Dialogue between the Concept of the Object in the Theater of Tadeusz Kantor and the Theatrical Praxis of the Perif é rico de Objetos

: Tadeusz Kantor was a Polish artist and theater director who directly influenced the conceptual understanding of theater, especially in Argentina following two visits to Buenos Aires with his troupe Cricot 2 in the 1980s. He exerted a particularly strong influence on the Perif é rico de Objetos [The Periphery of Objects], a troupe founded in Buenos Aires in 1989 by Daniel Veronese, Ana Alvarado and Emilio Garc í a Wehbi, labelled by critics as “the Argentine theatre of the image”. Despite radically different socio-cultural contexts, elements arising from Kantor’s theater practices (especially his idea of the “poor object” and his concept of “reality of the lowest rank”) acquired distinctly different meanings in Latin America from those coined by Kantor. A nuanced examination of the Perif é rico de Objetos indicates that Kantor’s concepts, which in their original context resisted politicization, played an important role in the creation of a socially and politically engaged theatre. His concepts, adapted to local realities by the Perif é rico de Objetos, were reflected in debates surrounding the recent Argentinian past, most notably, the post-dictatorship period.


Dialogue between the Concept of the Object in the Theater of Tadeusz Kantor and the Theatrical Praxis of the Periférico de Objetos
Among the Eastern European artists whose work undoubtedly had an impact on Latin America, and more precisely, on Argentina, a key figure is the Polish painter, director and performance artist Tadeusz Kantor.His presence in Buenos Aires dates back to August 1965, when he took part in an exhibition with other Polish artists at the Instituto Di Tella-the main institution devoted to the promotion of contemporary art in the 1960s.The exhibition, Arte actual de Polonia (Current art from Poland), was organised at the Centro de Artes Visuales del Instituto Torcuato Di Tella, Buenos Aires, from 6 to 27 August 1965.At the event, Kantor exhibited one of his umbrella assemblages: Paragua de Oslo (Umbrella from Oslo) (1965, hessian 162 × 100 cm).The work was reminiscent of the combine paintings of the American artist Robert Rauschenberg, who incorporated into his work various photographs, illustrations and objects found on the street.Kantor's artwork was situated between painting and relief, as it included a painting, on top of which an umbrella was affixed.Two years later, in 1967, Kantor was honoured with a prize at the ninth São Paulo Biennial in Brazil for a similar composition-Emballage II. 1 The difference here was that the figure of a woman was painted on the lower part of the work. 2 In June 1965, in issue 25 of the magazine Caballete (Easel), the section "Desde Alemania" (From Germany) featured an article entitled "Las relaciones entre el teatro y las artes plásticas" (Relations between theatre and visual arts).The article was about the exhibition "Bild und Bühne" (Image and Scene) (Mahlow 1965), 3 organised in Baden-Baden, West Germany, by the German art critic Dietrich Mahlow (Caballete 1965, p. 12).Among the more than 500 art objects, artists' sketches and models on display-and the participation of Arts 2024, 13, 11   2 of 17 set designers and theatre directors from Europe and Japan-there were a number of works from both Czechoslovakia and Poland.The article quoted a long passage from the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung describing the specificity of experimental theatre in Eastern European countries, and specifically mentioned the theatrical activity of Tadeusz Kantor: The "Süddeutsche Zeitung" writes: "While in some Eastern Bloc countries (Poland and Czechoslovakia) theatre has received a strong evocative and suggestive impulse from painters and decorators whose ingenuity goes hand in hand with their imagination, in other countries no such development has taken place.The theatres of the Federal Republic occupy an intermediate position between the radicalism of the young, such as Tadeusz Kantor, who in his 'Manifesto for Zero Theatre' vehemently rejects all stylistic directions in current theatre, and the conservative point of view; the scenography is the 'ancilla dramiatis', fulfilling only an intermediary mission" 4 (Caballete 1965, p. 12)   This was the first reference to Tadeusz Kantor's stage activity in Argentina.The article mentioned his Manifest teatru zerowego (Manifesto For Zero Theatre) from 1963, in which the Polish director expressed his interest in a theatre without stage action, based on the "disinterested states" 5 of the human being, such as "aversion, loss of will, apathy, boredom, monotony" 6 (Kantor 2000, p. 268). 7However, recognition of Kantor's theatrical work did not reach Argentina until the 1980s and was mainly focused on his most mature theatrical activity, dating from that time.
