27 April 05 - 22:45Three Stages of Event-Based Art
Fluxus has often been concerned with art as an event or art as an
experience. This is evidenced by the "happenings" of Allan Kaprow
as well as by later performances by artists such as Al Hansen and Yoko
Ono (Yoko Ono Piano Drop). The Fluxboxes and Fluxkits constructed by
many Fluxus artists might also be considered as experiential and
event-based works in some ways.
Event-based art may sometimes be perceived as being fleeting moments of
an ephemeral temporal nature. While the performative aspect of
event-based art is temporary, event based art actually consists of
three stages, of which only the event is temporary. The three stages
are:
- Conception and Planning
- Activity/Performance/Event
- Documentation
Conception and Planning:
This stage usually leaves lasting evidence in the form of drawings, diagrams, or event scripts.
The Event:
Performative and temporary - it may be the "main event", but it is not the only act in the show.
Documentation:
Evidence of the event will usually exist in the conception and planning
evidence, as well many event-based artworks also have the event or
performance documented in the form of audio or video recordings.
Fluxboxes and Fluxkits may also be considered as event documentation
insofar as they are the documentary evidence of their preparation.
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24 April 05 - 13:35Experimental / Experiential
Where does Fluxus fit within the history of art? From the
beginning of human art-making there have coexisted two streams in the
history of art. Art was either made to be decorative and illustrative,
or created to serve an experiential spiritual purpose. This statement
is not meant to imply that decorative art cannot be spiritual or that
religious/shamanistic art can't also be decorative. Clearly there are
numerous examples of art that is both decorative and experiential.
However, what is important is the purpose for which the art was
created.
I think that to most members of the public
art is viewed as serving a primarily decorative function. This
assumption applies even to 'traditional' religious art which is seen to
be decorative and also illustrative, but is often not seen for the
deeper experiential emotions which it is meant to evoke. Art that is
primarily experiential, and that is not inclined to be simultaneously
decorative, is perceived by many people as being incomprehensible. It
has been a lesson throughout human history, that what is not understood
is generally also hated.
Fluxus is part of a tradition in art that places experimentation with the experiential nature of art as a high priority.
While this tradition predates modernism and can be found in examples
from throughout history, the experiential tradition has most clearly be
articulated and evidenced since the beginning of the twentieth century.
This is when experimentation with experiential art resulted in an overt
separation of art-making from decoration manufacturing and
illustration. Dada, Fluxus/Intermedia, Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art
and Minimalism have elevated experimentation with concepts, and
experiential "art as event" into discreet art movements. The
unfortunate side effect of art as experience, art as concepts, or art
as event — has been that many people have been unable to disassociate
themselves from the belief that all art must be decorative or
illustrative in order to be called "art". Even while Fluxus and
Intermedia make art more accessible to more people, people are having
difficulty accepting the accessibility of experiential art because they
are finding it difficult to accept it as "art".
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18 April 05 - 21:51Fluxus Free Zone Intervention Event
The
"Fluxus Intervention Event" is my own contribution to the living Fluxus
intermedia experiment. I have designed a simple graphic, printed onto 2
in. by 4 in. labels. The labels read "Fluxus Free Zone". In smaller
type they also read "Certified Official". The interventions occur
clandestinely throughout the city. By applying the labels to selected
sign-posts in public spaces, the entire space is declared to be a
"Fluxus Free Zone".
The Fluxus Intervention Events
serve to bring personal ideas into the public domain, while also
questioning the rights of corporations versus the rights of individuals
to bring messages into public spaces. Corporate interests have overrun
public urban spaces with incessant and unavoidable demands to consume
their products. The application of a tiny label into this hijacked
public space helps force the issue of thinking critically about who has
the right to display their messages in public spaces and how that right
is either exercised or thwarted.
There
is also deliberate ambiguity over the nature of what constitutes a
Fluxus Free Zone. Some may be Fluxus Free-Zones, e.g. an area which is
suitable for Fluxus-friendly people and events. Others may be
Fluxus-Free
Zones, e.g. areas in which anything Fluxus would be alien. There is
also the matter of the label being "Certified Official", as Fluxus is
an entirely free-form anti-organization community where the idea of
anybody or group declaring with authority that an event or object is
official is antithetical to the Fluxus idea and ideals. Since it is
impossible for anything Fluxus to be "Certified Official", in the
spirit of Fluxus, I have decided to label my labels as being "Certified
Official".
