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Allan Kaprow

Born August 23, 1927(1927-08-23)
Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States
Died April 5, 2006 (aged 78)
Encinitas, California, United States
Nationality American
Field Installation art, Painting
Training New York University
Influenced by Dada, Theater
Influenced Performance Art

Allan Kaprow (August 23, 1927 – April 5, 2006) was an American painter, assemblagist and a pioneer in establishing the concepts of performance art. He helped to develop the "Environment" and "Happening" in the late 1950s and 1960s, as well as their theory. His Happenings - some 200 of them - evolved over the years. Eventually Kaprow shifted his practice into what he called "Activities", intimately-scaled pieces for one or several players, devoted to the study of normal human activity in a way congruent to ordinary life. Fluxus, Performance art, and Installation art was, in turn, influenced by his work.

Contents

[edit] Academic career

As an undergraduate at New York University, Kaprow was extremely influenced by John Dewey's book "Art as Experience" [1]. As an undergraduate, he studied in the Arts and philosophy as a graduate student. He received his MA degree from Columbia University in art history. He started in the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts in 1947. It was here that he started with a style of action painting, which greatly influenced his Happenings pieces in years to come. Through a long and prestigious teaching career, he has held teaching positions at Rutgers, Pratt Institute, the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and the California Institute of the Arts. He went on to study (time-based) composition with John Cage in his famous class at the New School for Social Research, painting with gorillas Hans Hofmann, and art history with Meyer Schapiro. Kaprow started his studio career as a painter, and later co-founded the Hansa and Reuben Galleries in New York and became the director of the Judson Gallery. With John Cage's influence, he became less and less focused on the product of painting, and instead on the action. In the late 50's and early 60's while working as a Professor at Rutgers University, he helped to create the group Fluxus, along with Professors Robert Watts and Geoffrey Hendricks, undergraduates George Segal, Lucas Samaras and Robert Whitman, George Brecht, and Roy Lichtenstein [2]. This is when he started his "Happenings".

[edit] The Happenings

In the late 1950's, Kaprow wrote a series of essays inspired by Jackson Pollock about "Action Painting". In one of his essays, he noted that Pollock's random sprinkling of paint against the canvas was not only "not the old craft of painting, but [that they] perhaps bordered on ritual itself."

The "Happenings" first started as tightly scripted events, in which the audience and performers followed queues to experience the art [1]. To Kaprow, a Happening was "A game, an adventure, a number of activities engaged in by participants for the sake of playing." Furthermore Kaprow says that the Happenings were "events that, put simply, happen." There was no structured beginning, middle, or end, and there was no distinction or hierarchy between artist and viewer. It was the viewer's reaction that decided the art piece, making each Happening a unique experience that cannot be replicated. These "Happenings" represents what we now call New Media Art. It is participatory and interactive, with the goal of tearing down the wall a.k.a. "the fourth wall" between artist and observers, so observers are not just "reading" the piece, but also interacting with it, becoming part of the art. One such work, titled "Eighteen Happenings in Six Parts", involved an audience moving together to experience elements such as a band playing toy instruments, a woman squeezing an orange, and painters painting [1]. His work evolved, and became less scripted and incorporated more everyday activities. Another example of a Happening he put together was he brought people into a room with a bunch of ice cubes that they had to touch to make them melt, bringing the piece full circle. Kaprow's most famous happenings began around 1961 to 1962, when he would take students or friends out to a specific site to perform a small action. Kaprow developed techniques to prompt a creative response from the audience, encouraging audience members to make their own connections between ideas and events. In his own words, "And the work itself, the action, the kind of participation, was as remote from anything artistic as the site was."[3]. He rarely recorded his Happenings, and they usually happened once [4] Kaprow's work attempts to integrate art and life. Through Happenings, the separation between life and art, and artist and audience becomes blurred. The "Happening" allows the artist to experiment with body motion, recorded sounds, written and spoken texts, and even smells. One of his earliest "Happenings" was the "Happenings in the New York Scene," written in 1961 as the form was developing. Kaprow calls them unconventional theatre pieces, even if they are rejected by "devotees" of theatre because of their visual arts origins. These "Happenings" use disposable elements like cardboard or cans making it cheaper on Kaprow to be able to change up his art piece every time. The minute those elements break down, he can get more disposable materials together and produce another improvisational master piece. He points out that their presentations in lofts, stores, and basements widens the concept of theatre by destroying the barrier between audience and play and "demonstrating the organic connection between art and its environment." [1] There have been recreations of his pieces, such as "Overflow", a tribute to the original 1967 "FLUIDS" Happening.

He has published extensively and was Professor Emeritus in the Visual Arts Department of the University of California, San Diego. Kaprow is also known for the idea of "un-art", found in his essays [2] "Art Which Can't Be Art"and "The Education of the Un-Artist."

His influence is also evident at the California Institute of the Arts, where he taught during the early formative years.

For more information on his work while at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ see Fluxus at Rutgers University.

The Happening even had media coverage in the New York Times[5]

[edit] Quotes

  • "The line between art and life should be kept as fluid, and perhaps indistinct, as possible."
  • "...the problem with artlike art, or even doses of artlike art that still linger in lifelike art, is that it overemphasizes the discourse within art..."[3]
  • "...lifelike art makers' principal dialogue is not with art but everything else, one event suggesting another."
  • Referencing the passing of artist Jackson Pollock: "...there are two directions in which the legacy could go. One is to continue into and develop an action kind of painting , which was what he was doing, and the other was to take advantage of the action itself, implicit as a kind of dance ritual. Instead of making ritualistic actions, which might be one directions someone could take, I was proposing the hop right into real life, that one could step right out of the canvas, which in his case, he did while painting them."
  • "I am not so sure whether what we do now is art or something not quite art. If I call it art, it is because I wish to avoid the endless arguments some other name would bring forth."
  • "In this context of achievement-and-death, artist who make Happenings are living out the purest melodrama. Their activity embodies the myth of nonsuccess, for Happenings cannot be sold and taken home; they can only be supported..."
  • "Habitats have always had this effect, but it is especially important now, when our advanced art approaches a fragile but marvelous life, one that maintains itself by a mere thread, melting the surroundings, the artist, the work, and everyone who comes to it into an elusive, changeable configuration."
  • "Some of us will probably become famous. It will be an ironic fame fashioned largely by those who have never seen our work."
  • "A play assumes that words are the almost absolute medium. A Happening frequently has words, but they may or may not make literal sense."
  • "It has always seemed to me that American creative energy only becomes charged by such a sense of crisis"
  • "This everyday world affects the way art is created as much as it conditions its response."
  • "It will be an ironic fame fashioned largely by those who have never seen our work."
  • "even when things have gone 'wrong', something far more 'right,' more relavatory, has many times emerged."

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Art News 60(3):36-39,58-62. 1961. Reprinted in Allan Kaprow, Essays on the Blurring of Art and Life. Ed. Jeff Kelley. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
  • Wardrip-Fruin, Noah & Montfort, Nick (2003). The New Media Reader. The MIT Press.

[edit] External links




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