Kantor travelled to Argentina with his theatre troupe Cricot 2 twice, performing his plays at the Teatro Municipal General San Martín in Buenos Aires.Wielopole, Wielopole was staged from 19 to 30 September 1984 and Niech szczezn ą artysci!(Let the artists die!-¡Qué revienten los artistas!) from 20 to 30 August 1987.Both stage performances were part of his Latin American tournée, which also included other Latin American countries. 8In parallel to the presentation of his plays, Kantor gave lectures about his theatre and his work, and came into contact with the Argentinian public. 9s Argentinian theoreticians of the theatre and researchers such as Carlos Fos have stated, 10 Kantor's presence was important for Argentine theatre, as both visits gave impetus to a kind of "stage revolution". 11In a recent publication summarising fifty years of the Teatro San Martín's activity we read: The visit of Tadeusz Kantor and his Teatr Cricot 2 from Krakow is, together with that of Pina Bausch, the most transcendental of all those the San Martín has received in its history.And the show he presented, Wielopole Wielopole, a truly singular aesthetic and human experience, whose influence on the Buenos Aires stage would leave a persistent mark 12  (Saavedra 2010, pp.166, 184).
The importance of Tadeusz Kantor in the context of Buenos Aires theatre is reaffirmed by the words of researcher Julia Elena Sagaseta in her article "El teatro de imagen" (The Theatre of the Image): The work of Tadeusz Kantor, the Polish director and visual artist, is, for many filmmakers of this tendency [theatre of the image], the paradigm.The works of this director that were performed in Buenos Aires, Wielopole Wielopole and Let the Artists Die!, as well as his writings collected in the book The Theatre of Death, made a strong impression on some actors and directors who saw in them a path to follow.Other artists followed a vague line between theatre and performance 13 (Sagaseta 1992, p. 73). 14mong the many Argentinian groups in dialogue with Kantor, the most important was the Periférico de Objetos (Periphery of the Objects), founded in 1989 by Ana Alvarado, Emilio García Wehbi, Alejandro Tantanián, Román Lamas, Daniel Veronese, Felicitas Luna and Javier Swedzky (Propato 2002, pp.285-96).This group-specialising in puppet theatre-acknowledged Kantor as its most important influence and spoke openly of the importance of the Polish artist's ideas to their work. 15The origin of this relationship would have been direct contact with the author, since according to Ana Alvarado, the members of the group would have participated in the lectures Kantor gave in the country and in the debates following his presentations. 16

The Concept of the Poor Object
Generally speaking, the reception of Kantor's theory of the Periférico de Objetos concentrated on the concepts of reality of a lower-rank (degraded reality) and poor object, developed by Kantor in his Ambalaże manifest (Emballage Manifesto) of February 1964 (Kantor 1964; in French in Bablet 1977, pp.69-80).
The manifesto can be seen as a consequence of his "loss of confidence in painting" and his introduction to the plastic creation of banal, frequently used everyday objects, which the artist described as "poor" (Kantor 1964). 17Although removed from their everyday reality and transferred to the context of art, Kantor's objects were not "found objects" introduced in a purely accidental manner like Dadaist objects. 18The artist formed his own repertoire of objects from which he selected those that appeared in his artistic creations and in his theatrical works.He introduced cartwheels, folding chairs, coat hangers, umbrellas, suitcases, rucksacks, etc.
The objects that the artist used in his visual work and in his theatrical pieces had an ordinary, simple and popular character, as they were present in everyone's life and easily recognisable.Once selected, or rather added by Kantor to his repertoire, they did not lose their original characteristics.What differentiated them from their conventional versions was the extraordinary use he made of them, which reversed their usual perception and exploited their narrative, expressive and poetic side.This artistic appropriation of objects was not aimed at elevating quotidian objects to the status of art, but instead privileged the "descent of the artist into reality" and the "renunciation of his aspirations and his prerogatives of superior rank" (Borowski 1982, p. 18).Kantor called this process "creation around the zero point", a process whose purpose was not the repetition of the object in the field of art, but its "rescue" (odzyskanie) through creation (Borowski 1982, p. 18).These rescued objects became "actors" in happenings and theatrical performances, and parts of works of art such as collage paintings.Kantor defined the poor object as: . ..the simplest object, with marks of wear and tear, tarnished by long use, on the threshold of rubbish.Already for this reason [the object was]: useless in life, with no hope of fulfilling its vital functions.Of no practical value.Old junk!Simply: poor!Pitiful.! 19  (Kantor 2005b, p. 415)   The concept of the object developed by the Argentinian group the Periférico de Objetos in the 1990s is, in many ways, reminiscent of Kantor's use of these common objects in his works.It is relevant at this point to compare Kantor's words on the poor object with the views of the members of the Argentinian group on the use of everyday objects on stage.According to Ana Alvarado, the object used in Periférico's plays should be: "a real, physical, artificial, irrational, found, constructed, disturbed or interpreted object [that] is subjected to an action" 20 (Alvarado 2009, p. 47). 21In an interview in 1995, Ana Alvarado and Daniel Veronese expressed their affinities with Kantor's vision of the poor object, stating: "We are interested in incorporating into the scene the object taken and not modified, used artistically.The natural object brings a certain genuineness" 22  (Castillo 1995, p. 63).These words indicate that the group was not only familiar with Kantor's concept of the poor object, but also used objects associated with everyday life in their performances in a similar way.In this sense, we could say that the main function of these objects was, as in the case of the poor objects in Kantor's plays, to give a certain authenticity to the spectacle, or in the words of Alvarado and Veronese, a "genuineness".
