Psychogeography and détournement
The book is a work ofLet the dead bury the dead, and mourn them.... our fate will be to become the first living people to enter the new life.The second section, 'December 1952', quotes Huizinga, and the third, 'September 1953', quotes Soubise. The work contains two separate layers. The first is printed with black ink, reproducing found text and graphics taken from newspapers and magazines. The second layer is printed using coloured inks, splashed across the pages. These sometimes connect images and text, sometimes cover them, and sometimes are seemingly unconnected. The black layer contains fragments of text, maps of Paris and London, illustrations of siege warfare, cheap reproductions of old masters and questions such as 'How do you feel about the world at the moment, Sir?' The coloured layer contains freefloating ink splashes, lines created by a matchstick loaded in ink, and a Rorschach inkblob. Other pages deal with more personal themes, including a cartoon of the first showing of his film ''Hurlements en Faveur de Sade'', with comments for and against, and references to
Anti-book: the sandpaper cover
The book is most famous for its cover, a dust jacket made of heavy-grade sandpaper. The idea of a damaging cover was conceived by Guy Debord and Asger Jorn, who expressed it in a latter to the printer, who suggested to make them with sand paper. According to the printer V.O. Permild:ermild:Long had ornasked me, if I couldn’t find an unconventional material for the book cover. Preferably some sticky asphalt or perhaps glass wool. Kiddingly, he wanted, that by looking at people, you should be able to tell whether or not they had had the book in their hands. He acquiesced by my final suggestion: sandpaper (flint) nr. 2: ‘Fine. Can you imagine the result when the book lies on a blank polished mahogany table, or when it's inserted or taken out of the bookshelf. It planes shavings off the neighbour's desert goat.Three copies of artist proofs by Guy Debord and Asger Jorn are known to exist. One is dedicated to “Mr. Ulmann” (likely Jacques Ulmann), dated “April 1959” and signed by Asger Jorn. Another is dedicated to Ghislain de Marbaix by Guy Debord. The third, without any dedication, was previously held at the Claude Bernard Library. All three are now in the hands of private collectors. These copies contain the same pages as the edition produced by Permild & Rosengreen in Copenhagen, Denmark, printed in December 1958. However, the three artist proofs differ in the sandpaper used for the cover. Instead of the Danish VIK Nr. 2 sandpaper the artist proofs use "3M" sandpaper. The text on the back of the sandpaper highlights two notable details: the word "PARIS" and the name "H. Navarre." In this context, the sandpaper references the location of the company on a street named after King Henry IV of France. However, at the time of publication, the name H. Navarre was likely more associated with the French general who led the country to defeat in Indochina, resulting in the recognition of an independent, socialist Vietnam. It is difficult to overlook the likelihood that Debord was interested in this detail for his "Mémoires". However,the sand paper of these proofs is notably thick and prone to cracking at the folds, and the large flaps glued to the endpapers and spine were not ideal technical choices—something later corrected by the printer. Debord himself alludes to this in his dedication: “Exemplaire factice pour le véritable comte de Marbaix en attendant mieux. Guy.” (In English: "Exemplaire factice" translates to dummy copy, or a provisional, imperfect example.)
''Fin de Copenhague''
''Fin de Copenhague'' (''Goodbye to Copenhagen'') is the first collaboration between the two artists. The artists' book is credited to Asger Jorn, with Debord listed as "Technical Adviser in Détournement". Also printed by Permild and Rosengreen,What do you want? Better and cheaper food? Lots of new clothes? A dream home with all the latest comforts and labour saving devices? A new car . . . a motor launch . . . a light aircraft of your own? Whatever you want, it's coming your way - plus greater leisure for enjoying it all. With electronics, automation and nuclear energy, we are entering on the new Industrial Revolution which will supply our every need, easily . . . quickly . . . cheaply . . . abundantly.Other pages include text in French, German, and Danish; illustrations of whisky bottles beer bottles and cigarettes; aeroplanes and oceangoing liners; cartoons of well dressed men and pretty girls and various maps of Copenhagen. One page declares, 'There's No Whiteness....Viva Free
Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Tell us in not more than 250 words why your girl is the sweetest girl in town.
Methods of production
Having just arrived in Copenhagen, Jorn and Debord rushed into a newsagents, stole a huge amount of magazines and newspapers, and spent a drunken afternoon collaging elements together. The next day they arrived at the printers with 32 collages, which were transferred to lithographic plates. Jorn then sat at the top of a ladder over the zinc plates, dropping cup after cup of Indian ink onto them. The plates were then etched and printed over the black texts and images. The cover was a heavily embossed image of an advertisement for a razor blade.The spectacle
The situationist concept of the'The spectacle epitomises the prevailing model of social life. It is the omnipresent celebration of a choice already made in the sphere of production, and the consummate result of that choice. In form as in content the spectacle serves as total justification for the conditions and aims of the existing system.' Guy DebordSociety of the Spectacle, Thesis 6
Editions
Both publications were printed by Permild & Rosengreen in Copenhagen, Denmark. Fin de Copenhague was published by Bauhaus Imaginiste in May 1957 in an edition of 200 copies. Its content was reprinted by Éditions Allia in 2001. Mémoires was published by Éditions Situationist International in 1959. It was reprinted by Jean-Jacques Pauvert at Belles Lettres in 1993. This edition includes a brief introduction by Guy Debord and does not feature the original sandpaper cover. A significant portion of the 2,300 copies printed by Jean-Jacques Pauvert was lost due to a fire at the Belles Lettres storage facility, which destroyed many copies and contributed to the rarity of this version today. In 2004, to mark the 10th anniversary of Guy Debord's death, Éditions Allia reprinted the content of this book.Notes
References
*Mémoires, Guy Debord and Asger Jorn, Editions Situation International, 1959 *Asger Jorn, Guy Atkins, Methuen, 1964 *Asger Jorn, The Crucial Years 1954–64, Guy Atkins, Lund Humphries, 1977 *Guy Debord, Merrifield, Reaktion, 2005 *Potlatch 1954–57, Debord and others, Lebovici, 1985 *Panegyric, Debord, Verso, 1991 *Fin de Copenhague, Asger Jorn and Guy Debord, Editions Allia, 2001 *Books of Warfare: The Collaboration between Guy Debord & Asger Jorn from 1957 to 1959, Christian Nolle