FLUXUS
Fluxus is an international
avant-garde collective or network of artists and composers founded in the1960s
and still continuing today
working title: BEUYS (FLUXUS) & CHRISTIANSEN (FLUXUS) 1969
Tate / National Galleries of Scotland
© DACS, 2018
Founded in 1960 by the
Lithuanian/American artist George Maciunas, Fluxus began as a small but
international network of artists and composers, and was characterised as a
shared attitude rather than a movement. Rooted in experimental music, it was
named after a magazine which featured the work of musicians and artists centred
around avant-garde composer John Cage.
The Latin word Fluxus means
flowing, in English a flux is a flowing out. Fluxus founder Maciunas said that
the purpose of Fluxus was
to ‘promote a revolutionary flood and tide in art, promote living art,
anti-art’. This has strong echoes of dada,
the early twentieth century art movement.
The first Fluxus event was
staged in 1961 at the AG Gallery in New York and was followed by
festivals in Europe in 1962. The major centres of Fluxus activity were New
York, Germany and Japan.
Fluxus played an important
role in opening up the definitions of what art can be. It has profoundly
influenced the nature of art production since the 1960s, which has seen a
diverse range of art forms and approaches existing and flourishing
side-by-side.
Fluxus had no single unifying
style. Artists used a range of media and processes adopting a ‘do-it-yourself’
attitude to creative activity, often staging random performances and using
whatever materials were at hand to make art. Seeing themselves as an
alternative to academic art and music, Fluxus was a democratic form of
creativity open to anyone. Collaborations were encouraged between artists and
across artforms, and also with the audience or spectator. It valued simplicity
and anti-commercialism, with chance and accident playing a big part in the
creation of works, and humour also being an important element.
Many key avant-garde artists
in the 60s took part in Fluxus, including Joseph Beuys, Dick
Higgins, Alice Hutchins, Yoko
Ono, Nam June
Paik, Ben Vautier, Robert Watts, Benjamin Patterson and Emmett Williams.
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