Ever since it was founded, the CAYC (Centro de Arte y Comunicación), helmed by the cultural promoter, artist, and businessman Jorge Glusberg, was intended as an interdisciplinary space where an experimental art movement could flourish. The establishment of collaborative networks connecting local and international artists and critics played an important role in this process. In addition to the exhibitions, a program of different activities exposed attendees to the latest in art and scientific thinking. According to Glusberg, the coordination between theoretical thinking and artistic practice was an essential part of social change.
During the military dictatorship of General Juan Carlos Onganía, the CAYC became a cultural home for the Fundación de Investigación Interdisciplinaria, a space that welcomed a group of dissident professors from the Facultad de Arquitectura y Ciencias Exactas de la Universidad de Buenos Aires after the military takeover of the university in what came to be known as “La Noche de los Bastones Largos” in June 1966. In its early years the center organized a variety of activities with intellectuals that contributed to the circulation of ideas from different disciplines (analytical philosophy, mathematical logic, epistemological problems, psychology, semiotics, and linguistics), which had been excluded from official circles.
The center’s interest led to the creation of the Escuela de Altos Estudios (EAE) in early 1973. The objectives described in the relevant newsletters (GT-201; doc. no. 1478752, GT-201- A; doc. no. 1478753, GT-224; doc. no. 1478771, GT-219; doc. no. 1478755) were apparent in the activities organized by the EAE (some of them were of a more technical nature, others more interdisciplinary), as well as in the art produced by artists associated with the center. This initiative was an expression of the mood of openness of the “Cultural Spring” that flowered during the brief democratic presidency of Héctor J. Cámpora, which lasted forty-nine days in 1973. It was seen as putting an end to a seven-year period of military dictatorships (first under Onganía, then Levingston, and then Lanusse), after Perón had been in exile for eighteen years.
Félix G. Schuster (1935–2017) graduated from the Universidad de Buenos Aires in 1963 with a degree in philosophy. He then specialized in philosophy of science, first under the direction of Mario Bunge (1919–2020) and later with Gregorio Klimovsky (1922–2009) as his first grant holder. After the military takeover of universities, he was relieved of his teaching position at the UBA. A grant from the British Council allowed him to continue his postgraduate studies at the University of London, where one of his professors was Karl Popper (1902–94), the renowned Austrian-born British theorist. When he returned to Buenos Aires in 1972 he was one of the founding members of the Sociedad Argentina de Análisis Filosófico (SADAF). (See the following documents in the ICAA Digital Archive: [GT-120 [la lógica y el método hipotético deductivo]; doc. no. 1478803, GT 120 [la discusión acerca de los conceptos de estructura y modelos]); doc. no. 1478802].