The
labels are also available for printout on the internet so that people
can extend the Fluxus Free Zone Intervention Events into their own communities. I
am also sending out labels in mail-art. My digital printmaking work has
also begun to include the Interventions as I patrol Toronto
with my digital camera and photograph the labels where I find them
displayed. The digital prints are then further modified (Fluxified?) by
the application of a Fluxus Free Zone
label to each print which allows the owner of each piece to declare
their own Fluxus Free Zone wherever they choose to display the work.
Prints can be viewed at my online gallery at DigitalSalon.com.
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18 April 05 - 21:50Video as Intermedia
In the Spring 2005 issue of
Canadian Art Magazine
there is a three part feature article by "media arts legend" Tom
Sherman called VIDEO 2005. The first part is titled "video
(intermedia)".
Whenever I see video described as being
"intermedia" I generally say, "Here we go again, another artist or
writer who doesn't know the difference between multimedia and
intermedia". But being interested in both multimedia and intermedia, I
read the articles anyway. Sherman's article was different than most
because it turns out that he knows the difference between intermedia
and multimedia very well. In fact, he quotes Dick Higgins in the third
papragraph of the article. Sherman uses a 1966 quote by Higgins ("Much
of the best work being produced today seems to fall between media") to
argue that video is the "between media" medium that Fluxus was missing
in the 1960s.
While I credit Tom Sherman for basing his article
on solid research and for giving credit to Dick Higgins and Fluxus, I
would dispute his conclusion that video is intermedia, or even that
video is the medium best suited to documenting intermedia. Fluxus is
too fluid to be limited to any medium. And Higgins' and Friedman's idea
of intermedia would extend to video as well; video is just another
concrete medium, albeit one with more flexibility than most others.
Still, intermedia is what is occurring between media, including between
video and other media.
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18 April 05 - 21:49George Brecht
George Brecht was one of the early members of Fluxus in the United
States. He was born in the town of Halfway, Oregon in 1924. It seems
fitting that an important Fluxus artist would come from a place called
"Halfway"; Fluxus being a movement that is seldom "All-the-way" to
anywhere in particular.
Brecht
was one of the students attending John Cage's New School of Social
Research in 1958 and 1959. He was associated with many of the Fluxus
and related artists of the 1960s including, Daniel Spoerri, Dick
Higgins, John Cage, Ray Johnson, Ken Friedman, and Alison Knowles. An
article about Fluxus, written in 1964 by George Brecht can be read
online at
http://www.artnotart.com, an excerpt from the article follows:
Whether you think that concert halls, theaters, and art galleries are
the natural places to present music, performances, and objects, or find
these places mummifying, preferring streets, homes, and railway
stations, or do not find it useful to distinguish between these two
aspects of the world theater, there is someone associated with Fluxus
who agrees with you. Artist, anti-artists, non-artists, anartists, the
politically committed and the apolitical, poets of non-poetry,
non-dancers dancing, doers, undoers, and non-doers, Fluxus encompasses
opposites. Consider opposing it, supporting it, ignoring it, changing
your mind.
In my mind, Brecht encompasses the true
spirit of Fluxus in the short statement above. Brecht was prescient in
anticipating the core concepts of post-modernism while living in the
midst of the modern era. Maybe the world owes much more to Fluxus than
has been acknowledged to date. The idea of embracing polarity and
dialogue rather than encouraging debate between conflicting positions
is now being widely accepted in the popular literature around business,
politics, and social issues.
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18 April 05 - 21:48John Cage
The composer and artist John Cage was an important influence on the
development of Fluxus in the United States. Cage was born in Los
Angeles, California in 1912 and died in 1992. His influence was
imparted through his work and through his teaching. In his work, he was
known for pioneering the use of silence as a compositional tool. His
most renowned work in this theme being 4'33", which consisted entirely
of four minutes and 33 seconds of silence from the stage. David
Bernstein writes in Corner Magazine:
The description of 4'33"--the musical analog for Robert Rauschenberg's
white canvases--as a composition without sound is misleading. 4'33" was
not merely a philosophical statement without any real musical content.
Cage has maintained that an audience experiencing 4'33" has an
opportunity to listen, in an aesthetic way, to what there is to hear.
He believed that we are all free at any time and in any place to
listen, in a musical way, to the sounds that are around us. He
eliminated the distinction between musical and environmental sound,
thus achieving a fusion of art and life in a musical context. Reference
Article
Works like 4'33" encourage the audience to be mindful of all of the
ambient sounds around them. Cage discovered that it is actually
impossible for us to experience absolute silence. Even when placed into
artificially created environments in which physical silence is close to
complete, people become aware of the sounds that their own bodies make
as living organisms. The pulse of our heartbeats, the 'ringing' in our
ears, and the sounds made as we shift position, suddenly take on
prominence, as external environmental sounds diminish. Cage was also
interested in Zen Buddhism which encourages the type of mindfulness
expressed in works like 4'33".
