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  2. Cage’s weekly homework was to create a piece of work and in response Kaprow began to create full-scale events that he called 'happenings'. In 1959 he presented 18 Happenings in 6 Parts at the Reuben Gallery in New York – the first opportunity for a wider audience to experience this sort of event.

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  3. www.theartstory.org › movement › happeningsHappenings - The Art Story

    • Summary of Happenings
    • Key Ideas & Accomplishments
    • Beginnings of Happenings
    • Happenings: Concepts, Styles, and Trends
    • Later Developments - After Happenings

    What began as a challenge to the category of "art" initiated by the Futurists and Dadaists in the 1910s and 1920s came to fruition with Performance Art, one branch of which was referred to as Happenings. Happenings involved more than the detached observation of the viewer; the artist engaged with Happenings required the viewer to actively participa...

    A main component of Happenings was the involvement of the viewer. Each instance a Happening occurred the viewer was used to add in an element of chance so, every time a piece was performed or exhib...
    The concept of the ephemeral was important to Happenings, as the performance was a temporary experience, and, as such could not be exhibited in a museum in the traditional sense. The only artifacts...
    The purpose of Happenings was to confront and dismantle conventional views of the category of "art." These performances were so influential to the art world that they raised the specter of the "dea...

    Happenings were inspired by the performances of Futurists who would enact short avant-gardeplays and read their manifestoes and poetry on stage. The Futurist tendency to break the "fourth wall" and elicit audience participation became a central idea in the Happening: the absence of boundaries between the viewer and the artwork meant the artwork bec...

    The audience participation in Happenings incorporated the aspect of chance, as anything could happen at any time and each performance would be completely unique from the one before. This was the critical difference between Happenings and other performance art of the time, which emphasized a more theatrical and repeatable ethos. Happenings could be ...

    Happenings culminated with the infamous 1963 Yam Festival, a month-long series of events held on George Segal's farm and in other locations in and around New York. After this event, Happenings began to dwindle in the mid sixties as other new art forms and theories gained prominence, such as conceptual art, body art and feminist art. Nevertheless, m...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_CageJohn Cage - Wikipedia

    John Milton Cage Jr. (September 5, 1912 – August 12, 1992) was an American composer and music theorist. A pioneer of indeterminacy in music, electroacoustic music, and non-standard use of musical instruments, Cage was one of the leading figures of the post-war avant-garde.

  5. Jul 11, 2024 · Allan Kaprow created “Happenings,” redefining performance art. His work blurred the lines between art and life. Kaprow influenced later movements and artists. Early Life and Education. Allan Kaprow was a pioneer in the world of performance art and environmental art.

    • August 23, 1927
    • Performance art and Happenings
    • April 5, 2006
    • Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States
  6. Mar 12, 2016 · In mid-century France, Yves Klein dragged nude models covered in paint across canvases as spectators looked on. In the United States, experimental composer and musician John Cage was particularly influential in the development of the Happenings.

  7. Aug 12, 1992 · This early proto-happening prefigured later developments in modern art, particularly the increasing focus on the outside world, as evidenced in later movements like Fluxus, Minimalism, and Conceptualism, as well as performance art in general.

  8. Sep 27, 2010 · On August 29, 1952, David Tudor walked onto the stage of the Maverick Concert Hall, near Woodstock, New York, sat down at the piano, and, for four and a half minutes, made no sound. He was...