Wednesday, October 7, 2015

George Brecht


George Brecht (George MacDiarmid),   (born Aug. 27, 1926, New York, N.Y.—died Dec. 5, 2008, Cologne, Ger.), American conceptual artist and sculptor who created art from an approach that valued fluid boundaries between artistic disciplines and playful engagement with the viewer. Brecht attended (1946–50) the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science and took a job as a research chemist but soon became inspired by the works of avant-garde composer John Cage.



Although Brecht’s own attempts at composition were short-lived, he retained from Cage both an interest in chance and a focus on multimedia “events” as defining elements of his work, and by the early 1960s he was affiliated with the Fluxus movement, a like-minded group of conceptual artists. Brecht was especially known for his sculptural installations of everyday objects and for his use of written instructions, which he called “event scores,” in the creation of art.


George Brecht performing his Solo for Violin, taken April 25, 1964 at 359 Canal Street, New York City during Flux Fest at Fluxhall    

Fluxfilm #10
George Brecht (New York, NY, USA, 1926)
Entrance to Exit, 7 min, 1965



 Entrance to Exit is a performance by George Brecht, Word Event (1961), transposed into film.  It is also one of the only sound films in anthology, with Paul Sharits’ Word Movie (fluxfilm #29) and Peter Kennedy and Mike Parr’s Flux Film #36.  The screen starts white, while on the soundtrack we hear a sine wave in middle C (262 Hz); the pre-amp proceeds to overmodulate through the volume does not change.  Gradually, as the picture fades to black, the sound signal is compressed, approaching white noise. 


 
The Word Event performance takes place in a dark room.  The audience can just make out two signs, “Entrance” and “Exit”. This produces simultaneous and multiple perceptions: some imagine the order to exit and leave the room; others turn naturally the look at the doors, or above them at the green lamps which designate them in the darkness; still others wait for Brecht himself to leave. 



There is no ironical or critical distance, no explanations or questions; only varying perceptions of the moment.
After studying chemisty, George Brecht took John Cage’s music composition class at the New School for Social Research where he met Robert Watts. With Allan Kaprow, he was one of the founders of the event in New York in the early 1960's.  Brecht also published essays on chance, impossible objects and vicious circles, and even planned to compile an anthology of misunderstandings.



George Brecht, like La Monte Young, played an active role in the development of Fluxus.  In 1963 he created the Fluxus magazine, V TRE, which Maciunas eventually took over.  For a few months in 1965 he founded “The Smiling Cedilla” with Robert Filliou in Villefranche-sur-mer, a gallery and workshop where together they built all kinds of pointless and farcical objects.  This gallery appears in retrospect one of the most convincing examples of the “play-art” professed by Fluxus.
On his work, George Brecht has stated: “The primary function of my art seems to be an expression of maximum meaning with a minimal image.”

From the linner notes of the DVD FluxFilm Anthology


'

 Drip Music, Fluxversion 1

First performer on a tall ladder pours water from a pitcher very slowly down into the bell of a French horn or tuba held in the playing position by a second performer at floor level.
1959


George Brecht: Incidental Music (excerpt)
Performed by Ben Vautier (FR)
Festival of Fantastics Roskilde 1985,
Video Production: TVF.© TVF 1985



Incidental Music


Five piano pieces, any number of which may be played in succession, simultaneously, in any order and combination, with one another or with other pieces.

1. The piano seat is tilted on its base and brought to rest against a part of the piano.

2. Wooden blocks. A single block is placed inside the piano. A block is placed upon this block, then a third upon the second, and so forth, one by one, until at least one block falls from the column.

3. Photographing the piano situation.

4. Three dried peas or beans are dropped, one after another, onto the keyboard. Each such seed remaining on the keyboard is attached to the key or keys nearest it with a single piece of pressure-sensitive tape.

5. The piano seat is suitably arranged and the performer seats himself.