If I can't dance, ...
Emma Goldman

Ever and ever again left politics tried to love resisting art. And
resisting art tried to love left politics. Ever and ever again
emancipatory politics didn't understand subversive art. And subversive
art didn't understand emancipatory politics. Politics were tall,
rawboned, earnest and planned the revolution. Art was small, swift,
liked to laugh and danced the revolution.

Both wanted the same and still they never found to each other. For some
days of wild dances, a handful of impassionate discussions and a few
moments of resistance one could see them together on the stage of
another world. Temporary loves, short passions and high ambitions. A few
enthusiastic people, many observers and even more sceptics. And time and
again the separation after a short splendid performance together.

Fun guerrilla, Pink&Silver, adbusting, Rebel Clown Army, invisible
theatre. Artistic expression of political analyses. Rotzfreche
Asphaltkultur (Cocky tarmac culture), agitprop, graffiti, radio ballet.
Art becoming politics. The boundaries are blurred, the possibilities
unlimited.

But besides the performances far too often and for most of the time art
is the shadow child of politics considering themselves as emancipatory
and undogmatic. As a toothless and minor attachment to one's own
political everyday life created for the private enjoyment or as an
ornament for political events without its own possibilities of
articulation, art is bearing its existence in the darkness of
the night. At the time when lights are off.

2007 lights will be on again. Such is the hope of big parts of the
German left. Tied to the mobilisation against the gathering of the Big
Eight in summery Heiligendamm, there are thousands of expectations,
hopes, wishes, dreams. Hopes for a new networking of different left
spectra and with it a new ability to act - also beyond the summit.
Wishes for new forms of action and a different kind of together. Dreams
of a joint resistance, of a walking hand in hand of a glamorous range of
all who say no, to all forms of oppression and social marginalisation.
The ideas are manifold and the actions numerous. And needless
to say that the art shouldn't be missing.

But art is not like art. Art can be resisting, political, conserving
the system, functional and a lot more. The kind of art that is
interesting for us is not the art of the White elites, of the academics
and yuppies, is not the art of the pop and culture industry. This art
will continue to accompany the prevailing politics with concerts and
wrist bands, and will divest itself of any subversive character. The
kind of art that we mean is the art of the unexpected scene, the art of
the moment, the art of resistance. It is the art as an act and an
expression of resistance against ever more controlled, regularised
and normalised societies. This kind of art is the one that offers in our
opinion a new, not yet well enough developed potential of resistance. It
is the one that can get across messages fast and directly. It is the one
that can break habits of view and confuse patterns of action. It is the
one that can link unfamiliar levels of thought and bring a human being
in conflict with him_herself.

It is the one that is able to open up spaces beyond the speakable
through its imprecision and that is, therefore, able to reach very
diverse people and groups.

Certainly, we are aware that resisting art is also not leading to
salvation, that this art, too, is producing exclusion, through its
history of origins, its environment, its forms of expression. We are
aware that art, even though happening on the street, is not accessible
for each and everyone, cannot be produced by each and everyone, that it
also needs previous knowledge and junctions. But our pleading is not
directed to art as THE new resisting political practice, but to the act
of taking artistic works seriously as an equal form of political
expression besides the classical forms of politics like
the panel discussion, the demonstration or the barricade.

Our previous activities and the experiences we've made with the links
between art and politics within the left drove us to write this call and
to start this project. Our political field of activity is the Federal
Coordination on Internationalism (Bundeskoordination Internationalismus
- BUKO) which will celebrate in 2007 its 30th birthday simultaneously to
the summit protests. 30 years of internationalist politics in the FRG
(Federal Republic of Germany) are the background of this network that
developed to an important forum of discussion for the emancipatory left,
especially with its annual congresses in the last five years.

Being the main focus within left politics, the mobilisation against the
G8 is also a major issue within the BUKO. We ourselves feel to be part
of the G8-resistance as well as of BUKO and within it we aim to
contribute to the mobilisation for the protests and at the same time to
intervene into previous political practice by producing a book-CD (a
music CD plus a booklet of around 80 pages of text) concerning the
intersections between art and politics.

We regard the medium of a book-CD as one of many possible forms how
theorists, artists and activists could work together on the issue of
political art/artistic politics. In the process we consider it very
important to refer to our own political and/or artistic practice, to
focus on prospects of acting - that is, how can art and politics be
jointly thought, so that they open up new prospects of acting - and to
dismantle barriers through the use of understandable, that is
non-academic, and multilingual texts. We would like to have not only a
view on European terrain, but to go beyond our own nose and
open up an internationalist perspective on the issue of art and politics
within the mobilisation against the G8. We will try to assure this on
the one hand through the choice of musicians and authors - people from
non-mainstream regions in the production of music and theory, ethnisized
Germans and White Germans - and on the other hand through a multilingual
booklet with the respective translations on the homepage.

The texts as well should reflect the links between art and politics, as
artists and theorists should provide contributions concerning the issue
of G8. Therefore, we will develop a questionnaire which will be accorded
to all involved in the project and which should make an equal treatment
possible, avoiding the often usual division into artistic design as
entertaining side effect and rather stodgy theory as the next step to
revolution or the dichotomies of here and there, of North and South.
Just as well as the texts should be written under the star of crossing
boundaries the pieces of music should equally be dedicated to crossing
boundaries.

Possible subjects of the project could be a critical review, e.g. in
terms of gender and migration, of the previous history of joint
performances of art and politics in Germany. How practicable are, for
example, artistic forms of action like Pink&Silver for migrants? Another
focus could be an analysis of the present handling of art as form of
political expression within the left. From the internationalist
perspective one could try to examine the relations between art
and politics in other countries than Germany. This could offer new
impulses through the different approaches. Because after all the aim of
our project is to develop new prospects of action. Our experiences of
the past years have shown, that a lot of old forms of action within the
left are already out-dated and damp the mood to resist. That doesn't
mean to throw over board everything that happened until now, we rather
would like to combine old experiences with new ideas. Considering the
changing circumstances and the associated changing requirements for the
left, we would like to try to look for new and appropriate reactions to
and forms of resistance against existing circumstances. In the means of
art we discover - in spite of the many previous attempts of linking
the two which ever again appear like shooting stars in the dark sky of
a different whole - a previously not much used, nearly endless pool of
possibilities.

Whoever is in the mood to join us in building milky ways out of shooting
stars, as an organiser, an author, an artist or a discussant, is invited
to contact us through email [EMAIL PROTECTED] or the phone number of
the BUKO office +49-40-39 35 00.


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