Since the Modernist period, radical artists who have engaged in site specific activist performance art activities that involve the modality of power that they are questioning have often displayed the need to become secretive, aggressive, abstruse or deceptiv e in order to get their messages across. This is because such artists are presenting a spectacle that displays opposing ideological standards to those who are in power at the time. Whilst engaging in such activities, Surrealist anti-resistance freedom fighter Claude Cahun (1934 cited in Doy, 2006, p.76) argued that ‘indirect, rather than direct suggestion of political meaning and action is preferable, both from the point of view of art and that of politics’. This paper will examine Clau...