Available Formats
Japan Fluxus
By (Author) Luciana Galliano
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
5th November 2020
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Asian history
Literature: history and criticism
The arts: general topics
700.411
Paperback
176
Width 154mm, Height 220mm, Spine 11mm
286g
Fluxus was a pivotal movement in redefining arts role and the artists identity in the contemporary world, so that its aesthetics as well as many of its gimmicks have become so deeply embedded in our social setting that we now no longer realize where they originally came into being. Fluxus has been described as the most radical and experimental art movement of the 1960s, challenging conventional thinking on art and culture. It had a central role in the birth of such key contemporary art forms as concept art, installation, performance art, intermedia and video. The amount of Fluxus-related scholarly activity has increased since 2009, when New Yorks Museum of Modern Art acquired the worlds largest collection of Fluxus works, the Lila and Gilbert Silverman Collection, and this in turn led to a series of exhibitions, first at MoMA and subsequently at other institutions worldwide.
Focusing on Japanese artists involved in Fluxus, the book proposes a new understanding of this movement which, in spite of its anti-academicism, its aversion to authorial identity and the ephemeral character of its output, is the best documented and best cross-indexed art movement in history, (Nam June Paik 1994, 77). The book presents postwar Japanese radical avant-garde and the related and highly refined discourse and debate behind it, enlightening crucial if less known aspects of (local) Fluxus history and theory.
By highlighting the significance of musicality to Japanese Fluxus, Luciana Gallianos book brings fresh perspectives grounded in music historical expertise and a very welcome intervention to existing narratives about Fluxus in Japan. It also productively decenters the cartography of experimentalism in the 20th century that assumes a de facto 'Western' center by foregrounding the figuration of Japanese aesthetic categories in the experimental practices of the artists and musicians in her study. -- Miki Kaneda, Boston University
This book reveals the historical significance of the Fluxus movement in a multidimensional way by elaborating the development of the international movement in Japan and the roles played by Japanese artists. -- Ishida Kazushi, independant scholar
George Maciunas once said 'Fluxus is Zen.' This book by Luciana Galliano unravels the depths of the global movement called Fluxus from Japans unique aspects. -- Toshie Kakinuma, Kyoto City University of Arts
Luciana Galliano is musicologist and independent scholar in musical aesthetics.