http://bbrace.laughingsquid.net/blabbering-cronies.html
there are alot of those rabbits out here on the prairie and they are all
named jack. fast little critters. they hang out with the prairie dogs.
does your bunny meditate alot? sure way to develope the third eye.
best, c :)
carol starr
taos, new mexico, usa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sat, 25 Mar 2000
Oh ok good I thought it was the other three eyed bunny...you know the one Im
talking aboutshhh dont say much about him cause he'll come and do mean
stuff like eat your paints...
>
>No, no, don't be afraid, he's an enlightened fluxbunny, he found
>his third eye, brought it out, and now wears
I'll second that.
RA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In a message dated 03/24/2000 6:10:43 PM Eastern Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> << >Fluxus is like a joke
> >in that you "get it" or you don't
>
> whatabout:
> fluxus is like a state of mind in which
> "no-preconception is the
Rosalie & Heiko
If you read Flight Out of Time you'll see the deeply spiritual feeling out of which
Dada in Zurich (at least Hugo Ball and Emmy Hennings) grew. And when it was over, Ball
being very religious lost his mind.
RA
"R.Gancie/C.Parcelli" wrote:
> Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
> >
> > > As
No, no, don't be afraid, he's an enlightened fluxbunny, he found
his third eye, brought it out, and now wears it as fluxbunny
chapeau decor. It bounces when he leaps, though, and, like a
good fluxbunny, he often documents the fluxbunny leap events and
records where he lands and the ensuing respon
Heiko writes:
>
>The "baby boom" is to simple as an explanation for what was going on in
>the 60s, my first idea when I read this.
I agree. Its not a matter simply of a quantitative population increase, but
of the effect that this increase has on the existing social structure (see
below).
>>
>>
>|\ /|
>| \ / |
> \ \./ /
> /\. ./\
>( ="= )
> \ _
>Please ignore this message.
Consider it ignored =p
__
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Terrence writes;
This is a good point Heiko. The goodness of the roots of reality and depth of
meaning always seems to get boiled out by the constant attendance. Why does
everything end up like clichés? If anyone read my earlier post of the
reminiscences of art school one could easily surmise it
In a message dated 03/25/2000 3:01:03 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
<< [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In a message dated 03/24/2000 6:10:43 PM Eastern Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> << >Fluxus is like a joke
> >in that you "get it" or you don't
>
> wh
> finally read Hugo Ball's Flight Out of Time: A Dada Diary. I was
> surprised at the depth of sadness directly involved in the movement over
I allways think to old style living rooms, from the time before WWi,
compared to what Bauhaus etc did. It wasnt changing furnitures alone.
Greetings, H.
|\ /|
| \ / |
\ \./ /
/\. ./\
( ="= )
\ ___ /
Hi,
George Free wrote:
> >> Population explosion -- the sudden flood of "new entrants" into a
> cultural
> >> field is major explanation of why cultural fields change, according to
> >> sociologists of art like Pierre Bourdieu (who's work I greatly admire).
> >
> >And why is french art today so
Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
>
> > As a joke Dada is definitely NOT overrated. Some Dada on the other hand was dead
> > serious,
> > like Berlin Dada.
>
I'd always been taught, too, to view Dada as the work of hip pranksters
who were always on the lookout for a joke. I was startled when I
finally
Please ignore this message.
does anyone know anything about jack burnham?
i have three of his books, was really into them in the early 70's.
happened to look something up in one and then wondered what else barnes
and noble had. well there was little i don't have and all were out of
print. so now i'm curious as to what happ
Different in the US. It was hard to find out about here, at least in the
midwest.
AK
--
> From: Heiko Recktenwald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: FLUXLIST: Why?
> Date: Saturday, March 25, 2000 12:31 AM
>
> > art books and "find" artists whose work interests m
and isn't it interesting when you think some one had their eye on the beam
and then they go blank and somewhat irritable.
c :)
carol starr
taos, new mexico, usa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >I think Roger got it. Right.
>
> ok, that's a point
> "get" or don't "get" requires an intuitive leap (the st
Heiko writes:
>> Population explosion -- the sudden flood of "new entrants" into a
cultural
>> field is major explanation of why cultural fields change, according to
>> sociologists of art like Pierre Bourdieu (who's work I greatly admire).
>
>And why is french art today so boring ? The pill ??
At 02:24 am -0500 25/3/00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>In a message dated 03/24/2000 6:10:43 PM Eastern Standard Time,
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
><< >Fluxus is like a joke
> >in that you "get it" or you don't
>
> whatabout:
> fluxus is like a state of mind in which
> "no-preconception is the pre-
At 12:04 am -0800 25/3/00, Patricia wrote:
>I think Roger got it. Right.
ok, that's a point
"get" or don't "get" requires an intuitive leap (the state of no
pre-conception).
in this sense, a task of fluxus art is to translate the insight into clear.
logical explanations,
to be open to critici
> As a joke Dada is definitely NOT overrated. Some Dada on the other hand was dead
> serious,
> like Berlin Dada.
Jokes dont have to be funny. Its rather easy to sit in 2000 and
How would you call the time between the cage class and this armystyle
artmovement with general, officers and soldiers, with Al
Hanson dissenting, "Prefluxus" ?
> > any meaningful sense as thatcranky old fart, George Maciunas. >
> Thanks a lot ;-)
>
> Population explosion -- the sudden flood of "new entrants" into a cultural
> field is major explanation of why cultural fields change, according to
> sociologists of art like Pierre Bourdieu (who's work I greatly admire).
And why is french art today so boring ? The pill ???
No, I dont believe
> art books and "find" artists whose work interests me. Flux dada etc. was never
>taught me. All to fill in the big gaps.
Fluxus and Dada was to new for serious discussion in school. But it was no
problem, to study the things directly. Max Ernst was born some miles from
here, in Bruehl. And ther
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In a message dated 03/24/2000 6:10:43 PM Eastern Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> << >Fluxus is like a joke
> >in that you "get it" or you don't
>
> whatabout:
> fluxus is like a state of mind in which
> "no-preconception is the pre-condition to disc
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