In his analysis of the creation of the reality effect 23 in the literary works of Gustave Flaubert, the French realist novelist who wrote in the latter half of the 19th century, the French writer and semiologist Roland Barthes stated that the parts of the literary story that contain a description of the tiniest "concrete details" 24 are "taken immediately" 25 from everyday life and are "unnecessary" 26 or "superfluous in comparison with the [semiotic] structure" 27 of the story and the narrative, and primarily serve as a form of authentication for the narrative: they are what make it "plausible" 28 (Barthes et al. 1982, p. 81).Transferring Barthes' theory to the context of theatre, we can say the same about the introduction of the real object, which not only contributes to the abolition of the boundaries between art and life, but also authenticates and contextualises the stage work.Both Kantor and the Periférico de Objetos bring their works closer to the everyday life of both the artists and the audience.Like Flaubert's details described by Barthes as insignificant notes outside the narrative (Barthes et al. 1982, p. 81), the objects used by these artists are included in their theatrical works not only for their formal aspect, but to give rise to a statement: "we are the real" 29 (Barthes et al. 1982, p. 81).
The fact that the objects the artists use in their performances are poor, ordinary, unsophisticated and invisible in everyday life reflects their desire to renounce all forms of illusion and seek authenticity in their works.It is a strategy that links them to the artistic practice and theory of early avant-garde creators such as Marcel Duchamp, who reappropriated everyday objects in order to inscribe them, without any formal intervention, in the world of art, thereby totally transforming their meaning without changing their appearance.However, even if the object in both Kantor and the Periférico de Objetos' work loses its original function, it does not become totally independent and free of its primary context, as in the case of Marcel Duchamp's ready-mades.The object "rescued" by Kantor and used by the Argentinian group maintains its characteristics and sense of origin.It seems to carry the memory of that original context, which it synthesises and expounds.

The Living Object, the Hybrid Object
All objects in Tadeusz Kantor's theatre and art are already worn out; they have their own history and traces of their formal degradation are visible.The objects that Kantor manipulates and appropriates for his creations are often somewhat intimate objects that establish a relationship of proximity with both the actors and the spectator.Kantor reuses these objects in a new context in order to bring out their dramatic character and their capacity to evoke emotions.In this way, inanimate objects are humanised in Kantor's works.In this sense, the objects in Kantor's theatre have several points in common with the object-subjects (objets-sujets) described in 1957 by the French philosopher Gaston Bachelard in his book The Poetics of Space.According to Bachelard, everyday domestic objects, such as a cupboard, a desk or a chest, are "the true organs of the secret psychological life [. ..] [which] have, like us, by us, for us, an intimacy" 30 (Bachelard [1957] 2004, p. 83).Kantor does not cite Bachelard's theories directly, but we can assume that during his stay in Paris 31 he may have come in contact with the French philosopher's writings.The artist seems to share with him his vision of objects which are humanised through their mental, emotional and also poetic potential.
Over time, objects gain a very particular meaning in Kantor's theatre.They cease to occupy the role of common props and gain a status similar to that of actors.The artist himself expands on this development when he states: "It is not that I want to make the object an actor: I want to make the object live, so that the object is like a living organism" 32 (Kantor 2003, p. 74).This phrase relates to a statement made by Ana Alvarado in 2009 in which the artist defines the specificity of the status of the object in the works of the Periférico de Objetos and its relation to the actor-manipulator that animates it.According to Alvarado: In contemporary object theatre, the object does not replace the actor [. ..] Th object must be on stage when its living reality is significant, when its presence structures not only the form but also the meaning of the work 33 (Alvarado 2009, p. 47).
In both cases, the object occupies a special place.In Kantor's works, as in the shows by the Periférico de Objetos, the objects present on stage are distinguished by being strongly marked by subjectivity.Not only do they acquire personal characteristics, but in both cases, they also act.
