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Fluxus
                                               “Everything is art and anyone can do it”



Fluxus Street Theatre by George Maciunas,
Copyright: © 2007 Gilbert and Lila Silverman
Fluxus Collection Foundation, Detroit.
Fluxus

“Fluxus remains the most complex – and
therefore widely underestimated – artistic
movement (or “non-movement,” as it
called itself) of the early to mid-sixties . . .
Fluxus saw no distinction between art
and life, and believed that routine, banal,
and everyday actions could be regarded
as artistic events, declaring that
‘everything is art and everyone can do
it.’”
Hal Foster et al., Art Since 1900
Fluxus
 The Lithuanian-born George
 Maciunas launched the Fluxus
 movement in 1961



“What Fluxus was is a matter of
some debate. Was it an art
movement, an anti-art movement,
a sociopolitical movement or, as
the artists themselves tended to
protest, not a movement at all?”
Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World,
with Stillness,” New York Times 23 September
2011




                                                   George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965
                                                   Wikipedia
Fluxus
He had also studied with John
Cage at the New School




                                John Cage preparing a piano, c. 1964
                                Image source:
                                http://usoproject.blogspot.com/2008/01/european-premiere-john-cage-variations.html
Fluxus
Like Happenings, Fluxus
emphasized viewer participation
and an integration of art and life




                                     Allan Kaprow, Words, 1962
                                     Smolin Gallery, New York
                                     Image source: http://www.no-art.info/kaprow/works/1961_words.html
Fluxus
But Fluxus was more international
in scope




                                    Wiesbaden, Berlin and Kassel: Harlekin Art Berliner Kunstlerprogramm Des DAAD,
                                    1982. First edition. Image source:
                                    http://www.derringerbooks.com/shop/derringer/010077.html
Fluxus
And it was much closer to Dada in
its radical anti-art stance
Fluxus
Most Happenings were “theatrical”
in approach, retaining a division
between audience and performer




                                    Jim Dine, the Smiling Workman, 1960
Fluxus
But Fluxus strove to beak down this
division by creating what could be
called “do-it-yourself-art”
Fluxus
In 1963 Maciunas issued a Fluxus
Manifesto


 “PURGE the world of dead art . . . . “

 “Promote living art, anti-art, promote NON
 ART REALITY to be grasped by all
 peoples, not only critics, dilettantes and
 professionals.”




                                              George Maciunas, Fluxus Manifesto, 1963
                                              Image source:
                                              http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/gallery/2008/nov/03/fluxus-
                                              gallery?picture=339281412
Fluxus
A second Manifesto denounced art
as a self-promoting industry

ART

To justify artist's professional, parasitic and elite status in society,
he must demonstrate artist's indispensability and exclusiveness,
he must demonstrate the dependability of audience upon him,
he must demonstrate that no one but the artist can do art.

Therefore, art must appear to be complex, pretentious, profound,
serious, intellectual, inspired, skillful, significant, theatrical,
It must appear to be calculable as commodity so as to provide the
artist with an income.
To raise its value (artist's income and patrons profit), art is made
to appear rare, limited in quantity and therefore obtainable and
accessible only to the social elite and institutions.

George Maciunas, Manifesto on Art/Fluxus Art Amusement 1965
http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-artartamusement.html



                                                        George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965
                                                        Wikipedia
Fluxus
Maciunias promoted the idea of
Fluxus as a mass-produced
“amusement” that could be made
by anybody and that would be
accessible to all




                                 George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965
                                 Wikipedia
FLUXUS ART-AMUSEMENT
 Fluxus
Therefore, art-amusement must be simple, amusing, unpretentious,
concerned with insignificances, require no skill or countless
rehearsals, have no commodity or institutional value.

The value of art-amusement must be lowered by making it unlimited,
Mass-produced, obtainable by all and eventually produced by all.

