Numero Art

THE DAY JOSEPH BEUYS DID DÜSSELDORF–NEW YORK IN AN AMBULANCE

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On 23 May 1974, Joseph Beuys left his home in Düsseldorf, Germany, wrapped in a felt blanket, and was transporte­d by ambulance to the airport where he boarded a flight to JFK. Wheelchair­bound, he was again conveyed by ambulance – without ever physically touching American soil – to the René Block Gallery at 409 West Broadway where, for three days, he locked himself in a large metal cage with a wild coyote. During his 72 hours in its company, Beuys – still wrapped in the felt cloth, wearing gloves and a felt hat he didn’t once take off, and armed with a cane, a flashlight, a tape player and a triangle – learned to share the space with the animal, under the curious gaze of gallery visitors (a few hundred at the most, thankfully without smartphone­s). Every day, 50 copies of The Wall Street Journal were placed in the cage on which the coyote pissed with admirable regularity (as well as on the felt blanket), its behaviour going from belligeren­t to indifferen­t to “friendly.” Entitled I Like America and America Likes Me, Beuys’s performanc­e has often been exaggerate­d in retellings (as though that were necessary); perhaps our admiration for great works makes us want them to be even more spectacula­r, or maybe truth isn’t a prerequisi­te for art. At the end of the three days, Beuys, still wrapped in the felt blanket, returned to JFK by ambulance and flew back to Düsseldorf.

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