialogue,
it seems to me that from these discussions an observation
emerges: the complete and verifiable critica! act is part of
artistic creation. Whoever is a stranger to artistic creation can
have a socially determined critical role only in as far as he
is part of a majority that is also distant from art, a majority
that avails itself of this bond in order to in some way find a
point of contact. This is how a false model for considering
art has been established: a cultural model. The critic is he
who has accepted measuring creation with culture, giving the
latter the prerogative of acceptance, of rejection, of the art-
work's meaning. Our society gave birth to an absurdity when
it made the critical moment institutional, distinguishing it
from the creative moment and attributing to it cultural and
14 carla lonzi self-portrait 15

practical power over art and artists. Without realising that the This book does not intend to suggest a fetishism about
artist is naturally critical, implicitly critical, by his very crea- the artist, but to call him into another relationship with soci-
tive framework. Certainly not through the mental, cultural, ety, negating the role, and thus the power, of the critic as
didactic, professional methods of the critic. But the artist is repressive control over art and artists, and above all in terms
also on the level of reflection and not only of procedure, even of the ideology regarding art and artists at work in our soci-
though he has no incentive to make this ability socially effec- ety. But how could one distinguish the true artist from the
tive. So this routine with artists, the speaking together, the false artist, if there were no more critics, this is the question
listening, bring this fact to consciousness: there is no critic that emerges in this case. However, first, one must ask why
who can trigger the interest of the artist, work-wise. He will this distinction is considered so essential by society. Where
be interesting to the artist, naturally, very much as a situation, does this need for a guarantee come from? Isn't the saint ree-
analogous to any other person who has an artistic experience. ognised by the scent of sanctity he releases? Is it possible to
Think of Vasari: an academie painter, official, not com - hypothesise a critic of sanctity? Despite the intermediary of
parable to those artists whose lives he wrote about. That's the Churches, the tally of the elect is beyond the purposes of
why, perhaps, he found the energy to write. But, frankly, is it this world. The conviction of the believer is that the phenom-
possible he said something about the artists that they hadn't enon exists even when it is trivialised and that this is not an
already lived out, at least in the work itself? And how many indifferent element to its value. Therefore no one, essentially,
layers of culture, of structures, of commonplaces and passing renounces being a saint: independently from religions, relig-
tastes didn't he put between them and the public. If it had iosity is part of the structure of humanity.
been possible to record what those artists said in their daily Aesthetic behaviour, art, are part of the structure of
discussions, would it be necessary to read Vasari's Lives to humanity too, but this conviction is not a patrimony of
enter into contact with them? I don't think so: rather, if any- those who deal with art: it is a patrimony reserved for artists.
thing, the reader enters into contact with Vasari the man, with Differently from Churches, Cultural Institutions are founded
Vasari the exemplar of the sixteenth century, with Vasari the on the need to offer the spiritual quota of a world, the salva-
writer and his personal charge. Artists live for that which oth- tion of which is none of their business. This is why art, also,
ers will have them live, it's true: however, if Vasari was legiti- like every other human expression, becomes accessible only
mate in his time, three centuries later Fénéon is already much as an object of evaluation. Through Cultural Institutions art
less so, and contemporary critics truly belang to an anachro- does not appear as a responsibility of human achievement:
nism, since here criticism is no langer about bringing to life, the tasks of consuming art and of identifying oneself as pub-
but rendering sterile. lic are reserved for 'ethers' In this scenario the profession of
Perhaps without being aware of it, the critic plays the the critic shows all of its functionality in service of a System.
game of a society that tends to consider art as an acces- But why not ask if this way of consuming art is compatible
sory, a secondary problem, a <langer to transform into di- with the sense of art, with its true raison d'être? Why be satis-
version, an unknown to transform into myth, in any case, fied with the alienated role, even if it is elevated to the very
an activity to contain. And how to contain it? Precisely same condition of judgement itself?
through the practice of criticism, working on the false dis- The discussions collected here were not done with the
sociation: creation-criticism. intention of demonstrating the above, but in order to initiate
16 carla lonzi

myself in an activity and a humanity to which I was drawn,


when at the same time I found ridiculous the claim handed
to me by the University of being a critic of a humanity
and an activity that were not my own. To seek to belong to
it and to see the role of the critic collapse happened all at
once. What remains, now that I've lost this role within the art
world? Maybe I've become an artist myself? I can respond: I
am no Jonger alienated. If art is not in my abilities as crea- LUCIO FONTANA: What do you want me to say if you don't tel1
tion, it is as creativity, as consciousness of art in the willing- me what to talk about ... What do I have to say, more or less ...
ness to do good. You have to ask me questions, or something ... provoke me.
This book is composed of tracks arranged freely in a way CARLA LONZI: We can start from anywhere because I sim-
to reproduce a sort of convivium, real for me since I lived it, ply want ...
even if it didn't happen in a single unit of time and place. The PINO PASCAL!: I would prefer to have some little topics.
tracks are parts of recordings: in '65 Fabro: in '66 Kounellis, Haha! ...
Accardi, Pascali, Paolini; in '67 Nigro, Fontana, Alviani, MARIO NIGRO: I could stop being a painter, a producer
Turcato, Consagra, Paolini, Castellani; in '68 Paolini, Scarpitta, of objects and do other things ... I don't know, an explorer, a
Kounellis, Fabro, Rotella, Consagra, Castellani, Accardi; in '69 warrior, a Franciscan monk, I don't know what.
Nigro. The questions directed at Twombly are from '62: they ENRICO CASTELLANI: I forgot what I told you last year and
were written, and they betray my previous behaviour towards I don't know what to tel1 you this year.
the artist. By chance, perhaps, Twombly didn't respond, but GIULIO PAOLINI: I'm pretty sure I already talked about
it carne to me to put them in the book anyway, both because some works, but out of gallantry it might be best if I
his silence, made me reflect, and because they bring forth a repeat myself.
somehow gracious echo of the academie language. GETULIO ALVIANI: Look, let's just do this, take it easy.
LONZI: Here: Rome, the 13th of ...
LUCIANO FABRO: ... September. Early afternoon. Test
to hear the recording and make sure the sound is okay. So:
Carla, tel1 me something. Excite me.
SALVATORE SCARPITTA: You are so beautiful ...
PIETRO CONSAGRA: I'd like to say this.
GIULIO TURCATO: You should do something like this, but
conversational, that is, don't ask questions.
LONZI: Yes yes ... no no ... in fact, I've always ...
MIMMO ROTELLA: Actually . . . Can you repeat that?
Because I didn't really understand.
LONZI: You give your paintings very precise titles -
Scuola d'A.tene, Ratto delle Sabine, Amore e Psiche ('The School
18 carta lonzi