Fluxus art-amusement is the rear-guard without any pretention
or urge to participate in the competition of "one-upmanship" with
the avant-garde. It strives for the monostructural and nontheatrical
qualities of simple natural event, a game or a gag. It is the fusion
of Spikes Jones Vaudeville, gag, children's games and Duchamp.

George Maciunas, Manifesto on Art/Fluxus Art Amusement 1965
http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-artartamusement.html




                                                           George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965
                                                           Wikipedia
Fluxus
To this end, Maciunas set up a a
Fluxshop and mail order business
where he sold “Fluxkits” comprised
of items made by various Fluxus
participants




                                     Fluxshop and Mailorder Warehouse, Fluxus Newspaper. Image source:
                                     http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
Fluxus
   The “Fluxkits” contained games,
   pamphlets, and other nonsensical
   items


“You could think of Fluxus as an
international, utopian conspiracy to alter
the world’s collective consciousness in
favor of noncompetitive fun and games
and other peaceable and pleasurable
pursuits. Their weapons of choice were
feeble jokes, verbal and visual puns, satiric
publications and instructions for absurd
performances. Bypassing the commercial
gallery system, Fluxus novelties were
meant to be sold cheaply by mail and in
artist-run stores.”
Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World, with
Stillness,” New York Times 23 September 2011




                                                        Fluxkit, 1964/65. Fluxus edition, assembled by George Maciunas. Photo: Walker Art
                                                        Center. Image source: http://slangfromchaos.wordpress.com/tag/fluxus/
Fluxus
They were inspired by Marcel
Duchamp’s Boite en valise, as well
as his penchant for games




                                     Marcel Duchamp, Boit en valise, 1941
Fluxus
A typical Fluxkit item is George
Brecht’s Water Yam -- a box of
“event scores” that were
instructions for ephemeral events




                                    George Brecht, Water Yam, 1963
                                    Flickr
George Brecht, Word Event, 1961.
From: Water Yam (collected scores), 1986.
George Brecht, Two Vehicles Events, 1961
MOTOR VEHICLE SUNDOWN 1960

                                                   Motor Vehicle Sundown is a verbal instruction piece
                                                   scored for any number of motor vehicles arranged
                                                   outdoors. For each vehicle, 22 auditory and visual
                                                   events and 22 pauses are written onto randomly
                                                   shuffled instruction cards. Beside 'pause', the events
                                                   include: Headlights on and off, Parking lights on and
                                                   off, sound horn, sound siren, sound bell(s), accelerate
                                                   motor, radio on and off, strike window with knuckles,
                                                   open or close door (quickly, with moderate speed,
                                                   slowly), open or close engine hood, operate special
                                                   equipment (carousels, ladders, fire hoses with truck-
                                                   contained pumps and water supply), operate special
                                                   lights (truck-body, safety, signal, warning, signs,
                                                   displays). At sundown '(relatively dark/open area
                                                   incident light 2 foot-candles or less)', the performers
                                                   arrive at the same time, seat themselves in the cars
                                                   and start their engines at approximately the same
                                                   time. They follow the instructions, substituting
                                                   equipment for that which they do not have, and turn
                                                   off their engines when they are finished.
George Brecht, Motor Vehicle Sundown Event, 1960
                                                   http://members.chello.nl/j.seegers1/flux_files/brecht_performances.html#top
Fluxus
This Fluxkit included Ben Vautrier’s
“Total Art Matchbox”




Ben Vautrier, Total Art Matchbook, 1966
http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/bvautier--.html




                                                  George Macunias, Flux Yearbook 2, late 1960s
“The idea of art (or life) as a game in which the
       artist reconfigures the rules is central to Fluxus.
       Martha Schwendener, “Celebrating Fluxus, a Movement that Didn’t
       Create by Rules, New York Times 6 January 2012




