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Defastenism is a Remodernist art movement founded in Dublin in 2004. The Defastenists are also known as The Defastenist Party. Artists who have participated in it include Gary Farrelly, Pádraic E. Moore, Alexander Reilly, Liam Ryan, Sophie Iremonger and Nessa Darcy. Origins Defastenism was founded in May 2004 by undergraduates at the Dublin National College of Art and Design, Gary Farrelly, , Ben Mullen, Alexander Reilly and Seanan Kerr. Moore, Farrelly and Reilly co-wrote a Defastenist manifesto. Their expression of an inner world has some parallels with Surrealism, as does their fixation with obsolescence and the uncanny. As of 2007, with the resignation of Alexander Reilly the remaining group's most prominent members are Liam Ryan(London), Pádraic E. Moore, Gary Farrelly (based in Paris), David Turpin (Dublin), Donna Marie O'Donovan (Dublin) and Christoph Kronke (Berlin). Philosophy The Defastenists state: # We believe that art is a mission demanding complete fanaticism. # It is our duty as Defastenists to excavate fully our fetishes, obsessions and desires through material forms of cultural production. # We oppose aesthetic dematerialization and are dedicated to the art object, the obsessive generation of which manifests itself in all aspects of Defastenist activity. # Our meticulous process of production in any and all media reflects a fundamental faith in the Utopian functions of art. # We reject cynicism and disaffection. We are allied to the founding Fathers and Mothers of Modernism and share their faith in progress. # Defastenism proposes an art that is all encompassing. Our practice unites the conscious and the unconscious, the private and the public. It is inflected with nostalgia; it is of the present and for the future. # The Defastenist Party and its members assume an auto-propulsive role in the actualisation of personal and professional ambitions, while maintaining complete loyalty to the Party. # We aspire to be both an institution and an Establishment, complete with rules and rigour. # At all times there exists a physical headquarters from which we conduct our ventures and campaigns. Activities Initially the Defastenists staged weekly cabarets or happenings ("Cabaretta Defastena") in Dublin, and have held similar events consisting of performance, lectures, and recitals in Galway, Belfast, London, Paris and Berlin. They have staged group shows in Dublin, Limerick, Berlin and Paris, exhibiting mainly two-dimensional art in random styles and installations. Happenings and screenings include Europa and Kunstbahnhoff. In 2005, they staged a "provocative, young and energetic exhibition" at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. In May 2005, The Dubliner said: In August 2005, Gary Farrelly and Alex Reilly represented the Defastenists in Addressing the Shadow and Making Friends with Wild Dogs: Remodernism at CBGB 313 gallery in New York City, along with Stuckist artists and Remodernist film makers and Stuckist Photographers. In 2005, Victoria Mary Clarke, author and now wife of Shane MacGowan, joined the group, having heard the members were attractive young men who liked dressing in white tailcoats. Crisis, decline and post Defastenist activity The Defastenists have not exhibited or published as a unified group since early 2006. All of the practitioners involved in the group continue to work in a manner closely in line with the ideals expressed in the Defastenist Manifesto. Certain members of the group have collaborated on non-defastenist - obsessive art projects such as PLANS SECTIONS AND ELEVATIONS an exhibition curated by Moore involving Farrelly, Turpin and Kronke which went on show at The Royal Institute of architects, Dublin in 2007. Several members of the group also collaborated on the 2009 periodical The New Obsessive.
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