Kantor used everyday objects to create a kind of hybrid machine that acted in his plays.They were used to reduce the prominence of psychological processes within the performance and to restrict the actors' stage presence.The Polish artist thus introduced various hybrid objects such as: the mouse catcher/hospital bed, the camera/machine gun, the toilet/cradle, the funeral machine or the coffee grinder/meat grinder.This practice of hybridising objects was also carried out with the actors' bodies.The relationship and, to a certain extent, the equivalence between the inanimate object and the human being also fascinated Kantor in his artistic activity.This is attested to by his drawings, in which he amalgamates the human figure with the everyday object: The Man-Package from 1963, The Human Silhouette-Window from 1971 or The Human Silhouette-Tobot from 1971. 34Later, he also brought to life hybrid characters composed of actors' bodies attached to backpacks, armchairs or mannequins on stage.These played a leading role in The Dead Class, one of Kantor's most famous and evocative plays, first performed in 1975.Kantor's practice of hybridising objects with actors was well known to the members of the Periférico de Objetos.As proof, we can cite a text by Ana Alvarado in which the artist refers to her stage work and her conception of the hybrid object: Kantor's characters are neither alive nor dead.Ghosts from the past or inhabitants of Kantor's own dreams are summoned onto the stage by Kantor himself.With their quasi-life they incessantly repeat something or repeatedly enter and leave the stage.Sometimes they are mistaken for mannequins or other objects in the scene, sometimes they are attached to the objects they define: Woman behind the Window (She herself carries the window through which she looks).She only exists in concrete form because she is attached to the window.Kantor's cast of actors is composed of "eternal wanderers", the bodies and costumes, multi-layered "packaging", are welded, glued or sewn to suitcases, bicycles, windows, guillotines 35  (Alvarado 2009, p. 40).
In her text, Alvarado refers to one of the characters in the spectacle The Dead Class from 1975, represented by a woman amalgamated with a window.Kantor's ideas about personalised and hybrid objects allowed the Argentinian group to conceptualise, in their works, the relationships between the object, the actor-manipulator who moves the object and "the non-manipulating actor" 36 who "links with the object without becoming it" 37 (Alvarado 2009, p. 60).In the same way as Kantor, who introduced mannequins into his theatre in 1967, 38 the Periférico de Objetos used "anthropomorphic objects" 39 -all kinds of dolls that coexisted alongside the actors and manipulators on stage.In fact, Alvarado very precisely defines the types of relations possible between the three "scenic subjects" 40 and very clearly differentiates between their capacities and their limitations.According to her, in today's object theatre the manipulator "acts on [the] object in such a way that it is not possible to be sure where one ends and the other begins" 41  (Alvarado 2009, p. 47).Similarly, in the notes on his play Wielopole, Wielopole from 1980, staged in Buenos Aires in 1984, Kantor stated: The matter of the show was created by the 'inner life' of the OBJECT, its characteristics, its destiny, its imaginary area.The actors became its living parts, its organs.They were as if genetically united with that object.They created a certain BIO-OBJECT, which acted and secreted the plot of a rather special action. 42 (Kantor 1984b, p. 133).
In both cases, the object occupies the leading role in the action, but, as Alvarado argues, the manipulator can "also be 'the other' who is embodied in her human body" 43 (Alvarado  2009, p. 47).In this case, the artist conceives the presence of a third actor, defined by her as a "non-manipulator" 44 , whose presence in the scene comes from a place that is rediscovered as that of a non-object.
In order to better understand Kantor's intentions, we can refer to Alfred Gell's theory on the agency of objects (Gell 1998).According to Gell, the latter have performative abilities very similar to living beings and can substitute for them.Kantor's objects, which are also artworks, have the power to influence their viewers, to communicate with them and to provoke "social-emotional responses" (Gell 1998, p. 6).By using ordinary and worn object agents, Kantor aimed to create a mental state-an ambience of hominess familiar to the spectators.The reason for this was to penetrate deeply inside their lives, to affect them, to "enmesh" them "in a texture of social relationship" (Gell 1998, p. 17).Similarly, in the plays of the Periférico de Objetos, objects are representations of human beings and are capable of social agency.Their aim is similar to that of Kantor's objects: effectively engaging the spectator and creating an atmosphere that is both familiar and, in some way, also strange to him in order to deeply penetrate him affectively.

Objects in Context
What is particularly meaningful in the dialogue surrounding Kantor's theatre is that the works of the Polish director acquired a completely new meaning in the Argentinian context.In the context of the People's Republic of Poland, under a communist regime, Tadeusz Kantor was among the artists who refrained from publicly expressing his opinions on the policies of the authorities.It is known that after World War II he spoke out against the doctrine of social realism and, as a consequence, lost his job at the art school in Krakow in 1949, but then, during the following decades, he was one of the few Polish artists permitted to travel and exhibit abroad. 45At that time, Kantor simply refused, more or less explicitly, to speak out through his works about the current politics of his country.On many occasions, he stated that his only desire was to question the limits of art.Thus, experimentation was the only important thing in his artistic oeuvre, happenings and theatrical work.However, his highly metaphorical art and stage productions could be read, and certainly were, as allegories full of allusions to state oppression.As an example, we could mention his show entitled Szafa-Der Schrank (Wardrobe), an adaptation of the play W małym dworku (In the Little Manor House) by the Polish writer Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, written in 1921. 46 The play was first shown in Baden-Baden, West Germany, in 1966, and it was interpreted as a metaphor for state oppression and the enclosure of the individual in communist countries. 47However, Kantor, unlike the members of the Periférico de Objetos, refused to openly criticise the socio-political reality of his time.