Robert Filliou’s “Optimistic Box #3 — So much the better if you can’t play
chess (you won’t imitate Marcel Duchamp),” a fold-up chess set from 1969.    Inclined Plane Puzzle, 1965, Fluxus Edition, George Brecht, assembled by
Image source:                                                                George Maciunas, Wooden box with ball, label and score. Photo: Archiv
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/08/nyregion/celebrating-fluxus-a-             Sohm, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. Image source:
movement-that-didnt-create-by-the-rules-review.html?_r=1                     http://slangfromchaos.wordpress.com/tag/fluxus/
Fluxus
Ay-O’s “fingerboxes” were filled
with soft material such as feathers
or foam




                                      Fluxus, Ay-O’s Fingerboxes, 1964
                                      Flickr
Fluxus, Ay-O’s Fingerboxes, 1964
Image source: http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
Fluxus
There were also Fluxus music
festivals




                               George Maciunas, Poster for ‘Fluxusfestspiele’, 1962
                               http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/works/fluxusfestspiele/
Fluxus
George Brecht’s Drip Music was
clearly inspired by John Cage




                                 George Maciunas performing George Brecht's Drip Music,
                                 Amsterdam, 1963
                                 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UT5lgaE-qZY
Fluxus
Other artists involved with Fluxus
included Nam June Paik who
performed Zen for Head at a Fluxus
festival in Wiesbaden




                                     Nam June Paik, Zen for Head, 1962
Fluxus
       Robert Rauschenberg’s Automobile
       Tire Print was similar in concept

       Listen to the artist discuss the work
       at:
       http://www.youtube.com/watch?
       v=u7M6LQJnGcA




Robert Rauschenberg, Automobile Tire Print, 1953
SFMOMA
Fluxus
Paik collaborated with cellist
Charlotte Moorman on several
Fluxus musical performances




  Sound file: Charlotte Moorman, 26’1.499”
  WBAI-FM “Avant Garde Concert III”. Originally
  broadcast December 12 & 17, 1964. A Recording
  of the Annual Avant Garde Festival Program of
  August 30, 1964




                                                  Peter Moore, Charlotte Moorman and Nam June Paik
                                                  Performing 26'1.499" for a String Player
                                                  1965/2003
Fluxus
He later became a leading pioneer
of video art




                                    Lim Young-kyun, Nam June Paik, 1981
                                    Wikipedia
Fluxus
Many Fluxus music performances
involved the actual destruction of
instruments

The piano, with its elitist
associations, was a favorite target




                                      Piano Activities, by Philip Corner, as performed in Wiesbaden,
                                      1962, by Emmett Williams, Wolf Vostell, Nam June Paik, Dick
                                      Higgins, Benjamin Patterson and George Maciunas
                                      Wikipedia
Fluxus
Nam June Paik (who was trained
as a classical pianist) performed a
piano piece by banging his head
against the keys




                                      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlVbT3cp0E0
Fluxus
George Maciunas wrote a series of
event scores for piano that anybody
could perform




                                      http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-12pianocompositi.html
Fluxus
Sonic Youth’s performance of
Maciunas’ Piano #13 can be seen
on YouTube

It involves hammering nails into the
keys of a piano




                                       http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=832ApdjhMcs
Fluxus
Another artist associated with
Fluxus was Yoko Ono, who
became famous as the wife of John
Lennon




                                    John Lennon and Yoko Ono in front of George Maciunus’s Fluxus
                                    Flag comparing casualties in Vietnamn to historical genocide
                                    records
Fluxus
Ono associated with the Fluxus
circle but was ambivalent about
belonging to a “movement”

“I never considered myself a
member of any group. I was just
doing my own thing, and I'm sure
that most artists I knew in those
days felt the same.”
http://www.a-i-u.net/onolife4.html




                                     Yoko Ono with Fluxus artists, 1965
Fluxus
She composed conceptually-
oriented “instruction paintings” that
were similar to George Brecht’s
event scores




                                        Yoko Ono, Painting to be Stepped On, 1960
Fluxus
The scripts could be performed or
imagined in the mind of the viewer




