Everything 
          began in an afternoon of November, 2003, when I received a call from 
          Cardiff, Wales, Great Britain, by the Irish performer André Stitt. 
          I remember that in that afternoon I was preparing my baggage to travel 
          the next day, for participating in "Contrato" (Contract), 
          a performatic event which was to be held in Cordoba, Argentine, an event 
          organized by the Daniel Acosta, artist and performer from Buenos Aires, 
          and also by Ximena Narea, curator of the well remembered events PROYECTO 
          LIMES, in Montevideo and Buenos Aires, and by Luís Cuenca, Director 
          of the La Casona, Centro Cultural Municipal del Cordoba (events already 
          commented in later issues of Escáner Cultural) (Cultural Scanner, 
          an electronic magazine from Chile, South America).
        
          Still's call was to know whether I was inclined to accept an invitation 
          to participate of an exchange program of artists and promotions of a 
          culture called Visiting Arts, sponsored by British Council for the Arts 
          and by Henry Moore Foundation, which provide funds in many parts of 
          the world for exchanging experiences with local artists. Due to this 
          resources, British artists are able to invite an foreign artist, during 
          a week, to dialogue and know themselves and share common experiences. 
          Of course I accepted under previous consult with some members of my 
          Fan Club.
        
          André Stitt, born in Belfast, North Ireland, in 1958, is considered 
          one of the most important performers in the world. He has done about 
          300 performances since 1976 in galleries, festivals and encounters in 
          very good places. Stitt is identified for the tension and force of the 
          execution of his performances what resolves in a catharsis (what Stitt 
          calls "akshun"). His works center in political and social 
          themes, oppression, freedom, subversion, alienation experiences, culture 
          appropriation, ritual and transgressive actions. His artistic work incarnates 
          the contradictions of capitalism and the determination to the materialism 
          processes of construction and desintegration and the consequent via 
          crucis of the redemption. On other hand he commands the National School 
          of Fine Arts of Gales, in Cardiff, and the Trace Gallery, only dedicated 
          to the realization of performance and by which many world famous artists 
          have been passed.
        
          It is in such good ambience that I made the performance PUNTO FINAL, 
          on February 28th, at 6 p. m., in a very crowded room. I have already 
          done this work in Montevideo, in a kind of legality of human rights 
          and the situation of many parents of prisoners and disappeared for political 
          objectives during the bad period of dictatory in my country. I also 
          made some poetical performances and exchanges of impressions with the 
          Stiff's students of School of Fine Arts.
          An especial chapter was the escape to London for some days. It was good, 
          first, for knowing Stuart Brisley, one pioneer performer from 60's, 
          one of the first artists who gave the major impulse to the incipient 
          artistic gender. Known worldwide not only for his performance, but also 
          for his theoretical works, he is now a living glory of United Kingdom 
          and Europe. And, second, for unprecedented effect that assumed the encounter 
          of mail artists or networkers during my visit to London. All began for 
          a call, via Internet, to the world artists and of the island for a meeting 
          on February 26th in the entrance of Tate Gallery. So, until 14 p.m. 
          we were meeting Martha Aitchinson, Marisol Cavia, Pat Collins, Ed Wilson, 
          Julia Tant, Alan Turner (from UK); Guido Vermeulen, Don Jarvis, that 
          is, Dawn Redwood, Vic Scott, Geert de Decker, that is, Sztuka Fabrica 
          (from Belgium); Roberto Scala (from Italy); Peter Kustermann, that is, 
          Peter Netmail (from Germany); Erik the Viking (from Denmark); Diane 
          Thorel (from USA) and André Stitt, the last who gathered to the 
          group. During the presentations and dialogues of surprise for meeting 
          each others in these circumstances, for we belonged to many different 
          countries and languages, and after the exchange of magazines, postal 
          cards (Martha prepared an excellent post card with my poem PAZ = PAN), 
          addresses, objects (Peter gave me a German post-box) and poses for our 
          cameras, we went to the fourth floor for having a coffee and keep on 
          making our exchange.
        
          One time at the bar and after the soft drinks, PeterNetmail distributed 
          one postcard in which there is a photo of mine with a vacuum cleaner 
          on my body (it was a photo of a performance in the street during the 
          homage to Edgardo Antonio Vigo, which I organized in the Centro de Arte 
          Moderno de Quilmes, Buenos Aires, in 1998). On the high part of the 
          postcard one reads: "We will take contamination out of Clemente 
          Padin in Tate Gallery" (notice that the play of words between "descontaminaremos" 
          (to take contamination out of ) and "terminaremos" (to finish, 
          to end), date and local and partial list of the participants. First 
          the performers covered their faces with handkerchiefs and put on yellow 
          sterile gloves, dressed white tunics and covered their heads with nets. 
          They put a t-shirt on me on which one reads "ANTRAX POLIZEI" 
          (Anthrax Police), for I, fictionally, was supposed to bring radiations 
          and all kinds of germs, including the virus of Anthrax, for the fact 
          I came from Uruguay, 3rd World. Suddenly Peter started passing a vacuum 
          cleaner in all my body, while the others verified other parts of my 
          body. At the end, Dawns put a stamp with gum arabic in the back of my 
          hand on which there is a declaration that I deserve to belong to the 
          First World. The performance had a dramatic close when a sentinel called 
          for his supervisor. The supervisor very politely explained that everything 
          which has been done in the Gallery should be "curated" by 
          it and that realizations as ours should be with copyright as the property 
          of Gallery. We didn't go on and stopped the performance immediately 
          because we intended to avoid problems with laws and British police.
        