During his stay in Buenos Aires in 1984, Kantor was questioned about the political reality of his country.Asked whether it had been possible to perform Wielopole, Wielopole in Poland in the context of martial law, Kantor replied: Yes, on two occasions.The first was in 1980, when the Solidarity movement was emerging.In that sense, I think my play predicted everything that happened with Lech Wałęsa's revolution and the war that came afterwards.At that time, we did performances in the Gda ńsk shipyards, where the Solidarity trade union started.(Di Tella 1984).
Kantor's opinion was openly against the idea of militant theatre.When asked about the reception of his scenic plays in Poland in the context of martial law in the early 1980s, he stated: The reaction of the audience was very special.The temperature was higher; but I don't know if that's a good thing because I don't like it too much when a work of art provokes a reaction in which its politics raises the temperature.It is the work of art that should create a special temperature.[. ..] Acually, I am against political theatre 49 (Di Tella 1984).
In the same vein, the Polish director stressed that: "in Poland, at [that] time, [there were] many directors who [took] advantage of politics, but only to be successful, to make a career" 50 (Di Tella 1984). 51He continued: "the theatre that [made] Cricot 2 [was] not political theatre, it [had] no political programme to [support] it.Even if, in its deepest layers, [it] had a political significance" 52 (Di Tella 1984).
Kantor's reluctance to take a stand against authoritarian power in his home country makes it all the more complex that, in Argentina, the performance of his plays, among others by the Periférico de Objetos, took on strong political overtones.The Periférico de Objetos was, in this sense, one of the groups that directly made power relations a primary theme in their plays.The first play staged by the group in April 1990, Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi (Ubu King) from 1896, was a farce about authoritarian power.In the second show, Variations on B. . .(Beckett), performed in May of the same year, there was a torture scene performed by a puppeteer playing the role of a tyrant.The central element of the next show, The Sandman from April 1992, whose name was taken from a story written by E.T.A. Hoffmann 53 and belonged to the Schwarze Romantik (Dark Romanticism) literary genre, was a sandbox full of hidden dolls.The dolls became visible only to be covered again with sand, manipulated by the actors who played widows in the story.Their gestures clearly evoked the practice of disappearance carried out as part of state terrorism in the country.
As the Argentine theatre historian Jorge Dubatti justly stated, the group's performances created a very dark, pessimistic atmosphere: From a semantic point of view, Veronese constructs in Cámara Gesell [the fourth show produced by the Periférico de Objetos, in February 1994] an absolutely violent, pessimistic and negative image of man, he elaborates a nihilistic anthropology that takes on all the tragedies of the past (and of the foreseeable future) without concessions to conformism or hope 54  (Dubatti 1995, p. 32).
It is possible to affirm that the main difference between Kantor's theatre and that of the Periférico de Objetos, beyond the dissimilar theatrical forms (experimental theatre in the case of the former and puppet theatre, also experimental, in the case of the latter), consists of the frequent references by the Argentinian group to violent and aggressive behaviour.These can be associated with the repressive practices and violence generated by the military dictatorship in Argentina.To an extent, all the group's works can be interpreted as metaphors associated with the repressive mechanisms of authoritarian power.Tadeusz Kantor addressed the question of death in his theatre.His manifesto of the Teatr Śmierci (Theatre of Death) from 1975 is one of his best-known texts and was translated in Argentina in 1984.In fact, Kantor's two shows in Argentina belong to this last stage in his theatrical work, called the theatre of death, which begins with this manifesto. 55Moreover, Kantor understood the "reality of a lower rank" as the part of everyday human life, linked to death, which is denied.In shows such as ¡Qué revienten los artistas!(Niech szczezn ą artysci!-Let the artists die!), performed in Buenos Aires in 1987, Kantor focuses on his own death, staging sequences of memories from his own life and prophesying his demise.However, violence, as such, was not a subject of particular interest to Kantor.Perhaps one moment in Kantor's theatre that seems closest to the atmosphere created by the Periférico de Objetos, in part linked to representation of the mechanisms of repression, is his show Wariat i zakonnica (The Madman and the Nun), based on a libretto by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, staged in 1963.In it, Kantor introduced the "annihilation machine", constructed from numerous folding chairs.The "machine" competed with the actors, pushing them off the stage and not allowing them to speak their lines.In the manifesto Teatr autonomiczny.Manifest teatru zerowego (Autonomous Theatre.Manifesto of the Zero Theatre) of 1963 (Kantor 2000, pp.233-43), the Polish director characterised this hybrid stage furniture as violent, crazy, nervous, ridiculous and monotonous, and claimed that it should act in an autocratic manner.The machine focused on delimiting the stage space, which was, according to Kantor, "reduced to a space close to zero" 56 and "so thin and pale that the actors [had] to struggle to stand on it" 57 (Kantor 2000, p. 238).The "annihilation machine" thus created a situation of competition and threat.As we will observe later in the performances of the Periférico de Objetos, in this work by Kantor, a banal everyday object inserted into a power structure becomes monstrous due to its unusual function.
