Unlike previous artistic movements, Fluxus sought to change
the history of the world, not just the history of art. The persistent goal of
most Fluxus artists was to destroy any boundary between art and life. George
Maciunas especially wanted to, "purge the world of bourgeoisie
sickness...." He stated that Fluxus was "anti-art," in order to
underscore the revolutionary mode of thinking about the practice and process of
art.
A central Fluxus tenet was to dismiss and mock the elitist
world of "high art" and to find any way possible to bring art to the
masses, much in keeping with the social climate of the 1960s. Fluxus artists
used humor to express their intent and, along with Dada, Fluxus was one of the
few art movements to use humor throughout history. Despite their playful
attitude, Fluxus artists were serious about their desire to change the balance
of power in the art world. Their irreverence for "high art" had an
impact on the perceived authority of the museum to determine what, and who,
constituted "art."
Fluxus art involved the viewer, relying on the element of
chance to shape the ultimate outcome of the piece. The use of chance was also
employed by Dada,Marcel Duchamp, and other performance art of the time,
such as Happenings. Fluxus artists were most heavily influenced by the
ideas of John Cage, who believed that one should embark on a piece without
having a conception of the eventual end. It was the process of creating that
was important, not the finished product.
"In Fluxus there has never been any attempt to agree on
aims or methods; individuals with something unnamable in common have simply
naturally coalesced to publish and perform their work. Perhaps this common
thing is a feeling that the bounds of art are much wider than they have
conventionally seemed, or that art and certain long established bounds are no
longer very useful."
http://www.theartstory.org/movement-fluxus.htm
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