                                     Yoko Ono, Painting to See the Skies, 1961
Fluxus
                                    “Among my instruction paintings, my interest is
Ono distinguished her work from     mainly in “painting to construct in your head” . . .
“Happenings” by emphasizing their   There is no visual object that does not exist in
conceptual orientation              comparison to or simultaneously with other
                                    objects, but these characteristics can be
                                    eliminated if you wish. A sunset can go on for
                                    days. You can eat up all the clouds in the sky.
                                    You can assemble a painting with a person in
                                    the North Pole over a phone, like playing chess.
                                    This painting method derives from as far back
                                    as the time of the Second World War when we
                                    had no food to eat, and my brother and I
                                    exchanged menus in the air.”
                                    Yoko Ono, Lecture at Wesleyan University, 1966
                                    http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2892207133/in/photostream/
Fluxus
In 1964 Ono published Grapefruit, a
collection of her instruction pieces
Fluxus
She also experimented with
performance art, such as Cut Piece
which was performed in several
international venues




                                     Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, Yamaichi Concert Hall,
                                     Kyoto, Japan, 1964
Fluxus
The artist explained her intention of
surrendering the ego of the artist


“Traditionally, the artist’s ego is in the
artist’s work. In other words, the artist
must give the artist’s ego to the
audience. I had always wanted to
produce work without ego in it . . . and
the result of this was Cut Piece.
Instead of giving the audience what the
artist chooses to give, the artist gives
what the audience chooses to take.
That is to say, you cut and take
whatever part you want; that was my
feeling about its purpose.”

http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2892799120/in/
photostream/                                                  Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, 1964
Fluxus
But the performance has been
interpreted as a powerful Feminist
statement




                                     Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, 1964
Fluxus
In 1966 Ono was invited to do a
show at the Indica Gallery in
London

It was here that she met john
Lennon




                                  Indica Gallery, 1966
Fluxus
Works from this show, along with
notes, can be found on Yoko Ono’s
official photostream on Flickr (the
internet provides a perfect vehicle
for the Fluxus ideal of accessible
art)




                                      Yoko Ono Official Photo Stream
                                      Flickr
Fluxus
This was an interactive piece in
which the audience was invited to
“add color”




                                    Yoko Ono, Add Color Painting, 1966
Fluxus
In this work the viewer was invited
to climb the ladder and view the
painting with a magnifying glass




                                      Yoko Ono, Ceiling Painting, 1966
Fluxus
The magnifying glass revealed the
word “yes”


“So it was positive. I felt relieved. It's a
great relief when you get up the ladder
and you look through the spyglass and
it doesn't say NO or FUCK YOU or
something.”
John Lennon, describing his reaction to
Ceiling Painting when first viewed in 1966
http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2891959833/in/
set-72157607541504677/




                                                              Yoko Ono, Ceiling Painting, 1966
Fluxus
Shigeko Kubota was another
Japanese-American artist active in
the Fluxus movement




                                     Shigeko Kubota and Nam June Paik
Fluxus
Her most famous work was a
performance in which she made a
painting with a paint brush attached
to her crotch




                                       Shigeko Kubota, Vagina Painting, 1965
                                       Performed during the “Perpetual Fluxus Festival,” New York
Fluxus
The work was meant to be a parody
of the “ejaculatory” rhetoric implicit
in public celebrations of American
action painting




                                         Shigeko Kubota, Vagina Painting, 1965
                                         Performed during the “Perpetual Fluxus Festival,” New York
Contradictions of
Fluxus
While Fluxus aimed to be
accessible, it was understandable
to few




                                    George Brecht, Water Yam, 1963
Contradictions of
Fluxus
And while Fluxus challenged the
commercialization of art, it did so by
turning it into a mass-produced
commodity (which nobody wanted
to buy)




                                         Fluxshop and Mailorder Warehouse, Fluxus Newspaper. Image source:
                                         http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
Web Resources

•    Fluxus @ Theartstory.org
     http://www.theartstory.org/movement-fluxus.htm

