Arts & International Affairs: Volume 2, Issue 1 | Page 32

“immediately recognizable by anyone who directly experienced that prison which was also the war.” They consist of nothing else than numbers indicating the amount of days a soldier had still to serve, and survive, until the end of the commission (o final da comissão). Collected from flea markets, these documents communicate pain, terror and boredom (“there is absolutely nothing here”; see Figure ��); they symbolize the seeming endlessness of each and every day that had to pass before yet another number could be crossed. The artist’s approach is minimalistic. No additional language is required, just numbers from � to ��� or lists of years, months, and weeks. Despite their materiality, these documents cannot be limited to materiality; they are “inextricably connected with individual people.” At the same time, they show “the shared experience of a generation”—the men of Botelho’s generation (Möller ����:���). Are these diaries witnesses, perhaps even moral witnesses? Figure 14. Manuel Botelho, Contagem Descrescente 1967–1969 (�). Photograph: Manuel Botelho. (Courtesy: The artist) 31