Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Fluxus in Texas

Fluxus in Texas

http://www.kera.org/artandseek/content/2009/07/17/fluxus-in-texas/

By Jerome Weeks
July 17, 2009

Anarchic and whimsical, Fluxus was a little-known art movement in the
'60s ­ little-known, even though Yoko Ono was an occasional and
influential Fluxite. (John Lennon once quipped that everyone knew who
Yoko was yet no one knew what she did.) But the movement arguably
died out in the '70s ­ although a Fort Worth artist, author and
home-grown museum curator disagrees. As proof, he has assembled the
current show, Fluxhibition #3, in the student gallery at the
University of Texas at Arlington.

Most art museum directors would have us believe that running an art
museum is an all-consuming job. Yet Cecil Touchon runs two, three,
maybe four ­ out of his own home. Actually, out of his living room.

TOUCHON: "We're standing in the living room of a three-bedroom,
ranch-style house in Fort Worth, and the entire living room is
wall-to-wall metal shelving housing boxes, plastic containers full of
collages and arts supplies."

These are not just any overflowing shelves. Touchon is a successful
artist with his boldly-colored collage works selling in New York and
Santa Fe galleries. They've been featured in Interior Design magazine.

But what's taking over his house are other people's artworks. For a
decade, Touchon has been exchanging pieces through the mail with
fellow artists. The resulting collections he's boxed up and crowded
into his living room.

TOUCHON: "It's all part of the Ontological Museum of the
International Post-Dogmatist Group. There's the FluxMuseum, the
International Museum of Collage, Assemblage and Construction, and
then Fluxus Laboratories is here. Oh, and FluxShop. Yeah ­ you know
you've got a real Fluxus product when you have a FluxShop gold stamp
on it like these. [laughs]"

In 1961, Fluxus was christened (and loosely organzed) by George
Maciunas, a Lithuanian-American who eventually sought to establish
"Fluxfestivals" in Europe. Paradoxically ­ meaning, in this case,
fittingly ­ the word "flux" refers to both "flowing" (as in water or
energy) and "fusing together" (as in soldering metals). Maciunas and
his fellow Fluxites were inspired by Dada, the mocking,
anti-traditionalist art movement that came out of World War I,
pioneered by artists Tristan Tzara, Marcel Duchamp, Hugo Ball and Jean Arp.

The apparent irrationality, the deadpan jokes aimed at political and
art establishments, the use of pointless mechanisms to spoof
technology, the love of paradox, inversion and mass-manufactured
products: All of these Dada traits re-appeared in Fluxus (which was
originally termed "Neo-Dada"). Fluxus set out, Maciunas wrote, to
purge the world of "dead art" and "bourgeois sickness" through a
"fusion of Spike Jones, gags, games, vaudeville, Cage and Duchamp."

Lis Gundlach-Sell, An Heirloom from My Aunt Augusta, brass caster
wheel from grand piano, display box, 2009

In the early '60s, Yoko Ono's performance efforts (what Maciunas
called "neo-Haiku theater") and composer John Cage's experimental
music ­ with his use of random sounds and silence ­ were major
influences on Fluxus. Flux artists specialize in noise music, brief
performance works, puzzles and games, as well as "intermedia." They
refuse to conform to the restrictions of paintings or sculptures or
theater, preferring to blend or muddle them. Curiously, Fluxus has
also been influential on architecture because of Maciunas' early
interest in prefab buildings.

A typical Fluxus project was Maciunas' Flux Rain Machine (right), a
little, clear plastic box with a bit of water in it. The water
condenses and forms droplets on the inside of the box. Voila ­ rain.

Another plastic Fluxbox by Keith Buchholz holds a pair of dice. The
cover declares, "Roll 13 and Win!" But a pair of dice can only add up
to 12. Voila ­ futility and the illusion of easy prosperity.

One reason that Fluxus isn't more widely known, I'd suggest, is that
its ideas and elements were various (and contradictory) enough that
they could easily morph into or be absorbed by the larger waves in
'60s art, particularly pop art and conceptual art. To a degree, both
of these also had origins in Dada, so the flow of Fluxeteers into
their ranks is not surprising.

Even so, Flux artworks are often distinguished by their manufacture:
They're cleverly made from cheap, ordinary, even scruffy materials,
including human hair, cardboard, string, discarded books, clothing,
broken crockery and novelty-store items. These "found objects" are
deliberately not employed for museum-quality masterworks. The pieces
are ephemeral and disposable, even self-destructive.