•    Martha Schwendener, “Celebrating Fluxus, a Movement that Didn’t Create by Rules, New
     York Times 6 January 2012
     http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/08/nyregion/celebrating-fluxus-a-movement-that-didnt-
     create-by-the-rules-review.html?_r=1

•    Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World, with Stillness,” New York Times 23
     September 2011
     http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/24/arts/design/fluxus-and-the-essential-questions-of-life-
     review.html

•    Adrian Searle, “Snapshots of a Revolution,” The Guardian 9 December 2008
     http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2008/dec/10/art

•    Fluxus Archive (online archive of Fluxus documents and works)
     http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/index2.html

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4.3 fluxus

  • 1. Fluxus “Everything is art and anyone can do it” Fluxus Street Theatre by George Maciunas, Copyright: © 2007 Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus Collection Foundation, Detroit.
  • 2. Fluxus “Fluxus remains the most complex – and therefore widely underestimated – artistic movement (or “non-movement,” as it called itself) of the early to mid-sixties . . . Fluxus saw no distinction between art and life, and believed that routine, banal, and everyday actions could be regarded as artistic events, declaring that ‘everything is art and everyone can do it.’” Hal Foster et al., Art Since 1900
  • 3. Fluxus The Lithuanian-born George Maciunas launched the Fluxus movement in 1961 “What Fluxus was is a matter of some debate. Was it an art movement, an anti-art movement, a sociopolitical movement or, as the artists themselves tended to protest, not a movement at all?” Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World, with Stillness,” New York Times 23 September 2011 George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965 Wikipedia
  • 4. Fluxus He had also studied with John Cage at the New School John Cage preparing a piano, c. 1964 Image source: http://usoproject.blogspot.com/2008/01/european-premiere-john-cage-variations.html
  • 5. Fluxus Like Happenings, Fluxus emphasized viewer participation and an integration of art and life Allan Kaprow, Words, 1962 Smolin Gallery, New York Image source: http://www.no-art.info/kaprow/works/1961_words.html
  • 6. Fluxus But Fluxus was more international in scope Wiesbaden, Berlin and Kassel: Harlekin Art Berliner Kunstlerprogramm Des DAAD, 1982. First edition. Image source: http://www.derringerbooks.com/shop/derringer/010077.html
  • 7. Fluxus And it was much closer to Dada in its radical anti-art stance
  • 8. Fluxus Most Happenings were “theatrical” in approach, retaining a division between audience and performer Jim Dine, the Smiling Workman, 1960
  • 9. Fluxus But Fluxus strove to beak down this division by creating what could be called “do-it-yourself-art”
  • 10. Fluxus In 1963 Maciunas issued a Fluxus Manifesto “PURGE the world of dead art . . . . “ “Promote living art, anti-art, promote NON ART REALITY to be grasped by all peoples, not only critics, dilettantes and professionals.” George Maciunas, Fluxus Manifesto, 1963 Image source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/gallery/2008/nov/03/fluxus- gallery?picture=339281412
  • 11. Fluxus A second Manifesto denounced art as a self-promoting industry ART To justify artist's professional, parasitic and elite status in society, he must demonstrate artist's indispensability and exclusiveness, he must demonstrate the dependability of audience upon him, he must demonstrate that no one but the artist can do art. Therefore, art must appear to be complex, pretentious, profound, serious, intellectual, inspired, skillful, significant, theatrical, It must appear to be calculable as commodity so as to provide the artist with an income. To raise its value (artist's income and patrons profit), art is made to appear rare, limited in quantity and therefore obtainable and accessible only to the social elite and institutions. George Maciunas, Manifesto on Art/Fluxus Art Amusement 1965 http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-artartamusement.html George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965 Wikipedia
