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Jool (What it Was:): this design is so cool great job
Stephen (What it Was:): I will be back often Congratulation and my best wis…
T. DArrigo (Reed Altemus Blog…): Cool Reed. I can relate to the copier art (and act…
Allan (A Bit About Marce…): Fluxus did not die. Fluxus lives.
Aideen (A Bit About Marce…): Did Fluxus Die?
Pierre-joseph Pro… ("Cop Shop" Fluxus…): I stand corrected. I stand. There is an author. [I]…
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+ 2 - 2 | § Peter Frank on Fluxus

In his review of Yoko Ono's work on http://www.artcommotion.com/Issue2/VisualArts/#Fluxus, Peter Frank summarizes the early Fluxus movement nicely:

The Fluxus movement emerged in New York around 1960, then it took root in Europe, and eventually in its way to Japan. The movement encompassed a new aesthetic that had already appeared on three continents. That aesthetic encompasses a reductive gesturality, part Dada, part Bauhaus and part Zen, and presumes that all media and all artistic disciplines are fair game for combination and fusion. Fluxus presaged avant-garde developments over the last 40 years.

Fluxus objects and performances are characterized by minimalist but often expansive gestures based in scientific, philosophical, sociological, or other extra-artistic ideas and leavened with burlesque.

The entire article is available here; http://www.artcommotion.com/Issue2/VisualArts/

+ 2 - 1 | § Fluxus Free Zone Redux

There are exactly three choices for how to use the Fluxus Free Zone stickers:
 
1) Fluxus Free Zone = Fluxus Free-Zone = This place is a good place for Fluxus to happen
 
2) Fluxus Free Zone = Fluxus-Free Zone = This is a place where Fluxus is not likely to happen
 
3) Fluxus Free Zone = Fluxus-Free Zone = Fluxus has not happened here yet, but it could/should/might
 
4) Fluxus Free Zone = Fluxus Free Zone = This is a Fluxus Free Zone

Download printable sticker file here.
File is a PDF, Adobe Reader required for viewing and printing.