They're more like junk. With a sense of humor.

Jon Hendricks is a Fluxus scholar and the curator of a major Fluxus
archive, the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, which was
recently donated to the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

HENDRICKS: "Maciunas' idea of Fluxus was to move away from art that
was something precious to something where art can become a part of
everyday life."

A utopian, Maciunas deemed that the entire 'art industry' ­ museums,
theaters, galleries, concert halls, everything ­ should die and be
replaced by radically simple artworks that anyone could do. Maciunas
also disliked the idea of the heroic individual artist. He preferred
collaborative and group efforts. Which inspired his use of boxes. He
borrowed the idea from Marcel Duchamp's Boite-en-Valise and Joseph
Cornell's famous shadow boxes. But for Maciunas, Hendricks notes, the
box isn't a way of framing and fusing together disparate objects
through a single artist's sensibility. A box is a way to contain
contributions from dozens of artists. They're like little museums
that way ­ or anthologies. Indeed, Maciunas' first boxes were called
"editions" and they were like yearbooks, compiled annually from
various efforts by Fluxites.

In Fort Worth, Touchon's mail exchanges with other artists and his
boxed-up collections eventually led to his assembling Fluxhibition #3
at UT-Arlington ­ which he was able to do very quickly with works
submitted from around the world. The show is sub-titled "Thinking
Inside of the Box." It features 140 kits, cases, tubes, cans,
birdhouses, bottles and containers ­ including a piece by Yoko Ono
herself, a limited-edition, yellow Japanese box containing a poem,
"We're All Water" (above). Through the course of the exhibition, we
see the box as utility item and metaphor, the box as a little stage,
as board game, toolkit, toy set, parfait glass, map case, juggling
pin, animal cage and laboratory sample ­ just about everything,
perhaps, except the box as coffin. Touchon likes to point out that
even a website can be a box ­ and he's created several linked,
Flux-related "web-boxes." In fact, his entire exhibition is mounted
to the walls of the gallery on shelves made of the cardboard boxes
that will be used to ship it to its next home.

It's a touring show ­ in a box.

But ­ is it Fluxus?

Scholars like Hendricks see Fluxus fading after 1978 with Maciunas'
death and with the other Flux artists going in new directions
(echoing what a number of early Dadaists did when they turned to
Surrealism in the '20s). So Fluxus belongs to a specific historic era
­ just like Impressionism or Cubism. Today, you could call your
artwork Fluxus or Cubist, and Hendricks says, it still could be
interesting. But it won't have the same meaning, the same revelation.
Times change, people change. What was fresh can now feel redundant or
irrelevant.

HENDRICKS: "Movements do tend to have a kind of time frame, a period
when they are essential, when they have to exist."

Touchon argues that this is the way collectors and curators think,
not artists. Collectors want movements to be limited to a period, a
place, a canon of select works. This increases the value of their own
collections. Ironically, Touchon himself is clearly a manic
collector. But for him, while Flux artists may play with boxes,
Fluxus itself can't be contained in one. The impulses behind Dada and
Fluxus, he believes, resurface during certain periods (World War I,
the Cold War, the Bush years). Besides, he notes, over the years,
Fluxus works have often been produced by artists in their spare time
(making an actual living at it would be directly counter to Maciunas'
ideas. Not surprisingly, he died impoverished). For them, Fluxart is
a low-cost sideline, as it were, a way to stretch the aesthetic
muscles, an intellectual game that doesn't have to pay the bills.

Which means the Fluxkits and Fluxcreations are likely to go on ­

[VOICEOVER intercuts with sounds of Touchon picking through the boxes
in his house]:

TOUCHON: "So there's more … " [rummages]

­ and on ­

TOUCHON: "This is full …" [rummages]

And on.

TOUCHON: "I think this is one of them here…"

So ­ has Touchon ever thought of rental storage?

TOUCHON: "Well, I'm considering that at this point. But I'm still
actually organizing the collection to tell you the truth. [Laughs.]"

Fluxhibition #3 runs through July 31 at the E. H. Hereford University
Center Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington. Cecil Touchon
has already posted a call for contributions to Fluxhibition #4:
Fluxus Amusements, Diversions, Games, Tricks and Puzzles.

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