Unlike the Periférico de Objetos, Kantor's theatre is based on his own personal memories, his intimate and highly subjective experiences.It is a form of play based on his own memory.The artist examines death from a dimension that is firstly personal and then universal, but is not a concrete collective experience.The Argentinian group renounces the fundamentally subjective character of Kantor's theatre in its work, and seems to take collective memory, as determined by its social contexts, which, in this case, relate to the recent history of Argentina, as the object of its investigation.The work of the Periférico de Objetos played a very central role in the post-dictatorship period in Argentina, acting as a catalyst for the discussion of traumatic experiences from its recent history that had previously been silenced.Its reception in the country was inseparably linked to a process of memory and mourning, both individual and collective.

The Sinister Object
As María Castillo states, the Periférico de Objetos "did not [leave] the spectator indifferent" but rather challenged them with a "disturbing aesthetic" 58 (Castillo 1995, p.  60).This is something that, once again, brought them close to Kantor, who was well known for his use of a variety of techniques to draw the spectator directly into the action.In plays performed by the Periférico de Objetos, we can observe the presence of strategies aimed at narrowing the distance from the audience.For example, Jorge Dubatti recalls that, in the play Cámara Gesell, the design of the space places the spectator in close physical proximity to the dramatic space; in this way, by leaving the "audience ominously glued to the most cruel and obscene scenes" 59 (Dubatti 1995, p. 35), 60 the Argentinian group went further, seeking to put them in a state of shock or, at the very least, produce discomfort.This aim was affirmed by Daniel Veronese, who in an interview with María Castillo on the subject of the aesthetics of the group's plays, said that it was: an aesthetics of the obscene, because one of the peripheral elements is obscenity: to show what people are not expecting to see, to make visible what should have been left out of the scene 61 (Castillo 1995, pp.60-63)   For her part, Ana Alvarado refers to the Freudian term "uncanny" (unheimlich). 62ccording to her, the group's third play, El hombre de arena (The Sandman), from April 1992, in particular was "strongly based on the Freudian notion of the uncanny" 63 (Alvarado 2009,  p. 66).The Periférico de Objetos worked with surprise in order to achieve an effect similar to the state described by Sigmund Freud with the term das Unheimliche, characterised by a commutation between the known and the unknown.We may also note that E.T.A. Hoffmann's short story, The Sandman (see Figures 1 and 2), on which the Periférico de Objetos' show was based, was also one of the examples analysed by Freud in his essay Das Unheimliche (Freud [1919] 1989).The German word unheimlich stands in opposition to the terms heimlich (domestic) and heimisch (native), both of which come from the word das Heim, meaning "home", or der Heimat, meaning "homeland".However, the uncanny does not simply mean something opposed to the domestic, something that might be unfamiliar or strange.For Freud, what is important is the linguistic proximity between the two terms Heim and unheimlich, because the latter, according to Freud, contains in itself das Heim, or that which is familiar.In this way, the uncanny becomes a factor that provokes a feeling of unease or even fear, caused by the cognitive dissonance between the recognition of a common and familiar phenomenon or object and the discovery of its uncomfortably strange and foreign side.The uncanny manifests itself, then, when the pleasure of the known becomes the displeasure of a terrifying and unfamiliar experience.Slavoj Žižek underscores this very point when he states that it is familiarity that constitutes the crucial element of the uncanny.In his 1989 book Looking Awry, in which he introduces Jacques Lacan's concepts through popular culture, Žižek states: "The most familiar things take on a dimension of the uncanny when one finds them in another place, that 'is not right'.And the thrill effect results precisely from the familiar, domestic character of what one finds in this 'Things'" (Žižek 1992, p. 145).
The fact that the Periférico de Objetos used dolls in their works imposed an uncanny atmosphere on the stage, as shown in Figure 3.The use of dolls provokes associations with childhood; although of course, in these works they were animated for an entirely different purpose than their primary use, which is child's play.This play serves as a means of replicating the behavioural patterns of adults, and thus prepare a child for its future life.The group also reproduced adult behaviour with the dolls, but instead of representing situations from family life, they represented acts of violence, linked to the reality of a social life subjected to authoritarianism.atmosphere on the stage, as shown in Figure 3.The use of dolls provokes associations with childhood; although of course, in these works they were animated for an entirely different purpose than their primary use, which is child's play.This play serves as a means of replicating the behavioural patterns of adults, and thus prepare a child for its future life.The group also reproduced adult behaviour with the dolls, but instead of representing situations from family life, they represented acts of violence, linked to the reality of a social life subjected to authoritarianism.The familiar character of the objects used in the works, easily recognisable to the public as they could be part of their everyday life or have been part of their childhood, intensified their experience of discomfort.This discomfort was provoked by the association of these familiar objects with death.Through the use of such strategies, the works of the Peripheral Objects were transformed into powerful and disturbing spectacles.