Cage's educational contibution is exemplified by his work at Black
Mountain College in the early 1950s and at The New School of Social
Research in New York in the late 1950s. His students at The New School
included many of the early Fluxus artists, including, George Brecht,
Dick Higgins, Allan Kaprow, and Jackson Mac Low. John Cage's work was
featured at the first "official" Fluxus event in Europe which was
organized by George Maciuanas. George Brecht, Dick Higgins, Nam June
Paik, Allison Knowles, and Emmet Williams, among others also performed
at this event. In 1989 John Cage wrote an autobiography which is
available at
http://www.newalbion.com/artists/cagej/autobiog.html. In
an excerpt from this autobiography, he describes himself:
Neither of my parents went to college. When I did, I dropped out after
two years. Thinking I was going to be a writer, I told Mother and Dad I
should travel to Europe and have experiences rather than continue in
school. I was shocked at college to see one hundred of my classmates in
the library all reading copies of the same book. Instead of doing as
they did, I went into the stacks and read the first book written by an
author whose name began with Z. I received the highest grade in the
class. That convinced me that the institution was not being run
correctly. I left.
It was at Black Mountain College that I made what is sometimes said to
be the first happening. The audience was seated in four isometric
triangular sections, the apexes of which touched a small square
performance area that they faced and that led through the aisles
between them to the large performance area that surrounded them.
Disparate activities, dancing by Merce Cunningham, the exhibition of
paintings and the playing of a Victrola by Robert Rauschenberg, the
reading of his poetry by Charles Olsen or hers by M. C. Richards from
the top of a ladder outside the audience, the piano playing of David
Tudor, my own reading of a lecture that included silences from the top
of another ladder outside the audience, all took place within
chance-determined periods of time within the over-all time of my
lecture. It was later that summer that I was delighted to find in
America's first synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, that the
congregation was seated in the same way, facing itself. From John Cage:
An Autobiographical Statement.
We can readily make the connections between Cage and Fluxus from the
excerpt above. We can also see how John Cage continues to inform and to
influence the work or artists, writers, composers, and musicians today.
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18 April 05 - 21:48Crispin Webb
Fluxus is much more than only an historical movement in the arts. In
addition to having a rich and interesting history, Fluxus continues to
be of significance to the current cultural tapestry of the world.
Crispin Webb may not be a household name. He may not be a seminal
figure in art history. But he is a great example of contemporary Fluxus
art and practice.
Crispin performs historical fluxus events in his studio in Ohio, and scripts new events there as well. His Web site at
http://www.crispinwebb.com/
is repleat with performance recordings, audio works, Fluxus objects,
and written Fluxus works. In the true spirit of Fluxus, Crispin calls
his work "intermedia" as Fluxus was described by Dick Higgins and Ken
Friedman. He also refers to himself as being "Phony Fluxus" rather than
Fluxus because of the hybrid nature of his work. I am somewhat less
inclined to draw the same distinction because Fluxus has never really
been very dogmatic or inflexible.
Here are a couple of ideas proposed by Crispin on his Web site:
Make a tree house in my studio with sculptures and
electronic mechanisms run on vinegar and lemons.
Rusn
my whole apt by extension cord from another apt in my building or down
the street. I should document this idea even if I don't actually do it.
Sell sculptures on EBay and send the buyers the sculpture and several other editions of works that I have made for them.
The
last project has been realized a few times already, so if your interest
is piqued by this article or by a visit to Crispin Webb's Web site, be
sure to
visit E-Bay to search for his work!
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18 April 05 - 21:47A Bit About Marcel
Marcel
Duchamp was not considered to be closely associated with Fluxus.
However, as Fluxus owes at least part of its historical significance to
Dada, I think that Duchamp's influence needs to be appreciated. Perhaps
part of the reason that early Fluxus artists tended to dissociate
themselves from Dada was due to early tendencies of art journalists to
call Fluxus "Neo-Dada". Fluxus artists in the early days of Fluxus
needed to present themselves as something different from Dada and as
something new, which they were. However, with the luxury of hindsight,
it is clear that while different from Dada, Fluxus shared certain
concepts with Dada. Maciuanas called for "anti-art" as did the Dada
artists. Fluxus artists made use of "automatic" writing and music
techniques based on selective randomness and minimal intervention by
the artists. As I see it, one of the biggest differences between
Dada and Fluxus is that Fluxus replaced the pessimistic nihilism of
Dada with optimism and humor.Marcel
Duchamp with his "ready-mades" fits in with the Fluxus propensity
towards mixing humor and serious theory. The ready-mades may have been
precursors to the Fluxkits and other Fluxus objects. Duchamp too, by
the 1960s had stopped making art in any traditionally recognizable form
and had turned to playing chess as his sole means of artistic
expression. This activity can be viewed as being analogous to a Fluxus
event.