1970
setf-portrait 19

of Athens; 'The Rape of the Sabine Women; 'Psyche Revived


1960 Pop art by Cupid's Kiss') - that very much recaU the most important
topics of the Renaissance masters. Then again, the world of
antiquity, with its myths, became a topic of interest after the
emergence of psychoanalysis. Do you see this connection?
CYTWOMBLY: (silence)
1950
CARLA ACCARDI: I am so completely instinctive, for now,
Neo-dada
Ini'ormale that if just fora moment I lose interest, the thought vanishes.
Tachisme FABRO: I'll tell you about that later because it arrives later.
1940 Astrattismo LONZI: Ah, thar later ... Okay, tel1 me in chronologi-
cal order.
Espressionismo
FABRO: Chronological order?
LONZI: In order ofwhat's most exciting.
]ANNIS KOUNELLIS: It's better to begin from the most
19JO recent things, isn't it? And then, maybe, we can even go a bit
further back ... But, I don'r know, going back, speaking like
this, in this sense, it doesn't rnean anything, because there
isn't a formal process. That is, you say 'After Cézanne's land-
scapes corne the Cubists, after the Cubists comes Mondrian,
Surrealismo etc.' It's very reasonable, and thar's where criticism is based,
1no right. A process like this puts the painting in an extremely dif-
ferent condition than when I see it now, a detached condition.
1 Reasoning about the painting comes from the painting itself,
Dada they say painting gives way to more painting, the world out-
Pittura metai'isica side doesn't exist, does it? Or it exists in a very relative way.
Costruttivismo
Neoplasticismo Today there is no process as such. Our very conscience has
Cubismo sintetico been transformed in this sense, that there no longer exists
1910 1111111 Ori'ismo a formal, logica] process. Today, something is born because
Futurismo
Pittura astratta there the conditions for it to be born naturally exist, right?
Cubismo analitico FABRO: Let's take the example of Buco: it is not a prob-
Espressionismo tedesco lem of form. In fact, I call it the 'hole', Buco, not by way of the
Fauvismo pattern that I used to make the hole, because it cannot be a
definite pattern and, even Iess, a visual pattern. Even a blind
1900 .1111 Jugendstil
man can discover the hole, he doesn't know its shape, bur he
discovers it. Same goes fora baby. All of our senses intervene
as a total organising mechanism to take hold of a situation.
20 carla lonzi self-portrait 21

It's a pattern that we cannot define visually. form has nothing painful - you realise that we never manage to take hold of
to do with it, nor does colour. Me, I don't gain experience things. Yes, we take them, yeah, we see them ... but to pos-
from a painting, a mirror, a structure: I gain experience from sess them, and know how we possess them, it always escapes
living, looking at things, taking possession of them. When us. I am able to make one or two works in a year. To pass
you're alive you're interested in everything, aren't you? It from one mental step to another, even if they are on the same
never crossed my mind to do something analogous to Jasper plane, it's always a leap. I look and try and turn and reverse
Johns but, at the same time, his concerns resonate with me, and see. There's this moment of attention: I look. I realise that
they interest me: when he took the American flag and put it I've taken possession of a situation, like that of the hole or of
there, like that. It's so different from the made-up experience reflection and transparency. From this last one I could have
of the Surrealists. Surrealism pointed out man's behaviour made a little game out of it, creatirïg, I don't know, a chess-
when he doesn't see things: a saddle placed next to the han- board of mirror-reflectors, It would have been more fun than
dlebars becomes a bull. The American flag doesn't become co-ordinating an experience. An experience, in and of itself,
something else, it's not Magritte's tree. But, even to Johns, is neither pleasant nor unpleasant: it is pleasant only in how
something strange happens, he takes things, he remakes much, when we have lived it, we're happy. We are forced to
them exactly the same and he realises they are no longer the put things into some kind of order, not because of an outside
same. They have become a pictorial fact. So, I've understood force, but because that's how it is, when we become aware of
that through the re-proposal of the object itself we do not disorder, we should make some order ... if we're not imbe-
re-propose the experience: the problem is still beyond. It's not ciles, or we're not in some state of imbecility, which is 99 per
a figurative process, even at the tautological level, it proposes cent of the hours of the day. To take hold of the world does
the thing to us again, but there is some different element that not have an abstract value, but it is an opening so that every-
must occur. A stiff board feels stiff, although it is quite dif- one who's up for it can pass through. Now, the pleasure of
ferent than a line with the same form. I want to get back to opening those gates, it is a true pleasure, to feel like oneself,
that moment there. My interest in Johns is from 1961-1962. to understand others, to move together ... When you feel like
It was necessary to start anew, from the beginning. Once the you have lived and all of the moments have had meaning in
figurative elements were taken apart ... I express myself this their existence, the knowledge that you did things, that you
way because also, Abstract Art, at its core, depicted through were part of something ...
form and colour ... I could have set out quietly, to look at PASCAL!: What I'd like is to be as natura! as possible. But
things. And these things no longer interest me on an erno- not natura! ... urn, I don't know how even to explain this idea
tional level, but they interested me for their cognitive value. of the natura! myself. That rhinoceros there, besides being a
So, the approach changes: you set out to really look at things. rhinoceros, it's a form that I looked for without really looking,
You know you can't copy them because in copying them they exactly because of its very structure as the form of the rhinoc-
are no longer the same things ... you know that form, even eros, but it isn't because of this that I sacrificed other factors.
copied, synthesised, transposed, is temporary: you can make I rescued what was salvageable of this form. Within it there
a thousand and help the procedure of the designer. So, what might be discoveries that aren't even apart of me, discoveries
do you do? Look at how things are, the reason why you take by other sculptors, of another way of thinking: the structure
hold of them, and you realise - it's really wild, it's evil, look, of this species of snake could also seem like something from
22 carla lonzi self-portrait 23

