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Henri Michaux
Adventure of the symbols
Galerie Berthet-Aittouars
29 rue de Seine 75006 Paris
May 23rd- June 28th, 2014
By Joseph Nechvatal
Published at Hyperallergic.com as
Further Adventures in Mescaline
http://hyperallergic.com/130265/further-adventures-in-mescaline/
Mind blowing drugs are nothing new in French culture. Indeed, Simone de Beauvoir reported in
The Prime of Life (pp. 169-170) that Jean-Paul Sartre (the master of French phenomenological
philosophy and subsequently awarded the Nobel Prize) had a medically supervised mescaline
injection in 1935, along with an unnamed intern. Sartre reported seeing lobsters, orangutans,
and houses gnashing their jaws. The intern reported virtually romping through a meadow of
nymphs. The following year, in 1936 Antonin Artaud, through his Mexican-Parisian friend, the
painter Federico Cant Garza, went to Mexico to live and study the ways of the Tarahumaran
people where he dropped peyote, recording his experience in a volume called The Peyote
Dance. But apparently things really took off in the middle of the dreadfully conservative
1950s.
In Adventure of the symbols, a retrospective show of thirty India ink drawings by
poet/journalist/artist Henri Michaux (1899-1984) I found Michaux building on his mid-1950s
mescaline inspired breakthrough drawings loosely called Dessin Mescalinien (Mescaline
Drawings) (1956/1957). They are shimmering dark drawings done during various phases of
neurological excitement induced by mescaline. That the work was electrified by congesting
mescaline (the active ingredient of the peyote cactus) is well known through Michauxs own
1950s books: Miserable Miracle: Mescaline (originally published in French in 1956 and first
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translated into English in 1967), Turbulent Infinity(1957) andPaix dans les brisements (1959).
For more on the neurological excitement induced by mescaline in the 50s as it may effect the
creative artist, see Aldous Huxley's 1954 publication The Doors of Perception, a well-known
account Huxley wrote after taking mescaline in 1953 under the guidance of the Canadian
psychiatrist and researcher Humphrey Osmond.
Of course, the dried heads of the peyote cactus, whose chief active ingredient is mescaline, were
used by the Aztecs at least as early as 300 BC and are currently being employed by over fifty
thousand Indians of the Native American Church as a vital part of their religious ceremonies.
The peyote cactus has long been used by the Indians of the Southwest and Mexico as a means of
communion with the divine world, and today the eating of the dried buttons of the plant is the
principal sacrament of the Native American Church of the United States.
In looking at Michauxs Dessin Mescalinien untitled drawings, I saw and sensed a vibratory
cyborgish aesthetic energy made manifest in a diagrammatic viral manner. Viral because,
according to Robert Hunter in The Acid Queen chapter of his The Storming of the Mind, th e
mescaline molecule resembles adrenaline. When mescaline is introduced into the body,
enzymes, mistaking the mescaline molecules for adrenaline, begin to dissolve them. While the
enzymes attention is focused on the mescaline, however, the adrenaline reproduces and finds a
hosting zone elsewhere in the brain - the enzymes cant handle both.
Michauxs works create an unaccustomed hovering feeling from the spread of floating signsfound scattering themselves throughout space. Adventure of the symbols demonstrates this with
a nice array of early pre-mescaline Mouvement drawings (1950-51).
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"Mouvement" (1950) India ink drawing, 30 x 25 cm
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"Mouvement" (1951) India ink drawing, 30 x 25 cm
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"Mouvement" (1951) India ink drawing, 30 x 25 cm
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"Mouvement" (1951) India ink drawing, 30 x 25 cm
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But I was particularly interested in the delicate post-mescaline Sans Titre (Untitled) works
(1956 on) that have the systematic, but out-of-control, vibrational quality of a nervous robot-
seismograph. In these drawings, vibratory energy is made manifest. There were no explici tdessin post-mescalinien or dessin de reagregation (both 1962/1963) drawings included in
this show, but all the post mid-50s field drawings have the same high-frequency ripe delirium,
the same chimerical electronic vibratory environment, as those.