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18 April 05 - 21:44The Collection Problem
The Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus Collection is
probably the largest collection of historical Fluxus objects in the
world today. While it is hard to overstate the importance of preserving
the history of Fluxus, collections like those of the Silverman’s
present a double-edged sword. While protecting the Fluxus heritage,
collectors and curators also have a vested interest in killing Fluxus
and keeping it dead. If no new Fluxus objects can be created or
accepted as legitimate Fluxus, then the value of the collection,
especially the financial value, increases.
When the financial
incentives to keeping Fluxus dead are added to the personality cult
around George Maciunas maintained by the collectors and friends of
Maciunas, like Jon Hendricks, who curates the collection, it presents a
barrier to acceptance of current Fluxus personalities.
The
barrier is artificial and is not very difficult to breach though. On a
purely practical basis Fluxus was never dogmatic enough to hold onto a
single, uniformly accepted identity. Also, there is no way to stop
artists from continuing to work in the Fluxus form and from calling
themselves and their work "Fluxus". So despite the efforts of
collectors and a few historians with vested interests, Fluxus continues
to live and thrive more than forty years after its inception.
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18 April 05 - 21:43The Maciunas Question
Was George Maciunas Fluxus?
George Maciunas is generally
credited with coining the term "Fluxus". During his lifetime he was
also very closely associated with Fluxus and often tried to dictate the
terms of membership in the Fluxus community. After his death, a small
cadre of collectors and associates attempted to declare that Fluxus
died along with Maciunas.
Fluxus did not require Maciunas as
much as Maciunas needed Fluxus though. George's insistent attempts to
dictate the terms of Fluxus while simultaneously encouraging as many
artists as he could to join him, instead had the effect of causing
Fluxus to slip away from him.
Besides his close association with
Fluxus, and even his coining of the word, the Fluxus movement predates
Maciuanas, and continued on independent of him. Naming something is not
the same as owning it, and nobody could, or can lay claim to owning an
idea as amorphous as Fluxus.
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18 April 05 - 21:43Should a Moment Last Forever?
From an academic panel discussion on April 5, 1997:
The
"whatness" of art that is designed as ephemeral, art that has the
"momentary" aspect as a principal element was the subject of this panel
discussion. Participants were asked to address the problems faced in
documenting, collecting, preserving and archiving intentionally
ephemeral works of art: i.e., those designed for specific time/space
constructs, or those which are temporal by nature. Should the ephemeral
work be allowed to expire? Can documentation accurately represent art
that is intended to be transitory? What is it that is documented -- the
moment, its essence, or only a hint of what actually transpires? Should
electronic art be captured, downloaded and put through format changes?
How do we handle intermedia which deal with processes of change or
virtual reality? Do librarians, archivists and curators of collections
have the right and/or responsibility to preserve installation art,
performance art or other time arts? How can librarians, educators and
artists share in documenting and creating access to these types of
information? Should libraries act as conventional repositories, or
spaces for audience interaction with these materials?
Moderator: Henrietta Zielinski, Bibliographer, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Sponsor: ARLIS/NA New Art Round Table
Full Article at
http://www.arlisna.org/
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18 April 05 - 21:42What it is:
1) Fluxus makes the mundane magical
2) Fluxus happens when one feels that life and art must be taken so
seriously, that it becomes impossible to take life or art seriously.
3) Ordinary acts and ordinary objects perceived in extraordinary ways.
4) Other ideas...
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18 April 05 - 21:42What it Was:
Perhaps the clearest description of Fluxus in the early days comes from
George Brecht, as quoted by Hannah Higgins in her book,
The Fluxus Experience. Brecht says,
In
Fluxus there has never been any attempt to agree on aims or methods;
individuals with something unnameable in common have simply naturally
coalesced to publish and perform their work. Perhaps this common
something is a feeling that the bounds of art are much wider than they
have conventionally seemed, or that art and certain long established
bounds are no longer very useful.