  • 12. Fluxus Maciunias promoted the idea of Fluxus as a mass-produced “amusement” that could be made by anybody and that would be accessible to all George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965 Wikipedia
  • 13. FLUXUS ART-AMUSEMENT Fluxus Therefore, art-amusement must be simple, amusing, unpretentious, concerned with insignificances, require no skill or countless rehearsals, have no commodity or institutional value. The value of art-amusement must be lowered by making it unlimited, Mass-produced, obtainable by all and eventually produced by all. Fluxus art-amusement is the rear-guard without any pretention or urge to participate in the competition of "one-upmanship" with the avant-garde. It strives for the monostructural and nontheatrical qualities of simple natural event, a game or a gag. It is the fusion of Spikes Jones Vaudeville, gag, children's games and Duchamp. George Maciunas, Manifesto on Art/Fluxus Art Amusement 1965 http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-artartamusement.html George Maciunas, Self Portrait, 1965 Wikipedia
  • 14. Fluxus To this end, Maciunas set up a a Fluxshop and mail order business where he sold “Fluxkits” comprised of items made by various Fluxus participants Fluxshop and Mailorder Warehouse, Fluxus Newspaper. Image source: http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
  • 15. Fluxus The “Fluxkits” contained games, pamphlets, and other nonsensical items “You could think of Fluxus as an international, utopian conspiracy to alter the world’s collective consciousness in favor of noncompetitive fun and games and other peaceable and pleasurable pursuits. Their weapons of choice were feeble jokes, verbal and visual puns, satiric publications and instructions for absurd performances. Bypassing the commercial gallery system, Fluxus novelties were meant to be sold cheaply by mail and in artist-run stores.” Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World, with Stillness,” New York Times 23 September 2011 Fluxkit, 1964/65. Fluxus edition, assembled by George Maciunas. Photo: Walker Art Center. Image source: http://slangfromchaos.wordpress.com/tag/fluxus/
  • 16. Fluxus They were inspired by Marcel Duchamp’s Boite en valise, as well as his penchant for games Marcel Duchamp, Boit en valise, 1941
  • 17. Fluxus A typical Fluxkit item is George Brecht’s Water Yam -- a box of “event scores” that were instructions for ephemeral events George Brecht, Water Yam, 1963 Flickr
  • 18. George Brecht, Word Event, 1961. From: Water Yam (collected scores), 1986.
  • 19.
  • 20. George Brecht, Two Vehicles Events, 1961
  • 21. MOTOR VEHICLE SUNDOWN 1960 Motor Vehicle Sundown is a verbal instruction piece scored for any number of motor vehicles arranged outdoors. For each vehicle, 22 auditory and visual events and 22 pauses are written onto randomly shuffled instruction cards. Beside 'pause', the events include: Headlights on and off, Parking lights on and off, sound horn, sound siren, sound bell(s), accelerate motor, radio on and off, strike window with knuckles, open or close door (quickly, with moderate speed, slowly), open or close engine hood, operate special equipment (carousels, ladders, fire hoses with truck- contained pumps and water supply), operate special lights (truck-body, safety, signal, warning, signs, displays). At sundown '(relatively dark/open area incident light 2 foot-candles or less)', the performers arrive at the same time, seat themselves in the cars and start their engines at approximately the same time. They follow the instructions, substituting equipment for that which they do not have, and turn off their engines when they are finished. George Brecht, Motor Vehicle Sundown Event, 1960 http://members.chello.nl/j.seegers1/flux_files/brecht_performances.html#top
  • 22. Fluxus This Fluxkit included Ben Vautrier’s “Total Art Matchbox” Ben Vautrier, Total Art Matchbook, 1966 http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/bvautier--.html George Macunias, Flux Yearbook 2, late 1960s