The reception of the Periférico de Objetos's work is inseparably linked with its sociopolitical context.In this sense, we can cite the article "El elemento siniestro en las obras de El Periférico de Objetos" (The sinister element in the works of the Periférico de Objetos), by playwright and theatre critic Cecilia Propato, written in 1998 at the height of the group's stage activity.Propato states: The disappeared are dead, and the sinister thing is to bring the issue to light.What happened is so sinister that society prefers it to be covered up, buried."The periférico de objetos ", by bringing this subject to light, become obscene.They show what people don't want to see, and they can only do that by means of dolls.Here we come to the peripheral essence: the choice to work with dolls-which already have a sinister charge-is related The familiar character of the objects used in the works, easily recognisable to the public as they could be part of their everyday life or have been part of their childhood, intensified their experience of discomfort.This discomfort was provoked by the association of these familiar objects with death.Through the use of such strategies, the works of the Peripheral Objects were transformed into powerful and disturbing spectacles.
The reception of the Periférico de Objetos's work is inseparably linked with its sociopolitical context.In this sense, we can cite the article "El elemento siniestro en las obras de El Periférico de Objetos" (The sinister element in the works of the Periférico de Objetos), by playwright and theatre critic Cecilia Propato, written in 1998 at the height of the group's stage activity.Propato states: The disappeared are dead, and the sinister thing is to bring the issue to light.What happened is so sinister that society prefers it to be covered up, buried."The periférico de objetos ", by bringing this subject to light, become obscene.They show what people don't want to see, and they can only do that by means of dolls.Here we come to the peripheral essence: the choice to work with dolls-which already have a sinister charge-is related to the possibility of telling horrible stories that could not be told with actors 64  (Propato 1998,  pp.387-95).
Indeed, the use of anthropomorphic objects allowed the group to depict scenes of violence in a very direct and explicit way.In fact, contrary to Propato's assertion, horrific stories linked to the last dictatorship were told in several films, with actors.The use of dolls in the works of the Periférico de Objetos allows this violent and sinister atmosphere to be maintained in a metaphorical dimension, which strengthens the effect of the work on the spectator.The link between the group's creation and the last Argentinian dictatorship is also perceived by Daniel Veronese.In his analysis of the construction process of the play El hombre de arena (The Sandman), the artist states: Although there was a personal political need in all of us to exorcise certain themes related to military repression, this was not present when we prepared the work.But obviously in our country the work was read as a work about those who disappeared during the dictatorship.We, without having set out to talk specifically about the subject, achieved a poetic synthesis that I think would have been impossible to achieve if the idea had been ahead of the form.We simply let our ghosts wander over the sinister.And it is impossible that in Argentina certain signs are not read in that way; the sinister being an element with which we have lived for years.The result was not pamphletary.That was, I think, the greatest achievement of the work 65  (Veronese 2000).
Like Kantor, Veronese affirms the importance of the aesthetic value of creation over its political message.The staging of the sinister aspects of everyday life during the dictatorship emerges in the group's work in an unintentional way.The message of the work seems to emerge from the context in which the work is received.The inevitability of the association with the disappeared may then be related to a collective need to exorcise certain themes linked with the repression.Thus, the audience's level of disturbance in viewing the play is very high.Regarding the show El hombre de arena, Daniel Veronese refers to the two strong contradictory feelings that the play produced: disgust and attraction, both provoked by the return of the repressed.Recalling its impact, he states: In the words of the audience, the result was terrifying.People couldn't bear to watch it, but at the same time they couldn't stop watching it.As if, despite the need to run out of the room, a force was keeping them attached to their seats.To be able to animate something that has no life produces that fascination, I think, that is so difficult to match.It's knowing something about death.The audience needs to see something about death even if they reject it 66 (Veronese 2000).
The disabled dolls used by the Periférico de Objetos, like Kantor's "dark parades of macabre puppets" 67 (Kantor 2005a, p. 33), are associated with the concept of the abject developed by Julia Kristeva.The abject occupies a liminal space, an intermediate place between the concept of object and the concept of subject, which disturbs the symbolic order and which she associated with both fear and pleasure. 68The doll in the work of the Periférico de Objetos becomes an abject object because it simultaneously provokes discomfort and pleasure in the spectator.These feelings seem to intensify as the spectator realises that death is at work on the stage, and that the object, which was a toy, becomes a corpse.Kantor himself, in an interview in Buenos Aires with Andrés Di Tella in September 1984, analyses the role of dead people in his own theatre, stating that: "in the dead we can recognise ourselves, in the sense that the dead person is of our own species, he is a human being like us.But at the same time, he is a stranger, he is someone who is out of life" 69 (Di Tella 1984). 70In his text on the Theatre of Death, Tadeusz Kantor said that introducing mannequins into his shows allowed him to address the theme of death.In this sense, he stated: "The MANNEQUIN in my theatre has become a MODEL, through which a strong sense of DEATH and the condition of the DEAD passes.A model for the LIVE ACTOR" 71 (Kantor 2005c, p. 18).For Kantor, the live actor should be able to internalise death from the model created by mannequin.His lifeless anthropomorphic figure embodies the presence of death on the stage.In a way, the Argentinian group appropriates the idea of the Theatre of Death to exorcise a sinister experience of Argentinian society.