Brancusi. I say that because Brancusi is also a part of a world


we consider almost natural, right? It's like somebody sees
whatever animal, sees ... a horse, I have a regular horse in
mind, and after, I've never made horses, who knows why ... a
horse, a bird, a fish ... and he says 'Brancusi' it's part of a kind
of imaginary that's already completed. It isn't that I'm inter-
ested in a forma! departure from Brancusi ... no, Brancusi
already exists and is already sculpture ... maybe it was simply
easier for me to understand it in this way. I like animals, but
that doesn't mean I want to remake animals: it's a subject, it's
an image, it's an outline that's already in place, a word already
printed that still fascinates me, the reason why I get into that
discussion, I take it as a presupposition.
PAOLINI: I absolutely do not believe that one can arrive
at covering spaces, whether they are mental or physical, cov- use of electric current, for example, that is to have given life
ering them in an effective, concrete way, that is with objects, to a model, to an idea rather than to an object in and of itself.
with forma! proposals, or any other kind. Rather, it is possi- CONSAGRA: Having lost animality, spontaneous life, there

ble, I'm not sure whether it'd be better to say to evoke them is nothing except the city as possibility for reclaiming contact
or to allude to them, anyway, to present them even through with nature inside us. Within ourselves, what does it mean?
a modestly constructed model, with materials that are not You mirror yourself based on the human contact you have.
already preloaded with meaning ... These results, to arrive at Now, the city gives us most of these kinds of relationships,
not having them replicate themselves, but, rather, to become, the city removes nostalgia, absorbs all of your intelligence,
who knows what else. It is in this unpretentious way one it unleashes you, it moulds you. The possibilities are there,
can work, better than with the most up-to-date tools, what that is, the possibility to meet people who can give you the
technology can offer us today, to arrive at this, in order to maximum of their human experience, who can give you the
achieve this, although I believe that once they are achieved richness of spontaneity, taken up in the identity of the city.
one is never satisfied. When I think of Manzoni, for example, You don't want to go to the city and find peasants, that is: you
I maintain that within him there was still a pictorial implica- want to go to the city, and you want to go to the biggest city,
tion, let's call it, in the sense that maybe, maybe he still wasn't where there are fewer neurotic people. Because a provincial
aware of using the canvas, the frame, the brush itself as medi- person is exactly this: a disassociated person, who might have
ated and established limit. Anyway, he acted naturally, in a all of the sweetness in the world, all of the best qualities in the
field of the destruction of image and form, without thinking world, but also has this dissatisfied nostalgia, an incapacity,
of the refusal of other more modern techniques, let's say. I within, to get used to anything. One feels that this makes the
believe that to do it consciously, to want to remain, on pur- city ... it's the activity, still, there's a lifeforce within it. Then of
pose, before these canvases, these jars of paint and to use them course this relationship can result in a complete failure, there
to not arrive at a result, to console myself for not having made are some people rendered so nervous, so disturbed that they
24 carla lonzi self-portrait 25

can run backwards towards a 'possible return'. Every so often


we think that there is a completely natural camel-driver ...
who gives you a sense of nature that's purer than one can
imagine, more innocent, more disarming ... disarming in
the sense of artificiality, isn't it true? Well, this may no langer
exist either ... Yes, the sadness at watching journalists ven-
turing into the forest to discover a tribe ... you see there is a
disappointment ... We, in these reportages, on the one hand
we seem curious about this very state of naturalness, and on
the other hand you're bitter that these tribes have actually
already lost it ... we begin to lose naturalness. And you see
that, like this, the photographer, the journalist, the scholar ...
has already ruined this, like someone has stepped on a beau-
tiful flower.
NIGRO: When you go outside or we're in the city also, I,
for my part ... more than the crowds, more than the traffic, I
like to see the sky. Even in the middle of the city. This may be
something common to many people, it's obvious, of course. be the place that welcomes two people when they speak or
Don't you think? ... It's a link ... yes, it is a link ... in the four people and that's it, right? Things that are less irritating,
sense that I have really to be an actor in this world, I have to to your neighbour, it's possible ... that they don't create these
participate in the tragicomedy of this world ... otherwise is it enormous problems that are everywhere, crooked roads,
possible that, at a certain point, I don't take part in it? all of it ... And man says 'And then, what do we have?' We
ALVIANI: The nature of things in their - l'd say autoch- have this enormous nature which one could analyse, each
thonous, but I'm not sure if it's the right word - state, mean- in a precise manner, because there are billions of things in
ing the trees, plants, flowers, rivers, I don't know, grasses, nature and I think that man, really getting close to them, we
clouds ... they're all excellent elements, meaning 'goed' would no langer need to create all of these things: crooked
because they are 'good' in and of themselves, aren't they? villas, little stucco hallways where natural light doesn't come
They are. We're also 'good, made with two hands, etc. Man in ... Naw I, idealistically, bring forth, very well, these serial
has always ruined these elements, he ruined them, this is objects, that are very small, because one can have phenom-
clear, with architecture, he made terrifying things, horri- ena created by man that are also quite valid, don't you think?
ble ... why? Because man wanted to express himself, each Actually, I think that one sets out to make things and does
one needed to see himself realised in the environment, in a make things . . . like the grass was made . . . as it was cre-
building, in a thing, to remove himself from the monotony. ated, I don't know, the sun, get it? But, he leaves everything
I am for the contrary, for this absolutely functionalist life in at the right point, where they are useful, don't harm anyone,
every aspect, like fora bathroom, get it? And the toilet is func- you can't say 'They don't do harm to one' ... don't hinder, or
tional fora given objective ... see, and like this the bed should rather, they happen gradually.
26 carla lonzi self-portrait 27