  • 23. “The idea of art (or life) as a game in which the artist reconfigures the rules is central to Fluxus. Martha Schwendener, “Celebrating Fluxus, a Movement that Didn’t Create by Rules, New York Times 6 January 2012 Robert Filliou’s “Optimistic Box #3 — So much the better if you can’t play chess (you won’t imitate Marcel Duchamp),” a fold-up chess set from 1969. Inclined Plane Puzzle, 1965, Fluxus Edition, George Brecht, assembled by Image source: George Maciunas, Wooden box with ball, label and score. Photo: Archiv http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/08/nyregion/celebrating-fluxus-a- Sohm, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. Image source: movement-that-didnt-create-by-the-rules-review.html?_r=1 http://slangfromchaos.wordpress.com/tag/fluxus/
  • 24. Fluxus Ay-O’s “fingerboxes” were filled with soft material such as feathers or foam Fluxus, Ay-O’s Fingerboxes, 1964 Flickr
  • 25. Fluxus, Ay-O’s Fingerboxes, 1964 Image source: http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
  • 26. Fluxus There were also Fluxus music festivals George Maciunas, Poster for ‘Fluxusfestspiele’, 1962 http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/works/fluxusfestspiele/
  • 27. Fluxus George Brecht’s Drip Music was clearly inspired by John Cage George Maciunas performing George Brecht's Drip Music, Amsterdam, 1963 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UT5lgaE-qZY
  • 28. Fluxus Other artists involved with Fluxus included Nam June Paik who performed Zen for Head at a Fluxus festival in Wiesbaden Nam June Paik, Zen for Head, 1962
  • 29. Fluxus Robert Rauschenberg’s Automobile Tire Print was similar in concept Listen to the artist discuss the work at: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=u7M6LQJnGcA Robert Rauschenberg, Automobile Tire Print, 1953 SFMOMA
  • 30. Fluxus Paik collaborated with cellist Charlotte Moorman on several Fluxus musical performances Sound file: Charlotte Moorman, 26’1.499” WBAI-FM “Avant Garde Concert III”. Originally broadcast December 12 & 17, 1964. A Recording of the Annual Avant Garde Festival Program of August 30, 1964 Peter Moore, Charlotte Moorman and Nam June Paik Performing 26'1.499" for a String Player 1965/2003
  • 31. Fluxus He later became a leading pioneer of video art Lim Young-kyun, Nam June Paik, 1981 Wikipedia
  • 32. Fluxus Many Fluxus music performances involved the actual destruction of instruments The piano, with its elitist associations, was a favorite target Piano Activities, by Philip Corner, as performed in Wiesbaden, 1962, by Emmett Williams, Wolf Vostell, Nam June Paik, Dick Higgins, Benjamin Patterson and George Maciunas Wikipedia
  • 33. Fluxus Nam June Paik (who was trained as a classical pianist) performed a piano piece by banging his head against the keys http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlVbT3cp0E0
  • 34. Fluxus George Maciunas wrote a series of event scores for piano that anybody could perform http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-12pianocompositi.html
  • 35. Fluxus Sonic Youth’s performance of Maciunas’ Piano #13 can be seen on YouTube It involves hammering nails into the keys of a piano http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=832ApdjhMcs
  • 36. Fluxus Another artist associated with Fluxus was Yoko Ono, who became famous as the wife of John Lennon John Lennon and Yoko Ono in front of George Maciunus’s Fluxus Flag comparing casualties in Vietnamn to historical genocide records
  • 37. Fluxus Ono associated with the Fluxus circle but was ambivalent about belonging to a “movement” “I never considered myself a member of any group. I was just doing my own thing, and I'm sure that most artists I knew in those days felt the same.” http://www.a-i-u.net/onolife4.html Yoko Ono with Fluxus artists, 1965
  • 38. Fluxus She composed conceptually- oriented “instruction paintings” that were similar to George Brecht’s event scores Yoko Ono, Painting to be Stepped On, 1960
  • 39. Fluxus The scripts could be performed or imagined in the mind of the viewer Yoko Ono, Painting to See the Skies, 1961
  • 40. Fluxus “Among my instruction paintings, my interest is Ono distinguished her work from mainly in “painting to construct in your head” . . . “Happenings” by emphasizing their There is no visual object that does not exist in conceptual orientation comparison to or simultaneously with other objects, but these characteristics can be eliminated if you wish. A sunset can go on for days. You can eat up all the clouds in the sky. You can assemble a painting with a person in the North Pole over a phone, like playing chess. This painting method derives from as far back as the time of the Second World War when we had no food to eat, and my brother and I exchanged menus in the air.” Yoko Ono, Lecture at Wesleyan University, 1966 http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2892207133/in/photostream/
