Tucumán Arde [Tucumán Is Burning] is the most famous collective production of emerging vanguard art in Argentina, both in Buenos Aires and Rosario, and it took place at the turning point of the artists’ political and artistic radicalization in 1968. Its design implied a complex process of research and counter-information as well as a mass-media campaign. Given the fact that they were an integral part of the investigation, many artists (mostly from Rosario) traveled to Tucumán for a second time in October 1968. It was in that province that, with the support of trade-union members, journalists, and other collaborators, the artists developed an underground registry of work pertaining to the social situation of sugar mills (closed by then), schools, hospitals, and so forth, seeking information that would evidence the official campaign’s deception respecting the so-called Operativo Tucumán. A variety of media was used, including recordings, photographs, and films.
One of the goals of the Tucumán Arde exhibition focused in producing an “overinformational” event in the mass media, which was expected to result in large-scale public repercussions. In that sense, the different mentions and references generated by the successive phases of Tucumán Arde in dailies, general-interest journals, and political publications, both national and international, provide an account of the strategy’s success in reaching the mass media.