Sense Sound / Sound Sense
Fluxus Music, Scores & Records in the Luigi Bonotto Collection
03 Sep 2019 - 02 Feb 2020
George Brecht Incidental Music 1961. Performed by Ken Friedman, Geoff Hendricks, Al Hansen, and Ben Vautier (left to right) at “Milano Poesia”, Ansaldo, Milan, 1989. Photo: F. Garghetti. Courtesy of Fondazione Bonotto. Copyright © Fabrizio Garghetti. All Rights Reserved.
SENSE SOUND / SOUND SENSE
Fluxus Music, Scores & Records in the Luigi Bonotto Collection
3 September 2019 – 2 February 2020
How should we use a grand piano in order to produce sound? By opening the piano and stacking wooden blocks inside the instrument until one falls and creates a noise, or by dropping dried beans onto the keys? Conceptual fluxus artist George Brecht (1926–2008), in one of his iconic works Incidental Music, instructed fellow artists to demonstrate how several people at once could interact with the piano.
The Fluxus movement emerged in the 1960s as an international network of artists, musicians and performers who staged experimental happenings using everyday materials. They shared an attitude to creativity that was anti-academic, quotidian and open to all.
Including works by John Cage, Philip Corner, Dick Higgins, Alison Knowles, George Maciunas, Claes Oldenburg and Yoko Ono Sense Sound/Sound Sense investigates Fluxus artists’ interest in music and sound through performance, scores, records and objects from the Luigi Bonotto Collection. Fluxus artists assigned importance to musical production, presenting public events as concerts that challenged conventional form and content in music. Their approach to music scores was equally radical. Breaking free from traditional sheet music, they devised notational systems based on graphics, poetry and the visual arts.
Sense Sound / Sound Sense is co-curated by Patrizio Peterlini (director of Fondazione Bonotto) Walter Rovere, and Nayia Yiakoumaki Curator: Archive Gallery with the assistance of Wells Fray-Smith, Assistant Curator: Special and Emily Gray, Archive Assistant Curator
Fluxus Music, Scores & Records in the Luigi Bonotto Collection
3 September 2019 – 2 February 2020
How should we use a grand piano in order to produce sound? By opening the piano and stacking wooden blocks inside the instrument until one falls and creates a noise, or by dropping dried beans onto the keys? Conceptual fluxus artist George Brecht (1926–2008), in one of his iconic works Incidental Music, instructed fellow artists to demonstrate how several people at once could interact with the piano.
The Fluxus movement emerged in the 1960s as an international network of artists, musicians and performers who staged experimental happenings using everyday materials. They shared an attitude to creativity that was anti-academic, quotidian and open to all.
Including works by John Cage, Philip Corner, Dick Higgins, Alison Knowles, George Maciunas, Claes Oldenburg and Yoko Ono Sense Sound/Sound Sense investigates Fluxus artists’ interest in music and sound through performance, scores, records and objects from the Luigi Bonotto Collection. Fluxus artists assigned importance to musical production, presenting public events as concerts that challenged conventional form and content in music. Their approach to music scores was equally radical. Breaking free from traditional sheet music, they devised notational systems based on graphics, poetry and the visual arts.
Sense Sound / Sound Sense is co-curated by Patrizio Peterlini (director of Fondazione Bonotto) Walter Rovere, and Nayia Yiakoumaki Curator: Archive Gallery with the assistance of Wells Fray-Smith, Assistant Curator: Special and Emily Gray, Archive Assistant Curator