          Of course it was a bitter parody about the treatment received by travelers 
          from dependent countries when they arrive in metropolitan countries 
          (except in rare cases). In fact it starts with the ironic accent while 
          were are being questioned by the immigration clerks until the complete 
          nudeness searching for drugs. On one side the tragedy of illegal immigrants 
          looking for better levels of life, those one who suffer the hell of 
          exploitation and humiliation until they find a nice place to live (sometimes 
          only for survivence) and, on other side, disdain and loss of documents 
          of identity to which they are submitted to be accpted.
          But the reality always overcomes the fiction: nobody could imagine about 
          the implications of this jocose performance (which only inadvertent 
          public was the parishioner in the pub) would have to do with one of 
          the controverter institution of the system of arts and its market, the 
          COPYRIGHT. It treats about one of most difficult themes which can be 
          studied by the present jurisprudence about all questioning which has 
          arose by the artistic activity in networking (the net of artists which 
          work in cyberspace) and, also, by the postmodernism which ha done anything 
          with the old concepts of plagarism and other concepts related to the 
          old order.
        
          Another chapter was open when, due to a kind invitation from my old 
          friends Angel Pastor and Joan Casellas, I traveled to Barcelona taking 
          the opportunity of my travel to Europe. It was a very impressed meeting, 
          not only with Angel and Joan (with whom I have shared performatic spaces 
          in Montevideo, Buenos Aires and Cordoba one year later), but also with 
          all people from Barcelona, for I left good friends when I was there 
          in 1999, when invited by the University, I offered a lecture in the 
          Facultad de Filologia.
        
          My first action was on March, 2nd: a lecture to a group of students 
          in the Facultad de Bellas Artes of the University in charge of Prof. 
          Pilar Bonet on "Poetry and Political Action". In the same 
          day, in Espal Jove Boca Nord, I performed my work PUNTO FINAL (with 
          many changes, I should confess) in a journey organized by the collective 
          Z. A. I. (Zona de Acción Itinerante = Itinerant Action Zone), 
          which, among other things, the presentation of the book by Robert Filliou 
          "El Arte es lo que Hace la Vida más interessante que el 
          Arte" (Art is what makes the Life much more interesting than the 
          Art) with Spanish translation by artist Nelo Vila, from Valencia; with 
          the presentation of the book ART ACTION, in charge of its editor, the 
          Canadian performer Richard Martel and, else, exhibition of audiovisuals 
          of some of my works in the street, what I call "social and artistic 
          happenings" (for, in fact, I can call them "performances"). 
          Later, a wide space opened up for the performance and the works were 
          appearing one by one. First the hosts Angel Pastor and Joan Casellas 
          and, then, the invited artists: Richard Martel, Nelo Vilar, Valentin 
          Torren and me.
        
          On March, 3rd, with Angel, we made a quick visit to the mail-artist 
          César Reglero in Tarragona, a person who manages a singular institution 
          on the networking: the MUSEO DEL SOL, all for the exhibition of works 
          of mail art. He alone edits a magazine and daily updates and maintains 
          one of the most visited websites of digital art in the world: BOEK861. 
          We also enjoyed the company of the artist Isabel Jover and of the poet 
          Guillermo Marín.
          The following stage was to face the Instituto Catalán de Cooperación 
          Iberoamericana, on March 4th. There I gave a lecture on "The Latinamerican 
          digital poetry" illustrated by numerous examples taken from my 
          colleagues Regina Célia Pinto, Jorge Luiz Antonio, Fabio Doctorovich, 
          Ladislao Pablo Györi, Franklin Valverde, Roberto Keppler, Isabel 
          Aranda, Lorenzo Facorro, Alcides Martinez, Alexandre Venera, Fernando 
          Strano, Christián Diaz and Santiago Tavela.
        
          Then the most touching part of the travel came for me to live. Even 
          knowing by the program that "The act will be followed by the reading 
          and actions of the poets J. M. Calleja, Xavier Canals, Pere Sousa and 
          Gustavo Vega", I have never imagined that their interventions were 
          turned to parody my own experimental poem, which make me live moments 
          of intense emotion. The same happened on March 5th, in KABARET OPERT, 
          a bar which offers performances shows each first Friday each month late 
          evening. The interesting is that everyone who wants can go up to scenary 
          and make what he or she wants. In that place we give a lot of interviews 
          to many artists and I had the opportunity to enjoy an unforgettable 
          overtime. I read one of my experimental poet and a poem of my friend, 
          who was unfortunately dead, the North American Dick Higgins. We finished 
          the night in Stidna enjoying an excellent exhibition of its activities.
          Finally on March 7th I returned to London for taking a flight to Montevideo, 
          via São Paulo, sharing some hours of my flight with Martha Aitchison 
          and her husband, "Largo" John, a person who taught me to know 
          the best of London.
          
          Montevideo, Uruguay, March, 14th, 2004.
          
          Translator: Jorge Luiz Antonio