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John Cage
Volume 12 (October Files)
By Julia Robinson (Edited by)

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Format
Paperback, 232 pages
Published
United States, 1 August 2011

John Cage (1912¿1992) defined a radical practice of composition that changed the course of modern music and shaped a new conceptual horizon for postwar art. Famous for his use of chance and ¿silence¿ in musical works, a pioneer in electronic music and the nonstandard use of instruments, Cage was one of the most influential composers of the last century. This volume traces a trajectory of writings on the artist, from the earliest critical reactions to the scholarship of today. If the first writing on Cage in the American context, often written by close associates with Cage¿s involvement, seemed lacking in critical distance, younger scholars--a generation removed--have recently begun to approach the legacy from a new perspective, with more developed theoretical frameworks and greater skepticism. This book captures that evolution. The texts include discussions of Cage¿s work in the context of the New Music scene in Germany in the 1950s; Yvonne Rainer¿s essay looking back on Cage and New York experimentalism of the 1960s; a complex and original mapping of Cage¿s place in a wider avant-garde genealogy that includes Le Corbusier and Moholy-Nagy; a musicologist¿s account of Cage¿s process of defining and formalizing his concept of indeterminacy; and an analysis of Cage¿s project that considers his strategies of self-representation as key to his unique impact on modern and postmodern art.


Julia Robinson is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at New York University. She was the curator of the exhibition ¿John Cage & Experimental Art: The Anarchy of Silence¿ and editor of the accompanying catalog. She is also the editor of New Realisms: 1957¿1962: Object Strategies Between Readymade and Spectacle (Museo Reina Sofía/MIT Press, 2010) and was the curator of the exhibition it accompanied.

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Product Description

John Cage (1912¿1992) defined a radical practice of composition that changed the course of modern music and shaped a new conceptual horizon for postwar art. Famous for his use of chance and ¿silence¿ in musical works, a pioneer in electronic music and the nonstandard use of instruments, Cage was one of the most influential composers of the last century. This volume traces a trajectory of writings on the artist, from the earliest critical reactions to the scholarship of today. If the first writing on Cage in the American context, often written by close associates with Cage¿s involvement, seemed lacking in critical distance, younger scholars--a generation removed--have recently begun to approach the legacy from a new perspective, with more developed theoretical frameworks and greater skepticism. This book captures that evolution. The texts include discussions of Cage¿s work in the context of the New Music scene in Germany in the 1950s; Yvonne Rainer¿s essay looking back on Cage and New York experimentalism of the 1960s; a complex and original mapping of Cage¿s place in a wider avant-garde genealogy that includes Le Corbusier and Moholy-Nagy; a musicologist¿s account of Cage¿s process of defining and formalizing his concept of indeterminacy; and an analysis of Cage¿s project that considers his strategies of self-representation as key to his unique impact on modern and postmodern art.


Julia Robinson is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at New York University. She was the curator of the exhibition ¿John Cage & Experimental Art: The Anarchy of Silence¿ and editor of the accompanying catalog. She is also the editor of New Realisms: 1957¿1962: Object Strategies Between Readymade and Spectacle (Museo Reina Sofía/MIT Press, 2010) and was the curator of the exhibition it accompanied.

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Product Details
EAN
9780262516303
ISBN
0262516306
Publisher
Other Information
34 b&w illus.; 68 Illustrations, unspecified
Dimensions
15.2 x 1 x 22.9 centimetres (0.44 kg)

About the Author

Julia Robinson is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at New York University. She was the curator of the exhibition "John Cage & Experimental Art: The Anarchy of Silence" and editor of the accompanying catalog. She is also the editor of New Realisms: 1957–1962: Object Strategies Between Readymade and Spectacle (Museo Reina Sofía/MIT Press, 2010) and was the curator of the exhibition it accompanied.

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