You study the 1960s-era art movement Fluxus as you would a lost people such as the Incas: through artifacts. In terms of traditional, museum-vitrine-ready artwork, the group left little behind.
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Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook You will decide to read or not read this article; having made your decision, the happening is over ...
“Calligraphic Poem: In the Dark Your Fingertips Make Blue Afterimages on My Skin,” 1966 Credit: Alice Dodge ©️ Seven Days Consider invisible art. That’s not a Fluxus instruction. Or maybe it is. At a ...
LOS ANGELES — Fluxus is fraught with contradiction. The interdisciplinary art movement, which emerged in the 1960s, is funny but serious; indefinite but authoritative; destructive but full of ...
Mieko Shiomi performing “Water Music” during Flux Week at Gallery Crystal in Tokyo, 1965 (photo by Teruo Nishiyama) Japan Society is pleased to present Out of Bounds: Japanese Women Artists in Fluxus.
A member of the Fluxus performance art movement (and a contractor by trade), he incorporated bagpipes, electronics and, yes, plumber’s materials in his music. By William Robin Yoshi Wada, a ...