PA SC A L! : I like the sea, for instance, I like spearfishing, the same nature. I am talking about a purely physical nature,
any silly thing about it, I like the rocks, near the rocks there not a nature created rationally like that of machines: man
is the sea, I played there as a child, I was barn near the sea, existed, the animal existed ... first, maybe, man didn't exist,
of course, here it's quite common ... I like animals because there were other animals, hut it doesn't matter. Sure, I feel
they look like intruders, something that doesn't belang to very close to animals ... it's funny hut it's true. I am much
our race, something that moves us, sometimes in the coun - more amazed to see, I don't know, even a small baby, simply
try, sometimes in the city: you try to understand it. Then you because babies aren't part of my ... and once I am able to
say, 'Yeah, okay' and you put it aside. But the very fact of see- see their softness, the way they are, really it takes me to the
ing a horse walking down the street or a tree growing out of next level ... Automobiles, houses, trams, everything that I
the pavement on a city block, I dori't know in which way I do every day doesn't interest me: once in a while one notices
see it, hut I see it: it isn't that one tree is part of all the other something that has its own heat, a heat ... now I don't want
trees ... anyway, it's very dear to me. An animal, for me, is to sound sly here ... it isn't a human heat, hut it's simply that
such a strange thing, it's already a phenomenon to see sheep it doesn't matter, and because it doesn't matter it's very beau-
passing by houses or men, there's a shift in something that tiful ... it seems like the Last of the Mohicans, you know, or
isn't a part of what's already organised, it appears as some- there might be lots of Mohicans, what do I know?
thing other. For me, it is much stranger to see a horse than to LONZI: I wanted to make a book that's a bit meander-
see a car, or a missile that goes 7,000 kilometres an hour, you ing, you know? Because what really bothers me ... no, what
know? It isn't like I live in New York; I live in Rome. It's like I really like in artists hut what really bothers me in critics,
the story of taking a bird that once flew in your hands, a spar- where there's none, is this sense of measure, this moving
row, a swallow ... really, I find myself in contact with a being from one argument to the next. Critics, on the other hand,
that isn't part of the calculations, you know, it has already are always stubborn types. For me ... I just can't stand this
existed and has the same presence as me, the same lifeforce, sense of mind that fixates on one thing. This need to produce
knowledge ... the cultural worker, that one has to work over
and over the culture itself, so they become obstinate about
pulling something out ... What do they call it ... 'obsessive
praise', the existentialists, that is this imbalance between one's
concrete personality and one's ideas, to extract all of the pos-
sible mental consequences from an assumption and, really,
go on to infinity.
ACCARDI: When someone wants to make a book like this,
she's got to actually put a lot of herself into it, as if it were
also apart of her life, you know? You could never do it, Carla,
as you want it, I'm sorry, I have to tel1 you ... I don't know,
if we're talking about the level of creativity, yes ... Now, it is
an extremely great leap you are asking yourself to make, or
so at least it seems to me, because as a creative person, you
28 carla lonzi self-portrait 29

should put yourself in there as you are in particular moments I don't like painting the way Raphael did and I think nobody
of your life, do you know what I mean? How can you do that? will ever like it again. You can't become Raphael ifhis manner
It's that, maybe, artists are able to communicate this a bit bet- of painting is no longer appreciated: one becomes Raphael
ter, it's what makes others suffer ... Maybe, I don't know, I because one likes that kind of painting. What's an even more
keep saying 'maybe' You say, 'Look how artists talk, and they banal sort of reasoning? That no one could become Raphael
are more, yes, casual .. .' Yes, because in that moment, they because they aren't as intelligent as Raphael. No, apriori one
are doing work that is practically a continuation of the work has no interest in being him, one has excluded being Raphael,
they've already clone so far ... so, can you imagine what calm, therefore the process of the artist is a process of pleasure, con-
what ease they speak with. Hey, it isn't all based on what they tinually confronting what one thinks through a determined
are saying ... did you think of that? material, which absolutely does not need to be liked by oth-
PAOLINI: Look, I would like Carla to remember my ers, in fact, others have already excluded him from doing this
painting from 1965 titled Delfo. In that painting I appeared, I particular thing.
appeared from behind the frame, life-sized. I mention this in TURCATO: If you want to talk about Raphael, let's talk
order to describe another work that is, in fact, called Delfo II. about Raphael. And you know, Raphael is undoubtedly ...
The painting has the same dimensions, 95 x 180 centimetres, First of all, at least I don't think, he was ever really understood.
and the same technique, screen-printing on canvas, as the He wasn't truly understood when he did things that were
previous painting. It reproduces my image, nothing more, so, really for himself, because he's been generally remembered
on the same level as the canvas, which is in this juxtaposition, for the Madonna delta seggiola. The Raphael Rooms, which are,
but in the foreground, it's in its entirety, and therefore: I am
wearing a long white tunic and in my right hand I hold the
Bandiera (Flag') in one fist and in my left hand I am holding
the bust of Saffo ('Sappho'), which covers my face and hides
it, in the same way that you couldn't see my face in the previ-
ous work since it was covered by the frame of the canvas, an
identity ... Yes. This time I'm hidden by the bust of Sappho
and so I'm in this ecstatic mood, I don't know ... Behind me,
as a background, appearing as a work of mine, also from 1965,
there is that white staircase with the perspective that leads to
an infinite point.
CONSAGRA: I only use painting rarely, since I am not a
painter, but I could have been because I very much like a
painting I have in my head, but I have never made it because
as soon as I add colour, as soon as I touch the brush, etc. Then,
even to think of other materials with colour, it has always
been so difficult for me, I don't like to paint, it doesn't satisfy
me. And I think: I wouldn't even like to be Raphael because
30 carla lonzi self-portrait 31