Through the use of common, worn-out objects, bearers of their own history, Tadeusz Kantor and the Periférico de Objetos link themselves to the past.The old porcelain dolls are, for the members of the Argentinian group, like old photographs that "refer in a particular way to time and death" 72 (Castillo 1995, p. 63). 73In this sense, the group comes very close to Kantor's consideration of mannequins.These anthropomorphic objects are used by the artist to express life through their absence.Kantor himself confirmed this phenomenon: Its appearance [of the mannequin in my theatre] aligns with my conviction, which is growing stronger and stronger, that life can only be expressed in art by the absence of life, by reference to DEATH, by APPEARANCES, by EMPTINESS and the absence of TRANSFERENCE 74 (Kantor 2005c, p. 18).
Both theatrical visions are also inseparably linked to the context in which they were created.However, Kantor's degraded reality does not correspond exactly to the peripheries of the Argentinian troupe.Both Kantor and the Periférico de Objetos recreated an atmosphere in their plays that might suggest the structure of a dream or a memory.Both organise their stage performances in a way that is sometimes chaotic, illogical and inexplicable in the same ways that the memories that reside in human memory manifest themselves.Both play with trauma and the return to childhood: in Kantor's case, one could cite his play The Dead Class.However, unlike Kantor, who perpetually stages his own dreams, experiences, memories and anxieties, the performances of the Periférico de Objetos renounce this highly subjective character and take the plots of collective memory as the object of their investigation.
The post-dictatorial context becomes a crucial element in the analysis of the works of the Periférico de Objetos.This is confirmed by Ana Alvarado's self-analysis of the group's artistic activity.Referring to Jorge Dubatti's text "Micropoetics.Teatro y subjetividad en la escena de Buenos Aires (1983-2001)" (Micropoetics.Theatre and Subjectivity on the Buenos Aires Stage (1983-2001)) of 2002 (Dubatti 2002), Alvarado defines the origin of the stage works of both the Periférico de Objetos and other theatre troupes of the same period.She states: In their works, [the theatre troupes of the post-dictatorship period in Argentina] refer not only to this stage of Argentinean history: Resistance, disappearance, violence, torture, repression, the sinister, etc., but also to the social and economic crisis of the subsequent period, which is addressed on stage in various ways: parody, absurdity, meaninglessness and pathos.These aspects are not "themes" or "influences" of the social context on the work, but are the building blocks of the work itself and the artists' procedures 75 (Alvarado  2009, p. 48). 76lvarado points to the decisive link that the group maintained with the social and political context of Argentina in their artistic production.This context is related both to the need to persist in the practices of memory, referring to the last dictatorship at a time when the trials for crimes against humanity were in clear retreat, and to the social and economic crisis that characterised the 1990s.
However, the performances of the Periférico de Objetos cannot be treated as testimonies to the most painful events of recent history.They are not inspired by a specific biography, as in Kantor's case, but are based on the structure of a trauma which belongs to a collective.The nightmarishly recurring scenes of violence make the audience live and relive their own fears.The performances by the Periférico de Objetos tend to reproduce the mechanism of a bad memory which, once repressed, reappears in an undesirable way at the least favourable and least expected moments.The group focuses, then, on memories whose incessant return shatters the audience's comfort.In looking for the reasons why an image becomes intolerable, the French philosopher Jacques Rancière, in his analysis of representations of massacres, remarked that it is the fact that images are "too intolerably real to be proposed as images" (Rancière [2008] 2010, p. 85).Following this idea, we could affirm that the sinister or the intolerable in the work of the Periférico de Objetos is used first and foremost as a means of reworking a trauma linked to the experience of social oppression. 77The antique doll serves, as the mannequin did for Kantor, to represent the unrepresentable, the intolerable.In this sense, the artistic work of the Argentinian group assumes a very important role in the post-dictatorship milieu as a means of supporting the discussion of recent history.Their work is inseparably linked to social debate about the crimes of state terrorism.
The work of the Periférico de Objetos is thus a very complex example of the dialogue between Kantor's art and theatre in Latin America.The Argentinian group found, in the Polish artist's scenic language, elements from which to develop its own language.Taking a position more marked by the political context, the Periférico de Objetos presents, unlike Kantor, a narrative that serves to relate to its spectators on the basis of a shared past.In any case, both artists' performances connect with universal archetypes.The fact that both concepts of theatre are still captivating today is due to the fact that they speak, above all, about the human condition and its horrors.