Zimmerli to mark 50th anniversary of Fluxus 




http://ns.gmnews.com/news/2011-09-22/Front_Page/Zimmerli_to_mark_50th_anniversary_of_Fluxus.html
 




September 22, 2011 




Fluxus, the art movement led by George Maciunas and made widely known by Yoko 
Ono, is returning to its starting place on the campus of Rutgers University. 
The celebration will be held from Sept. 24 toApril 1. 

The exhibit, “at/around/beyond: Fluxus at Rutgers,” is at the Zimmerli Art 
Museum in celebration of Fluxus’ 50th-anniversary. From sculptural objects, 
assemblages, prints, multiples, ephemera and books to films, sound works, 
photographs and performance documentation, more than 60 works will be assembled 
at the Zimmerli from the museum’s permanent holdings and private collections. 

One section of “at/around/beyond” brings together works by themost influential 
of the Fluxus artists at Rutgers, including Robert Watts, Geoffrey Hendricks 
and Al Hansen, who were teachers; Larry Miller, 1970 graduate with a Master of 
FineArts; and George Brecht and Philip Corner, who were each an important 
presence on the campus. 

Watts, who taught at Rutgers for 35 years, is represented by a number of 
seldom-seen objects on loan from his estate, including a chrome pencil, a pair 
of Fluxus underwear, and a stamp machine loaded with his own stamps. Other 
notable objects by the Rutgers artists include Brecht’s Water Yam (1963), a box 
of Brecht’s printed instructions known as event-scores, or fluxscores, which 
could either be performed in public or left to the imagination, and Geoffrey 
Hendricks’Flux Divorce Box, a wooden box inside which is Hendricks’s own 
wedding album, sliced in half. 

The Zimmerli will also present a number of Fluxus films, including 89 movies by 

Robert Watts, and the Fluxfilm Anthology, compiled by Maciunas. In the reading 
room, visitors will be able to peruse Fluxus books like Yoko Ono’s “Grapefruit” 
and editions from the “Great Bear” pamphlet series published by Dick 
Higgins’Something Else Press. 

There are black-and-white prints capturing Yam Festival events such as Kaprow’s 
Tree Happening at George Segal’s Farm in North 


Brunswick, the legendary Flux-mass at Rutgers in 1970, and Philip Corner’s 
performance of Dick Higgins’ “One Thousand Symphonies” (1968), a musical score 
created with the help of New Jersey police who fired a machine gun into sheets 
of music paper — the holes they made marked notes of music. 

Ahighlight of the exhibition is the presentation of a Fluxus concert led by 
Fluxus artist 

Larry Miller to be performed by a contingent of Rutgers students, 6-7 p.m. Nov. 
2 as part of the museum’s Art After Hours program. After the concert, visitors 
will be invited to participate in games of Sound Chess, Fruit and Vegetable 
Chess, or to play Shiomi’s Fluxus 

Balance game in the galleries. The Fluxus concert and the events at Art After 
Hours are free to Rutgers faculty, students and staff, and free to the public 
with museum admission. 

The museum is located at 71 Hamilton St., on the campus of Rutgers University 
in New 

Brunswick. Hours are 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday Friday, and noon-5 p.m. Saturday 
and 

Sunday. Admission is $6 for adults, $5 for adults over 65, and free for museum 
members, 

Rutgers students, faculty and staff (with ID), and children under 18. 

Visit www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu or call 732-932-7237, ext. 610, for more 
information. 


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