bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

šŸ’¬ Have been doing a deep dive into the Fluxus art movement of the 1960’s and am more than a little inspired by the anti-retail shop opened by Robert Filliou and George Brecht, which they named ā€œLa CĆ©dille qui Sourit,ā€ or ā€œThe cedilla that smiles.ā€

The thoughtfulness and spirit of the work speaks for itself, but I do adore this tidbit about Filliou, as quoted in JSTOR:

Filliou’s text suggests a fully relational model of subjectivity that, while individual, desires to be fulfilled or made able by connecting to others. It was a model lived by the artist himself, who depended for his survival upon the...

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isaacgreene
isaacgreene

@bradleyandroos An absolutely rollicking read along these lines is John Cage’s Silence. Lots of Fluxus (or adjacent) folks show up, and he’s just a hilarious writer and storyteller.

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bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

@isaacgreene my man! Cage’s name has popped up repeatedly and I haven’t dug in yet. Now I know where to start, thank you!

And yes— what characters! So much life and creativity. Cant wait to learn more.

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isaacgreene
isaacgreene

@bradleyandroos Most people find his writing more appealing than his music, but you should at least give it a shot. Third Construction and In A Landscape are the two of my (very different) favorites.

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JohnBrady
JohnBrady

@isaacgreene I’ll decide what I think about his As Slow As Possible when I’ve listened to the whole thing.

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ablerism
ablerism

@bradleyandroos If you don’t already know it, you might also enjoy the long inheritance of that tradition among the projects beautifully collected in Living As Form

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In reply to
bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

@isaacgreene 🫔 I will definitely give it a shot. I did notice,and was intrigued by, the way that so many Fluxus artists came from a music/composition background, as opposed to purely visual. No doubt is a huge factor in their singularity. Thanks for putting me on game!

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bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

@JohnBrady This is so, so funny to me. Lol A+ joke!

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bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

@ablerism I most certainly was not familiar—and this seems right up my alley. Many thanks for putting it on my radar; would never pass up a rec from you!

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isaacgreene
isaacgreene

@JohnBrady I caught about 30 minutes of the Halberstadt performance in 2011. Missed a note change by several months unfortunately.

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ablerism
ablerism

@bradleyandroos So glad. For many years that kind of work was a lifeline for me — and remains a big source of imaginative nourishment.

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bradleyandroos
bradleyandroos

@isaacgreene Had a chance to listen. Sonically they are so distant, but there is such a great spiritual quality to both. Despite its ā€œchaos,ā€ 3rd Construction seems so genius that the sweetness of In A Landscape didn’t entirely surprise me. Both are great experiences. Thnx again for putting me on. 😊

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isaacgreene
isaacgreene

@bradleyandroos So glad you listened! There’s an essay about the organization of 3rd Construction in Silence - it’s all based on units of clock time rather than pitch or rhythm as we normally think about it. Internal organization that sounds chaotic. I saw it live once and it was electric, the place went wild when it was done. Like Sara said, there’s so much creativity here it’s inspiring even if I don’t always love the work itself.

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mbattles
mbattles

@isaacgreene I found Kay Larson’s biographical account of Cage, Where the Heart Beats: John Cage, Zen Buddhism, and the Inner Life of Artists nourishing and inspiring. (Cage’s disquisition on Basho’s haiku ā€œMatsutake iaā€ is a great treat, too.)

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