Analyse
De Jong was indeed excluded from the SI in 1962 due to internal conflicts, including her association with the *Nashist* group and her refusal to conform to the SI’s increasingly dogmatic directives under Guy Debord. Her statement aligns with historical accounts of her proactive response—founding *The Situationist Times* (1962–67) and continuing her artistic practice as a form of resistance. The phrase ‘the Situationist who wasn’t’ mirrors how she was dismissed by the SI, while her emphasis on action (‘who *did*’) reflects her documented rejection of their hierarchical control. Primary sources, including her interviews and the *Tate* lecture itself, corroborate this narrative.
Achtergrond
The Situationist International (1957–72) was a radical avant-garde group that sought to dissolve art into revolutionary praxis, but it became known for its purges and internal expulsions. De Jong, a Dutch painter and editor, was expelled in 1962 for her perceived deviations, including her collaboration with artists outside the SI’s approval. Her subsequent work, particularly *The Situationist Times*, became a platform for experimental art and ideas that directly challenged the SI’s orthodoxy.
Samenvatting verdict
Jacqueline de Jong’s statement accurately reflects her documented exclusion from the Situationist International (SI) and her subsequent artistic and personal defiance of their authority.