undoubtedly, quite ... The School ofAthens etc. are magnifi- never have, they aren't interested in it, if it interested them,
cent things, some others, they're already well they antici- they would become artists and they would do it in some way.
pate the Baroque. And then, he had a great he was a genius, ACCARDI: In an old interview of mine, the one in Marcatrè,
that is the genius ... He, deep down, was a stupid artist, but he you know, I said, 'I have this urgent need to understand.' Do
had this strength that, for the very reason that it comes from you remember, Carla? It's something vital I carry with me,
a genius, well, it can transform things. Add to that the fact that that surely everyone has: some deny it and close them-
he arrived from a mystic sort of painting, like Perugino, etc., selves off in their own pride, they no longer have the desire
etc. Then, at a certain point he was the biggest proponent of to understand, and so they say, 'So, what does this thing do?
a kind of sixteenth-century realism and he saw a completely and what does that thing do?' Whether it's in polities or in art.
new understanding of space. Undoubtedly, though, in many Others, on the other hand, have the vital attitude of wanting
things he's like a set-designer, so is Michelangelo, hut his agil- to understand, to be in contact with things - I'm very much
ity, his freshness in making things is undoubtedly a sign of part of this second group - hut, then, I thought I didn't much
his greatness ... And then, having had such a short life, start- like this thing I said, it seemed too rigid, there was something
ing with a mysticism, so shielded, so provincial also, if you hungry inside what I said, something controlling, that wants
like, like the art in the Marche, however he managed to ere- to devour the other. This bothered me for a long time, then
ate this extremely strong understanding of space. And then, I realised that it was important to not let it become a sort
it had a drawn quality ... It is also all fruit of the work of the of neurotic fixation. If it becomes self-defensive it becomes
Renaissance from which it emerges ... it's not like these indi- neurotic, and then, the first thing one always remembers is
viduals emerge by chance. They emerge because there was 'to try and understand others in order to have control over
this will to arrive at a certain situation. thern' On the other hand, if one does it a little, doesn't do it
CONSAGRA: There is a harrier between what I myself a little, loses interest, you've also got to think of the facts of
do, and the others, right? But the artist, I think, today ... humanity ... This year I thought of things on a larger scale,
or maybe this has always been the case, transmits himself I concerned myself with the problems women face ... eer-
to others to change their perspective: the artist continually tainly I have more love, I don't know how to say it, because
imagines himself as another person who enjoys this thing if not, if you always stay there focused on the creative fact,
the artist does. When I split myself in two, I split myself with fixed, within a collective, you lose a lot, because you begin
a non-professional, someone without a profession, I split to feel the presence of others. This, even as a girl, is some-
myself with someone who has a somewhat animal intelli- thing I always avoided, hut instinctively ... I remember I
gence, a man of sacrifice, though they may be small, all to say, had none of this thinking then, I was completely indiffer-
I imagine myself as a guy with a really generic intelligence, ent to understanding others fully, as is common with young
who has to live inside the things I make, am I explaining people; I disengaged for a long, long time. Even now I like,
myself? At a certain point, the artist means just this: the man sometimes, to think about something for a while, and then
who liked to do that given thing, and the others, who aren't really rest, I can even become indifferent to it. And like this,
artists, those who have refused to do this thing here. For the I realised that this understanding between artists can happen
others, it always remains a question of knowledge, of culture, at certain times, while at other times, during youth perhaps,
hut never of experience ... it is an experience the others will you don't care about it at all. I can feel the indifference in a
32 carla lonzi self-portrait 33

young person because I can ... I can remember it. But, I, 1'11 know them very well, and it's not like I know just one side ...
leave this alone, hut I realised a lot of things ... and there is On the other hand, sometimes, I went, maybe l'd arrive late,
a point I want to clarify. If you bring me to someone else's because I wanted to hear someone in particular. And natu-
studio, to Fabro's or to Kounellis's, I, in that moment, I have rally, I am interested in those who are younger than me and /

a liveliness, this love, this interest, because I have respect and have different experiences, they always draw very authentic
kindness, they are also friends, above all, there is an affinity, emotion out of me. So, one night I was disheartened because
I like them very much. So, I enter and say, 'Ah, look, here I I gat there and I saw Argan, I didn't know ... and so I said,
am in front of their work' and in that moment I feel all of the 'What goes on in their heads, calling artists from certain
pleasure of assimilation ... But it doesn't last long, I cut it off, periods, and young artists, and then they call up Argan.' In
I don't insist upon it, do you see what I mean? And like this Rome these curious things happen: you have a debate about
it remains beautiful. This winter there were debates between demonstrations and you call Cagli on stage! But let me tel1
artists and critics, sometimes I didn't go, because when I you, how false it all is. Look, it seems to me that in Italy
don't feel rested ... One time there was Dorazio there to talk, there is actually a tradition of falsity, because people think,
and given that I understood that there was within him all the 'It does no harm, falsity isn't what destroys ideas ... <leep
weight ofhumanity that carne before him, I didn't go. An art- down maybe there are good ideas, new ideas .. .' No, this isn't
ist like Dorazio puts toa much weight into these debates, he the way. One must be a bit tougher, a bit more puritanical
goes there with his heart and leaves it there. No. For me this and should say, 'No, where we find good ideas, new ideas, we
is toa painful, I can't relate to it, I don't want to go see these can cut them out, we can make a division.' And it isn't like
shows, it's like watching a melodrama, you see? Because I someone like Argan needs to intervene, and then be mixed
in with critics at random: it's a mess. It would be better to
invite someone who is more tied to the artists, someone with
whom they share a personal affinity. For this reason, a debate
emerged, that one there, pathetic, from this point on. Why
had artists spoken so little and critics rambled on so much ...
I don't want to add more, it will diminish it. So, I wanted then
to clarify: what does the critic do? He does the opposite of
everything I previously mentioned, he does everything at
random, comments waft about like when you smell a good
fragrance, a rose and you remember 'roses exist,' or you go
into someone's studio and say 'Oh, look at this thought that
he had .. .' But the critic has knowledge locked in a certain
phase, in its own neurotic form.
LONZI: I want to kiss you!
ACCARDI: His life itself depends on his comprehen-
sion, and the faster his comprehension of the work of an
artist, naturally the more right he has to continue his work,
34 carla lonzi self-portrait 35

