Events
Date/ 1964
Artist(Credit Line)/ Robert Watts
Classification/ Object
- Paik-Abe Video Synthesizer
- Homecoming
- 12 Piano Compositions for Nam June Paik by George Maciunas performer’s copy of score with annotations and instructions for performance at Nam June Paik Art Center in 2010 prepared and performed by Ben Patterson
- Message to Nam June Paik
- Chronicle of A Beautiful Dancer
- In Memoriam Geroge Maciunas
- Flux Reliquary
- Deck, A Fluxgame
- Closed on Monday, A Fluxgame
- Bead Puzzle
- Flux Rain Machine
- Events
- Living Fluxsculpture
- Instruction No.2
- Events
- Name kit
- Sinfonie Nr. 6 - in box (Violinparts and score), funkhaus köln, Neuss
- 2 1/2 TV
- Chair Black and White
- Colored Chair
- Hommage a John Cage
- 6 drawings on beertabs
- Fan
- MS-Fluxussus (symphonie Nr. 7)
- Cooking Pot (with Korean Recipe)
- First portable TV
- Untitled
Dimensions / 3×18.1x13cm
Medium / Plastic box, 71 instruction cards, 1set of postage stamps
Along with the idea of ‘Fluxkit’ that George Maciunas conceived in 1964, Fluxus artists produced multiple editions of kits encompassing a selection of miscellaneous objects and sheets of paper as graphic scores for the user to read or manipulate as with interactive games. The kits were packed together in a small attaché case for sale, which was first advertised in the fourth Fluxus newspaper, fLuxus cc fiVeThReE that also contained Nam June Paik’s essay, Afterlude to the Exposition of Experimental Television. This Fluxkit is Robert Watts’ Events, a box that contains 71 instruction cards and one set of postage stamps. In 1961, Watts designed a perforated sheet of stamps with popular and erotic imagery, to become the first artist to use postage stamps within the context of art. The most well-known is Fluxpost/17-17, his fourth sheet made up of 100 postage stamps. His stamp sets were often included in a Fluxkit, in whole or in part.
Medium / Plastic box, 71 instruction cards, 1set of postage stamps
Along with the idea of ‘Fluxkit’ that George Maciunas conceived in 1964, Fluxus artists produced multiple editions of kits encompassing a selection of miscellaneous objects and sheets of paper as graphic scores for the user to read or manipulate as with interactive games. The kits were packed together in a small attaché case for sale, which was first advertised in the fourth Fluxus newspaper, fLuxus cc fiVeThReE that also contained Nam June Paik’s essay, Afterlude to the Exposition of Experimental Television. This Fluxkit is Robert Watts’ Events, a box that contains 71 instruction cards and one set of postage stamps. In 1961, Watts designed a perforated sheet of stamps with popular and erotic imagery, to become the first artist to use postage stamps within the context of art. The most well-known is Fluxpost/17-17, his fourth sheet made up of 100 postage stamps. His stamp sets were often included in a Fluxkit, in whole or in part.