[Ryan
Mulligan reads text while Harris talks on the phone in the background.
The text of Harris's intended talk is preserved
here, though portions are omitted or altered in the audio.]
Considered
in terms of avant-garde strategies and blockages, Oiticica's
projects seem to follow a liberated trajectory. Without gallery
representation his entire life, he
is free to regard his work as proposals, open-ended realisations
always dependent on participants' interaction. These synthesize
a carnivalesque anarchy with intellectual clarity. They spill over
with unconventional ideas and seem commited to being a means of
generating pleasure and companionship in what was a pretty bleak
and dangerous environment (compare with City of God film).
A gay
man from a prosperous well-educated family, he moves into the
Mangueira
MH: Hang on. Are you lost?
RM: Yeah. What's that?
MH: Favela.
RM: Favela.
favela, one the Rio's slums. After a
difficult reception he is eventually accepted.
RM: Let me take a drink. Oh, that's
so much better.
He
loves everything about
it, seeing in the energy, violence and sensuality a condition
of revolt against his background and Brazilian authorities. He
is
allowed into a Samba troupe and rises high within the hierarchy
of dancers.
What he says about the all-night practice sessions brings back
Nietzsche's voice: "I became ill of the ['Samba
fever'] too, impregnated completely, and I am sure that from
that disease no one recovers, because it is the revelation of
mythical activity . . . something more important than intellectual
activity
or rational thought when these become exagerrated and distorted."
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