in a certain sense. And so, what does he do? He's dreadful. But maybe, you know, the fact of saying 'the young critic' is
He goes so fast, that he begins right away to intervene in presumptuous, like saying 'the young artist' The young critic
the work of this other, and in this way takes ownership of is someone who hasjust finished university, who set out to get
it. As soon as he has taken ownership, he absolutely has to to work right away ... I think, however, there are people that
alert the public to the fact that he is in control, and so has you don't know Probably, there will be, at a certain point,
to publicise his knowledge. And soon after comes this neu- if things go well well, are apparently going well ... things
rotic fact of consumption. That they themselves, the crit- will happen.
ics, have invented, because who is it that invented this idea KOUNELLIS: Who is the critic today? He's somehow a
of consuming art? I understand that we live in a consumer- mediator, isn't he? He sterns from a preconceived notion
ist society, hut I don't feel consumption as part of my very that's integrated into our thinking, of a socially integrated
being. I can live ... it seems to me we can all continue to live man and seeks to integrate all of this in the critic, right? With
with things for years, then we have our experiences, we con- the pretence of providing, exactly, a vision of something
sume them, and we move on to consume other things. But that is common to all, who does nothing hut misinterpret
this rapid consumerism still hasn't got to me, or maybe the the values that are in the paintings themselves. He charac-
European himself won't let it get to him. So: I was saying this terises them in another sense, he interprets them, and this
little portrait of the critic, we can title it 'Little Portrait of the interpretation is made for the very reason that he is socially
Critic' ... haha ... just like that. What carne out of it? This integrated and sets off from that very concept. In fact, crit-
thing full of indiscretions. This word indiscretion sounds a ics see what they want to see in paintings, hut they rarely see
bit like indecency ... what's there, you know? And, afterwards, they defend them-
FABRO: The critic is like the mediocre artist whose prob- selves immediately if one of the painters attacks their posi-
lem is to finish something on time. He doesn't have the seren- tion, they step up right away, on the defensive, because that
ity of the good artist who isn't worried, who knows that he'll constitutes their privileges as men of prestige, and of many
get things done on time, because, I don't know, his experience other things. Isn't that so? Painters always create a crisis for
has taught him to say 'I do things on time.' While the other other painters, even the values which are essential to being
one ... and, this happens quite often, it's just like the critic ... a painter create a crisis for painters, hut critics never bring
who has to be over-inforrned, has to know everything, who them to that point. Naturally, I can't go around spreading
panics if someone does something, if someone does some- propaganda about my work, or anything really: I simply
thing right before or ... or right after. I think the critic, hyper- accept all that they say ... In the end, I really don't care at
bolically, feels excluded from the activity of art, and for this all about this business, it no longer constitutes a problem
reason runs behind the artist, the so-called militant critic, in because, you understand, in principle, if someone is nervous
the avant-garde there is also that other type, who at a certain they try to solve it, right? Afterwards, nothing bothers them
point tries to stop things, so he breaks them ... Like when you any more. One has to finish by also understanding these
go to take a walk: there is the guy who continues to stay behind things: if one doesn't understand them, then one doesn't
you and then there's the other guy, who stops you every five understand them ... what can I do? I have enough problems
minutes to say 'Look at the view.' Probably, if things continue to take care of, I mean, I can't worry about this, too. Because,
as they are, the youth, critics and non-critics, will be different. here, the critics are an organisation of people who are highly
• ---==========--------..r=:::::::::::=====-----------------------,
36 carla lonzi self-portrait 37

/
organised, socially and all that, and I am a poor devil, and I .'

can't go up against all of that. It's only that this all lacks com-
mon sense, doesn't it?
CASTELLANI: You, when you make something ... then,
it gets away from you, because you don't possess the means
of distribution, it's in the hands of others, in the hands of
those who give you something so you can continue working,
something to live off of ... but, then, they take what you've
given them and they do what they want with it. The market
.
is a moment of this general mystification, but when I say 1'11
give you a few lire for your product, I'm not talking about the
market, I'm talking about society, which pays you to let it hide
what you've done or to misinterpret it ...
1,,
' .. ..,...,,r.

.,
.
LONZI: There are two moments: the moment of the critic
and the Cultural lnstitution and the moment of the market.
At this point I am more likely to think of the critic's moment •<'-.';,:_,::~-
,v,;, ·., ',
as the most negative, and the Cultural lnstitution as the actual
point of maximal deformation for an artist's work. Then, his
product is considered an object, more or less a decorative experiences, I confront life in all senses, each day, you know?
object, and it is inserted through the justification of who has And the problems that occur with each day.
a surplus, that is to spend - I mean, that is a problem, but it LONZI: Artists realise that they don't have eflicacy, that
seems quite clear to me that this is how it is, there's nothing they're misinterpreted, that they're misunderstood, but their
else to discover in that sector. Where, on the other hand, the stories are told perfectly to the public. So, what does this
contortion occurs ... it's curious, because all artists think up mean? When museums function well, they function like in
ideas about it, saying, 'Let's see if I can manage to put things the United States, and this distortion still happens ... I don't
the right way .. .' understand when people come from the United States and
CASTELLANI: ... to put it up the rear end of one per- say 'How wonderful to see these museums, these museum
son in particular who said some things about me. Sometimes directors, these galleries of .. .' What's it mean? It means that
it's mistaken or done unwittingly, but he did it by sabotaging it's spread with a megaphone to a million people, rather than
what I wanted to say. to a few people, a point of distortion in which the work loses
KOUNELLIS: See: I know that critics say so ... but, the its charge for others, let's say, to find themselves connected to
way they say things, I don't want to respond, so I don't. the work of art, to feel it a bit more closely, I don't know ...
Usually. Because it creates absurd problems later, and later, The young people who go to India, say, it's curious, to have a
since I don't really believe it anyway, I never say anything, more spiritual form of reasoning ... Here there are artists: it's
right? Because, I don't know, I do the things that are, for me, possible that the culture has managed to ... one is unable to
congenial and extremely natural, indeed ... I'm not having consider the work of an artist and make sense of it? ... There
38 carla lonzi self-portrait 39