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18 April 05 - 21:41George Maciunas
Thanks to T. Sulaiti, who has a great page of infromation about George
Maciunas because Maciunas was a family friend, I have added two short
quotes from Maciunas (transcribed from scans on Mr. Sulaiti's Web site)
as well as a short quote from Sulaiti. Maciunas is considered to be one
of the "founding fathers" of Fluxus so I am very grateful for the
firsthand information at:
http://www.slonet.org/~tsulaiti/fluxus.htm
Promote a revolutionary flood and tide in art.
Promote
living art, anti-art, promote NON ART REALITY to be grasped by all
peoples, not only critics, dilettantes and professionals. ~ George Maciunas
"I
remember visiting George with my dad and being flabbergasted by his
projects. Some of my favorites were the suicide kits and feces kits
that he sold. The suicide kit consisted of small compartmentalized
clear plastic boxes that contained the necessary tools to do yourself
in. This kit did not include instructions so you had to get creative
with some of the objects. One was a fish hook on a string that George
pointed out. The hook would be swallowed then by pulling up the on
string you would get to your maker."
~ T. Sulaiti (Who has several original pieces by George Maciunas on his Web site)
Purge the world of bourgeois sickness.
"intellectual", professional & commercialized culture,
PURGE
the world of dead art, imitation, articficial art, abstract art,
illusionistic art, mathematical art, -- PURGE THE WORLD OF "EUROPANISM" ~ George Maciunas
Source: http://www.slonet.org/~tsulaiti/fluxus.html
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18 April 05 - 21:40Before the Beginning
The very first post on The Fluxus Blog said that Fluxus arrived in America in 1962. While 1962 may have been the year of the first Fluxus exhibition in America, Fluxus was happening in New York in the 1950s.
In the years 1957 to 1959 John Cage was teaching a music composition course which was attended by many of the early Fluxus activists, including Dick Higgins, George Brecht and Al Hansen. This was also where and when Allan Kaprow first conceived of, and exhibited his
happenings, and other Fluxus artists were creating art and music
events and were producuing the scores to performing the events.
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18 April 05 - 21:39From an Interview with Allan Kaprow
John Held Jr. interviewing Allan Kaprow in 1988:
JH: It occurs to me that alot of this type of activity had precursors in the Dada movement...
AK: Sure. And the Futurists.
JH: ..it was in the air then too, and then it petered out in the twenties, thirties..
AK: That's right.
JH:
...forties, and then all of a sudden in the fifties - here it was again
- with yourself, and the Fluxus people, and Gutai in Japan...
AK: They were before us.
JH: ...and Yves Klein and the Nouveau Realists in France.
AK: Right.
JH: It just happened again. Why? Why after all those years...
AK:
There's no explanation for it. The usual kind of exhaustion principle,
that the prior avant-garde had exhausted itself is true, but it's not
an adequate explanation, because you don't find it happening with every
exhaustion. So, why it happened pundits will have fun on speculating,
and I'm sure they're all right.
Full Transcript of Interview
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18 April 05 - 21:38How to Find the Fluxus Answers
1) Ask a fluxus expert
2) Ask another fluxus expert
3) Make sure that the two experts disagree with each other
4) Make sure that you do not agree with either expert
5) Read a book
6) Follow all of the preceding steps
7) Question everything that you learned by following the preceding steps
8) Now you have the answers
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18 April 05 - 21:38Some Fluxus Questions
What is fluxus? Is fluxus an art movement or a social movement? Is
fluxus still active or is fluxus now history? Is fluxus art or
anti-art? Is fluxus dada, neo-dada, anti-dada, or something else
entirely? Is fluxus dead? Can fluxus be defined? Is fluxus still
relevant? Was fluxus important or impotent? Dose fluxus matter? Is
fluxus matter? Should anybody care about fluxus? Is fluxus collectable?
Is there a dfference between fluxus and dada? Is the answer to these
questions yes, no, or maybe? What is the right answer to the previous
question? Is there a right answer? Does it matter?
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18 April 05 - 21:36In The Beginning
Fluxus had its beginnings in Europe during the 1950s. Fluxus was
introduced to America in 1962 by George Maciunas. One of the first
fluxus exhibitions, the "Fluxus International Festspiele", was put on
in Wiesbaden, Germany in September of 1962.
Some
of the artists, performers and writers who were active in the early
days were; George Maciunas, Yoko Ono, Dick Higgins, Alison Knowles, Al
Hansen, Ken Friedman and Nam June Paik. Several others were involved
with fluxus but did not always call themselves fluxus artists such as
Ray Johnson, Allan Kaprow, and John Cage.
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