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17 February 08 - 13:59Energy That Matters: Leonard Cohen


  • Jean Baudrillard
  • Charles Bukowski
  • John Cage
  • Leonard Cohen

He was never closely associated with Fluxus, and his work falls pretty neatly into the modernist traditions of art and writing. So, why have I chosen to write about Cohen in The Fluxus Blog? I guess that the first connection that can be made between him and Fluxus is that one could make the argument that as a poet, singer, and songwriter, Leonard Cohen is engaged in the original Intermedia form. What could be more Intermedia than the intersection between poetry, music, and performance? I think that the argument is valid. But it is not overwhelmingly convincing. Fluxus was also about experimentation, humor, and postmodern philosophical ideas. Never-the-less, I think that poetic minstrels, like Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, at the dawn of the postmodern era, deserve a place at the Fluxus table. I chose Cohen primarily because of one stanza in one song. The song is Famous Blue Raincoat, and the stanza speaks about a friend who has moved into the desert to build a small home and plans to live off of the land. Cohen says of his friend, "You're living for nothing now, I hope you're keeping some kind of record." And for me, this moves Cohen's work outside of the modernist realm and into the realm of postmodern reflections on meaning and language.

  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Allen Ginsberg
  • Albert Einstein
  • Karl Marx
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Andy Warhol

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07 February 08 - 21:30Energy That Matters: John Cage


  • Jean Baudrillard
  • Charles Bukowski
  • John Cage

    The Godfather of Fluxus. John Cage may never have been a member of the Fluxus movement as it existed under the auspices of George Maciunas, but Cage was a seminal figure for Fluxus and for all postmodern art that came after him. Cage made the observation, that in retrospect seems very simple, but which in its effect on arts and culture was enormous, that music consisted of nothing but sound. One way of composing music was to use the standard European music notation system. But since music was nothing but sound, Cage reasoned that it could be composed using any sounds. Natural sounds, manufactured sounds. Sounds usually thought of as noise. Even silence, and the sounds that occur within a "silent" environment. While artists working around the same time were already looking at paintings as being composed only of paint on canvas, and drawings as being composed purely of marks on paper, Cage opened the door much wider - to art being constructed out of anything that could be sensed by humans. Therefore the role of the artists expanded to include any person who created things that could be sensed by other people. In fact since a musical composition could consist solely of the score for a performance, art could also now exist solely as the score (i.e. Fluxus event scores) for constructing an object, performance, or Intermedia composition.

  • Leonard Cohen
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Allen Ginsberg
  • Albert Einstein
  • Karl Marx
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Andy Warhol

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03 February 08 - 11:23Energy That Matters: Charles Bukowski


  • Jean Baudrillard
  • Charles Bukowski

    Bukowski, while contemporary to Fluxus, was never a part of it, and I suspect he would not have wanted to be. Equally, I suspect that the contemporaneous Fluxus people would not have been keen to have him.

    Never-the-less, Bukowski is an important figure for understanding the Fluxus Attitude. His poetry insists on two features that are important to Fluxus practice; accessibility and brevity. Bukowski embodies the Fluxus ideal of cutting away superfluous cultural baggage to tell big stories using a few small words. And one does not need to have a multi-volume dictionary handy to understand what he is saying.

  • John Cage
  • Leonard Cohen
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Allen Ginsberg
  • Albert Einstein
  • Karl Marx
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Andy Warhol

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03 February 08 - 11:06Energy That Matters: Jean Baudrillard


  • Jean Baudrillard


  • Baudrillard may not have invented postmodernism, but he provided one on the best descriptions of it in his book, Simulacra and Simulations. Baudrillard describes a cultural universe in which humanity exists in a perpetual hall of mirrors, epitomized by television and the Internet. The media present us with an idealized world view that we consciously and unconsciously attempt to emulate --- then the media reflects our attempts at mimicry back at us, in an endless loop of copying ourselves copying a non-existent, fictional version of reality.


    Baudrillard's postmodern universe is very much in keeping with the Fluxus Attitude, and with Intermedia practices.

  • Charles Bukowski
  • John Cage
  • Leonard Cohen
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Allen Ginsberg
  • Albert Einstein
  • Karl Marx
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Andy Warhol

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02 February 08 - 12:06Matter and Energy: Energy that Matters

In Alphabetical Order:

  • Jean Baudrillard
  • Charles Bukowski
  • John Cage
  • Leonard Cohen
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Allen Ginsberg
  • Albert Einstein
  • Karl Marx
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Andy Warhol

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