employ the same method for toothpaste as they do for art-


ists, I'm not saying how one paints, I mean how they present
him, how they distribute him, it's a compact society, mon-
olithic, that creates and destroys all on its own. And then
what? This doesn't mean anything, right? Us, here in Europe,
we find ourselves before ... 'in Europe', one always says,
talking, 'in Europe' ... since we have a much more specific
vision here in Italy it's better to say, 'in Italy'. Because of this
charm American art holds over us, all of this, it gives off a
phoney image, like a postcard of skyscrapers. Truly phoney,
because it diminishes it as a phenomenon and, afterwards,
leaves you with the feeling of something fantastic. I believe
that, here, we've been given a phosphorescent image of the
American artist, while he is a much realer man than us, this
is certain, who confronts real situations, of all kinds, even
when he makes abstract things. Only, here, there is a defen-
sive feeling, a politica! defence: you never face anything
when you're defended, it's not like you ever touch anything.
was Duchamp ... if one considers him there's plenty ... you And, there, it's much more open and they face reality in a
don't need to go to India. Am I explaining myself? It's this much more explicit way. They do well to stay there, you
dynamic of a person who's put in the world that wants to pick know what I mean? I admire them because there is tension
her up and meanwhile she's giving signals to escape and is
able to escape the hold. Yes, people have to be woken up .
because everyone's a bit sleepy it seems to me most people
are sleepwalking, a little sleepy .
FABRO: Bp! A kiss from Luciano Fabro.
KOUNELLIS: There is an actual structure, I don't know, an
official American culture, and then, it chooses its representa-
tives, right? But this is pre-existent. American painters, who
I admire a great deal, aside from what they may represent,
are smart, really, but this doesn't take away from the fact
that they're chosen ... There is a tradition, really, of choos-
ing people who don't make a fuss, who don't do anything
against the system, and they are chosen by the system to rep-
resent it. And there, how is art understood? It's an essential
fact, also in that system, because really, I don't know, they
344 carla lonzi

characterised by one of the last obstinate outbursts of per-


sonality. Certainly, though, will the individual of ten years
ago not have had some merits? Ät\erword
'As H ex\raordinar~ \hings were
possib\e be\ween beings'
C\aire Fontaine

Carla Lonzi's Self-portrait defies easy classification. It does so


partly because of the method of its composition - it's a collage
of transcribed recorded conversations with artists, featuring
images that entertain a complex relationship to what is said -
but also because it was written by an art critic who was about
to abandon her profession. Fourteen men and one woman
(Carla Accardi, like Lonzi a founder of the feminist collec-
tive Rivolta Femminile) are her interlocutors, but the book
is signed only by Lonzi, and enigmatically titled Self-portrait.
One of the artists, Cy Twombly, remains totally silent, and
his lack of participation is included.1 Battista Lena, Lonzi's
son, is featured as Tita, and contributes with some comments:
children's voices are an integral part of the life experience of
many women, and the effort required to recapture the con-
centration lost every time they interrupt a train of thought is
rarely accounted for.
Recording, for Lonzi, isn't only a means to capture
exhaustivelywhat is said ( only a small part of the conversations
made it into the book), but a tool for the transubstantiation of
speech. This 'condensation' this becoming-ink-on-paper of
something that was once only sound, is a change of state in
346 claire fontaine afterword 347

which thoughts preserve the freshness of spoken language, our subjectivity. In fact the importance of her texts should
the replies and questions stemming from the presence of the be measured not only by the thoughts that they convey, but
person who inspired them. The writings resulting from this by those that they awaken in the reader. Because feminism is
process are fundamentally different from academie texts, at once an epistemic model and a poli~ y
written and read in solitude and silence, at a safe distance prattice and a p~grammatIC honzon, 1t prov1des the tools
from life. Orality is typical of Lonzi's style: by bending lan- to re-examine our lives, detaching them from what we have
guage to the edge of incorrectness she resists patriarchal con- long been told about them. It materialises an autonomy
ventions and revives the undisciplined body from which the from the existing symbolic structures of our civilisation that
unexpected words have come. Self-portrait was born out of allows us to perceive the connection between the different
'the need to spend time with someone in a fully communica- disciplines of knowledge and the hierarchical structure that
tive and humanly satisfying way': this statement in the book's they justify. Lonzi's feminist adventure cuts transversally
introduction sounds like a casual authorial confession, but through various fields - critical, artistic, historical, political,
is in fact a politica! programme. Lonzi discusses with Carla militant, philosophical - as she takes the paths that lead her
Accardi the possibility of art being a form of expression that straight to the points where she can unmask whatever nor-
exceeds conventional culture, and which opposes the author- malises women's inferiority. By doing so she creates a voice
itative discourse of the critic. Purely intellectual knowledge that is unexpected, the 'unplann~d subject' as she calls it,
is neutralising, cannibalistic and domineering; it's fed by the who disregards the place assigned to her, in order to move
stubbornness of wanting to understand things on a mere pro- on and reach her full potential. A lack of respect for tradi-
fessional level, containing and evaluating the artists, rather tional culture and its institutions is necessary and healthy
than truly listening to them. 'The critic' - Acçardi says - 'has for this journey;Qfeatl tur~is~ s she calls it, is a way of
knowled!e locked in a certain phase, in its own neurotic form.' rethinking what knowledge and history should do in order
1 To which Lonzi replies: 'I want to kiss you!'
The emphasis on what a conversation can do and
to serve the purpose of our freedom, to connect us with the
inner meaning that words acquire when they resonate with
why a shared moment shouldn't be used to take control our existential experience of ourselves - what she contro-

l or extract information, but to explore the other and one-


self, is at the core of feminist practice and autocoscienza
('consciousness-raising'). It's through dialogue that processes
of subjectivisation are inflected inside the collective where
women become a help to one another, transforming and
empowering each other. In this rnanner, Lonzi's words are
versially calls 'authenticity'
Lonzi clearly remembers how from childhood she felt
that 'extraordinary things were possible between beings,
and this feeling led her to become an art critic. Retracing
her journey towards feminism she 1+1rites: 'I began to look,
being certain that it was expressed somewhere, that it would
always a wake-up call, rousing the possibility for the collec- be manifested somewhere, a potentiality that I felt human-
tive to happen, extracting us from the confusing nightmare ity possessed. I knew I had it and that I felt that it belonged
of isolation: 'Yes, people have to be woken up ... it seems to everyone' 2 Although she was afraid that she might get
to me most people are sleepwalking, a little sleepy' Reading stranded on the border of this promised land, Lonzi pursued
Lonzi is an experience that changes our idea of what texts this 'existential feeling' only to realise that she had to abandon
can do. Concepts immediately enter our body and transform her profession and continue her quest outside the workplace .

