Corporate Imaginations
About the Author
Table of Contents
1. A Fantastic Confusion
2. The Great Executive Dream
3. Performing the System
4. George Brecht: Scoring Events
5. Robert Watts: Engineering Objects
6. Nam June Paik: Art for Cybernated Life
7. Alison Knowles: Ritual and Routine
8. Mieko Shiomi: The Artistic Globalism of Fluxus
Notes
List of Illustrations
Index
Reviews
“Dumett argues for Fluxus as a kind of ‘thinking’ by illustrating ways that Fluxus artists appropriated principles and practices, which hustled internationalism into globalization. She shows how Fluxus simultaneously exploited, expanded, denounced, subverted, used, and abused many of the scientific and data-driven experiments that formed and controlled everyday life after World War II.”—Simon Anderson, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
“The idea that Fluxus—the most chaotic, incoherent, and ambiguous of the twentieth-century avant-gardes—was also driven by the principles and procedures derived from corporate culture seems as counterintuitive as everything else about this crazy quasi-movement. Mari Dumett makes a strong and original case for such a reading through a searching profile of the thought and activities of its central figure, George Maciunas, and through fascinating close studies of the work of its principal practitioners—George Brecht, Robert Watts, Nam June Paik, and Alison Knowles—and comments on lesser known ones such as Mieko Shiomi.”—Terry Smith, University of Pittsburgh