Critical Mass: Happenings, Fluxus, Performance, Intermedia, and Rutgers University 1958-1972
2003
Rutgers University from 1958 to 1972 was at the centre of many new developments in the art world. Artists connected with Happenings and Fluxus created works that had a major impact in New York and abroad. A dozen years after Allan Kaprow’s first Happening on Rutgers' Douglass campus in 1958, George Maciunas (Mr. Fluxus) created his major late composition, the Flux-Mass, in the same space, and Hermann Nitsch, the Viennese Actionist, presented his controversial Orgies-Mysteries-Theater. These radical shifts in art paralleled calls to rethink attitudes about race, sex, gender, and war during turbulent times in America’s history. Critical Mass chronicles this ephemeral work on the Rutgers campus and in New York City, and the innovations that grew from Bob Watts, Allan Kaprow, and George Brecht's “Project in Multiple Dimensions.” With texts and performance scores by artists together with numerous photographs of the events and essays by art historians and critics Hannah Higgins, Jill Johnston, Susan Ryan, and Kristine Stiles, Critical Mass presents a vivid picture of this dynamic moment. This volume was a companion to an exhibit at the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College in Amherst, Massachusetts, from February 1 to June 1, 2003, and at the Mason Gross Art Galleries at Rutgers University from September 29 to November 5, 2003.
Abe Books