.
348 claire fo ntaine afterword 349

In 1969, the year of Self-portrait's publication, Lee a manifesto entitled The Absence of the Woman from the
Lozano, an artist whom Lonzi didn't know, was making her Celebratory Moments of the Male Creative Manifestation, in
'language pieces' - sheets of paper each hearing a handwrit- which we read that when men write or make art they do so
ten description of an artwork that was actually taking place for men: women have no place in this process and there is no
in real life. On 21 April of that year, Lozano wrote Dialogue possible liberation in taking part in a dynamic conceived only
Piece. a project of having conversations with all sort of beings to exclude them. The manifesto ends with an invitation to
(including plants, animals and infants): 'The purpose of this refuse the belief that 'the bene-fits of art can be administered
piece, Lozano writes in a fascinating performative contradic- like a grace', like a medicine to cure feminine inferiority. If
tion, 'is to have dialogues, not to make a piece. No record- the role of the critic were seen as politically problematic,
ings or notes are made during dialogues, which exist solely because it validated artists on the basis of alienated criteria,
for their own sake as joyous social occasions.' On 8 February the role of the artist itselfbegins to appear as a form of..expro-
of the same year, Lozano had decided to withdraw from her ptiation of the general creativity. Artists enchant the current
professional context with her now iconic General Strike Piece, situation and profit from it, me~ more than women; Lonzi
in which we read of her commitment to 'Gradually but deter- is adamant about this. In 1975 she writes in her diary: 'The
minedly avoid being present at official or public "uptown" artist persecutes humanity with the continuous display of a
functions or gatherings related to the "art world" in order to self-confidence that, for being existential, has been elevated
pursue investigation of total personal & public revolution.' in the culture to the tatus o ontological confidence ... The
1
The analogies and differences between the two positions are myth of art will continue to crus umanity, which has ere-
many (Lozano would end up never talking to women as part ated it out of its need to tame the persecutor. I would like a
of her art practice, whereas a manifesto co-signed by Lonzi world where all expression remained at the existential level:
famously ends with 'we communicate only with wornen'), 3 ~ng, playing, painting, making operations of every sort
1 but the climate that allowed refusals of the artworld in the and in any medium. For that to be realised it would be neces-
name of a higher and less compromising form of success is sary that everyone, down to the last person, accept the need
definitely the same. It is also important to see how women's to express themselves. If a single person remained blocked,
practices of <leep exploration, which do not settle for mun- Art would maintain its roots in its spirit alone.'5 This position
dane recognition and the false currency of integration within would eventually divide her from the people dearest to her,
patriarchal society, lead to the abandonment of the profes- like Pietro Consagra and Carla Accardi.
sional space. Dropping out, practising conflict by subtraction, Self-portrait is deeply connected to another liminal book,
exerting for~ of intersubjective intran;i~nc~re ~ of Vai pure ('Now You Can Go'), published in 1980: both mark
what we have called 'human strike', a form of struggle that an existential turning point for Lonzi; both are composed
aims at opposing the taxi city of uarmalised power relauon- Of recorded conversations. Vai pure documents her final dia-
~ozano and Lonzi both enacted human strike and paid logues with her long-time companion, Pietro Consagra, who
the price, experiencing 'illegibility, the total misunderstand- is also one of the voices in Self-portrait. In their exchange,
[ ing of their position. 4 ~st's creative metabolism ultimately appears as a threat
Lonzi's stance on art as a professional context would to authëntic relationships, and - because for femi~ the
radicalise over the course of the years, in 1971 she co-signed pe~al is political and the political personal - this ends
350 claire fontaine afterword 351

) up compromising the possibility of their love. Art needs to 1. The questions to Twombly, who at the time was living in Rome, were
I transform life into a means for its own production - a spe-
posted to him, but never answered: the artist is both physically and ver-
bally absent.
cial climate needs to be created for the artwork to be born 2. In 1987 the French artist Philippe Thomas, echoing perfectly Lonzi's
even at the expense of the most meaningful relationships. feelings and intuitions, would use exactly her words - without having
read them - to create the agency Ready-Mades Belong to Everyone.
'When I see that you ... are ready to betray me,' Lonzi writes, 3. Carla Lonzi, Elvira Banotti and Carla Accardi, Manifesto di Rivolta
'to betray the reasons for the relationship in order to replace Femminile (july 1970); Lozano's Boycott Piece is from 1971.
them with the reasons for the work, either you prefer to sus- 4. On this point see our essay, 'On the illegible' in Deculturalize, ed.
Ilse Lafer (Museion Bozen/Bolzano and Mousse Publishing, 2020),
tain the work and yourself as author rather than yourself as pp. 145-55.
participant in the relationship - well, there I have hit rock 5. Carla Lonzi, Taci anzi paria. Diario di una femminista (Scritti di Rivolta
bottom'. 6 For Lonzi this state of affairs was already very clear femminile, 2010), pp. 1,173-4.
6. Carla Lonzi, Vai pure. Dialogo con Pietro Consagra (Scritti di Rivolta
when she spoke repeatedly in Self-portrait of the mirage of femminile, 1980; republished 2011), p. 10.
the Venice Biennale: 'One cannot make use of the recognition
that is given in exchange, one cannot do something with it. It
[ seems to me that all artists have this experience.'
It is possible that Self-portrait delivers the painful news
that our productive metabolism is unsustainable, on a per-
sonal and ~n a societal level; that even artists whose work is
,( infused with care are ready to deny this same care to humans
if they get in the way of their career. The lesson might be even
more disturbing, and reveal that capitalism is extracting from
nature, women, artists something that it is not able to regen-
erate; that women's freedom is the most precious of resources
and the most vital of renewable energies. And, also, that dis-

currency. Ultimately, creativit, ,~


system and subtracted fr_o_m
_th-,-
e........se._a_r_c-;-h-~-;:
o-r_o_n_e-;-,s_o_w
_n_,f,_r_e_e...,d-om
is a problem. It isn't by accident that Lonzi cites Duchamp as
an alternative to escapes into exotic spirituality and mystica!
journeys: Duchamp who said that his masterpiece had been
the use of his time.

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