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"Sans Titre" (1956), India ink drawing, 27 x 20 cm
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"Sans Titre (vers 1957-58), India ink drawing, 60 x 40 cm
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"Sans Titre" (1960), India ink drawing, 40 x 60 cm
"Sans Titre" (1960), India ink drawing, 104.5 x 74.5 cm
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"SansTitre" (1960), India ink drawing, 45 x 32 cm
Michauxs work here are a snarl of vicissitudes so intertwined that it must give birth to different
scopes of thought and perception. Through this articulation, grammar may appear as semi-
abstraction, because in his art the sign no longer consists only of representations but of innercodes that in turn may represent other representations, and so on, as the links of surreal
thought require.
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"Sans Titre" (1960), India ink drawing, 40 x 60 cm
"Sans Titre" (1960), India ink drawing, 104.5 x 74.5 cm
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In free-flowing works like the untitled series from 1960, habitual values and expectations of
solidity no longer exist ipso facto. They elucidates for us (again) that art may refuse to
recognize all thought as existing in the form of representation, and that by scanning the entirespread of representation art may formulate an understanding of the laws that provide
representation with its basis: the rare aesthetic that is at once seamless and fragmented.
Like mescaline engendered thought (see the Alan Watts book The Joyous Cosmology (1962))
Henri Michauxs post-mescaline art, by virtue of its distinctive constitution as networked
fluidity, floats us in an extensive stratosphere of virtuality. In an osmotic membrane. It is art as
a blotter of instantaneous ubiquity and proliferation.
Such a sumptuous view of Michauxs aesthetic activity results, I guess, in the atomization and
disintegration of what once was considered coherent normality into disoriented immateriality.
And this delirious disintegration/merging yields up to art a certain aesthetic scrutiny; a
vaporous conceptual panorama based on circulation that de-centers prior logocentric social
hegemony. May I just point out that this vibrational flee from the play of popularity-based
representation has political/social ramifications in our media saturated society.
Michauxs post-mescaline work develops vibrating articulations which may consist of
phantasmal elements now grouped into spreading systems which possess characters the eye canscan and identify because they have a structure that is, in a way, the chimerical, concave, inner-
side of visibility. The conditions of these links reside outside of representation however, and
inside of semi-abstract knowledge opposed to immediate visibility.
Michauxs drawings from 1960 depict a sort of behind-the-scenes vibrating world, deep and
dense enough that representation finds itself joined together in surreal suppositions.
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"Sans Titre" (1960), India ink drawing, 45 x 32 cm
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Sans Titre (c.1970) India ink drawing, 56 x 76 cm
Non-logocentric works like these here can perhaps direct us towards that capricious, behind-the-scenes, vibrating zone, that necessary but always inaccessible arena, which dives down,
beyond our gaze, towards the very velvety heart of things. Indeed it is this quivering, sensual but
chimerical, semi-cohesion that maintains the sovereign and secret sway over each and every
sign - this figure/ground vibrating - which I find interestingly in Michaux. That something
beyond reductive abstraction or glib representation. Something excessive, hybrid, semi-abstract.
Obviously, Michauxs post-mescaline work is a work of overload. The drawings are to be
understood as a flustered code-field of vibratory energy. And since prevailing representation is
made up of conventional, rigid, social signs (and art typically of unconventional irresponsible
signs - the mode that represents the real arbitrary nature of all signs as it subverts the socially
controlled system of meaning) Michauxs work offers us the opportunity for the creation of
anti-social signs (semi-abstract, ecstatic, anti-signs) which continue to mentally move and
multiply. Henri Michauxs aesthetic work is an offer for us to achieve an integration of figure
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and ground by dissolving discrete information into a primary vibrational and dynamic
underpinning.
Encounters with Michauxs work, I suggest, might create an opportunity for social image
transgression. Surely such a hybrid impetus can help release pent up energies, as his type of highcounsel provides a quivering defiance through transport aimed against the controlling worlds
sedate blandness. In Michauxs work, daily kinds of thoughts detach themselves from the order
and authority of the old sign and float up into the higher realm of imagination, of fantasy, and
into non-knowledge. Yet Michauxs aesthetic non-knowledge is certainly the most erudite, the
most aware, the most conscious area of our identity, as it is the surface-and-depth from which
all representation emerges in its precarious, but glittering, existence.