  • 41. Fluxus In 1964 Ono published Grapefruit, a collection of her instruction pieces
  • 42. Fluxus She also experimented with performance art, such as Cut Piece which was performed in several international venues Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, Yamaichi Concert Hall, Kyoto, Japan, 1964
  • 43. Fluxus The artist explained her intention of surrendering the ego of the artist “Traditionally, the artist’s ego is in the artist’s work. In other words, the artist must give the artist’s ego to the audience. I had always wanted to produce work without ego in it . . . and the result of this was Cut Piece. Instead of giving the audience what the artist chooses to give, the artist gives what the audience chooses to take. That is to say, you cut and take whatever part you want; that was my feeling about its purpose.” http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2892799120/in/ photostream/ Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, 1964
  • 44. Fluxus But the performance has been interpreted as a powerful Feminist statement Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, 1964
  • 45. Fluxus In 1966 Ono was invited to do a show at the Indica Gallery in London It was here that she met john Lennon Indica Gallery, 1966
  • 46. Fluxus Works from this show, along with notes, can be found on Yoko Ono’s official photostream on Flickr (the internet provides a perfect vehicle for the Fluxus ideal of accessible art) Yoko Ono Official Photo Stream Flickr
  • 47. Fluxus This was an interactive piece in which the audience was invited to “add color” Yoko Ono, Add Color Painting, 1966
  • 48. Fluxus In this work the viewer was invited to climb the ladder and view the painting with a magnifying glass Yoko Ono, Ceiling Painting, 1966
  • 49. Fluxus The magnifying glass revealed the word “yes” “So it was positive. I felt relieved. It's a great relief when you get up the ladder and you look through the spyglass and it doesn't say NO or FUCK YOU or something.” John Lennon, describing his reaction to Ceiling Painting when first viewed in 1966 http://www.flickr.com/photos/yokoonoofficial/2891959833/in/ set-72157607541504677/ Yoko Ono, Ceiling Painting, 1966
  • 50. Fluxus Shigeko Kubota was another Japanese-American artist active in the Fluxus movement Shigeko Kubota and Nam June Paik
  • 51. Fluxus Her most famous work was a performance in which she made a painting with a paint brush attached to her crotch Shigeko Kubota, Vagina Painting, 1965 Performed during the “Perpetual Fluxus Festival,” New York
  • 52. Fluxus The work was meant to be a parody of the “ejaculatory” rhetoric implicit in public celebrations of American action painting Shigeko Kubota, Vagina Painting, 1965 Performed during the “Perpetual Fluxus Festival,” New York
  • 53. Contradictions of Fluxus While Fluxus aimed to be accessible, it was understandable to few George Brecht, Water Yam, 1963
  • 54. Contradictions of Fluxus And while Fluxus challenged the commercialization of art, it did so by turning it into a mass-produced commodity (which nobody wanted to buy) Fluxshop and Mailorder Warehouse, Fluxus Newspaper. Image source: http://artsconnected.org/collection/118487/art-in-the-1960s?print=true
  • 55. Web Resources •  Fluxus @ Theartstory.org http://www.theartstory.org/movement-fluxus.htm •  Martha Schwendener, “Celebrating Fluxus, a Movement that Didn’t Create by Rules, New York Times 6 January 2012 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/08/nyregion/celebrating-fluxus-a-movement-that-didnt- create-by-the-rules-review.html?_r=1 •  Ken Johnson, “Liberating Viewers, and the World, with Stillness,” New York Times 23 September 2011 http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/24/arts/design/fluxus-and-the-essential-questions-of-life- review.html •  Adrian Searle, “Snapshots of a Revolution,” The Guardian 9 December 2008 http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2008/dec/10/art •  Fluxus Archive (online archive of Fluxus documents and works) http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/index2.html