Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fluxus. Started: 1959. Ended: 1978. 1 of 11. Summary of Fluxus. Emerging in the 1960s and operating globally, Fluxus was an interdisciplinary and experimental approach to art that emphasized blending different artistic media and breaking down traditional boundaries between art and everyday life.
The avant-garde Fluxus movement was an informally structured collective of Fluxus artists from all over the world, with a notable presence in New York City.
Fluxus was an international, interdisciplinary community of artists, composers, designers, and poets during the 1960s and 1970s who engaged in experimental art performances which emphasized the artistic process over the finished product. [1][2] Fluxus is known for experimental contributions to different artistic media and disciplines and for gen...
The Fluxus art movement was founded in 1960 by the Lithuanian American curator, performance artist, graphic designer and musician George Maciunas in New York City. He described Fluxus as, “a fusion of Spike Jones, gags, games, Vaudeville, Cage and Duchamp.”
Fluxus is an avant-garde artistic movement of artists with a shared goal to experiment with and challenge traditional art and societal mores.
In 1963, an artist named George Maciunas put forward a rallying cry for a new movement in art, one that he would call “Fluxus.” Like many of his avant-garde predecessors and peers, he chose to make his case known in the form of a manifesto.
Fluxus, a loose international group of artists, poets, and musicians whose only shared impulse was to integrate life into art through the use of found events, sounds, and materials, thereby bringing about social and economic change in the art world.
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.
Fluxus refers to an international avant garde art movement, popular in the 1960s and 1970s that valued chance, indeterminacy and the process of art-making over the final product.
Fluxus was a radical art movement that emerged in the early 1960s, challenging traditional notions of art and culture. Centered around the idea of anti-art, it incorporated aspects of performance, visual arts, and interactive experiences to blur the lines between life and art.