Velemir Khlebnikov Vladimir Tatlin Zangesi
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Velemir Khlebnikov Vladimir Tatlin Zangesi
Vladimir Tatlin
Zangezi, 1923
Vladimir Tatlin designed, directed and starred in a performance of Velimir Khlebnikovâs play-poem Zangezi which uses the âtrans-rationalâ language zaum, invented by the Russian Futurists. Zangezi premiered in 1923 at the GINCHuK Museum of Art and Culture in Petrograd â where, from 1928 on, Khlebnikovâs successors, the literary absurdists of the OBERIU group (a Russian acronym for âThe Union of Real Artâ), were active. The groupâs leader Daniil Kharms developed a theory of the object connected to the idea of free will, writing: âSuch an object âLEVITATESâ.â Tatlin illustrated Kharmsâs absurdist fairytale First, Second (1928).Â
Khlebnikov had died of malnutrition earlier in the year, and the performance was to be a memorial to Tatlinâs favorite poet. To Khlebnikovâs construction of words, where sound was the principle building element, Tatlin attempted to find a counterpart in tangible construction, built with a variety of materials in different surfaces and shapes. According to the artistâs conception, certain combinations of colours and forms corresponded to certain sounds; light and costumes also played an important role in the production.
Zangezi was an isolated production among Tatlinâs post revolutionary works, and curiously it was staged when Constructivism had already made inroads into the theater, thanks to the convergence of the ideals of such plasticians  as Popova, Stepanova, and Meyerhold.
Kazimir Malevich
Victory over the Sun, 1913
The opera was performed in 1913 on a double bill with Mayakovskyâs play Vladimir Mayakovsky. A Tragedy at Luna Park Theatre in St. Petersburg.
In 1913 Kazimir Malevich was asked to produce a series of costumes and set designs for the âfirst Cubo-Futurist opera,â entitled Victory over the Sun. The music was by Mikhail Matiushin, and the main text was written by the poet Alexei Kruchenykh in the invented Futurist âtransrationalâ language of zaum. This new language relied on neologisms, puns, and the free association of sounds and images that divested words of all predictable meaning, attempting to communicate the internal state of the speaker directly. Dissonant music combined with sound effects accompanied the actorâs movement speech. There was also a prologue written by Velimir Khlebnikov.
Malevichâs non-objective black-and-white sets made from cloth sheets painted with conical, spiral, and geometric forms were equally unconventional, as were his costumes - ingenious constructions of brightly coloured cardboard cylinders, cones, and cubes. In addition to reshaping the human figure, the costumes dictated specific movement patterns. The Futurist Strongmen, for example, could only flex their arms upward.Â
Malevich had originally planned for a three-dimensional stage set, but the lack of resources on the part of the producing organisation forced him to use backdrops that he painted himself. In spite of this limitation, he achieved a three-dimensional, volumetric design through the distribution of freestanding geometric forms onstage and the use of mobile lighting. The poet Benedikt Livshits, who saw the production recalled:
Painterly stereometry was created within the confines of the scenic     box for the first time, and a strict system of volumes was established, one  that reduced the element of chance (which the movements of the human figure might have introduced) to a minimum. These figures were cut up by the blades of light and were deprived alternately of hands, legs, head, etc., because for Malevich, they were merely geometric bodies subject not only to disintegration into their component parts, but also to total dissolution in painterly space.
This description supports Malevichâs belief, formed in accordance with futurist principles, that âall matter disintegrates into a large number of component parts which are fully independent.â
Stereo Decoy A Canadian/American Duet Laurie Anderson 1977 #laurieanderson #performance #performanceart https://www.instagram.com/p/CGQDyYYFdmx/?igshid=l8ckrh60g1et
Stereo Decoy A Canadian/American Duet Laurie Anderson 1977 #performance #performanceart #laurieanderson https://www.instagram.com/p/CGQDWt2lI2Z/?igshid=y1e2tyntdvn
Primeira performance? Amadeo Souza Cardoso, Manuel Bentos, JosĂ© Pedro Cruz, EmĂ©rico Nunes e Domingues Rebelo em Paris, dramatizam âLos Borrachosâ (âO Triunfo de Bacoâ) de Velasquez . â[...] chegarĂĄ o tempo em que a vida nĂŁo se resumirĂĄ a uma mera questĂŁo de pĂŁo e trabalho ou trajetĂłria do puro Ăłcio: serĂĄ uma obra de arte.â F.T. Marinetti (em CitĂ© FalguiĂšre) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGIDtg2F2pQ/?igshid=rlm3d6nc2p51
Ben Vautier, "Total art match-box"
Fondazione Bonotto
(bytheinch)
Group Ongaku
Giuseppe Chiari, September 26, 1926 / 2020
(image: Fluxus. 10 opere di Giuseppe Chiari, (postcard), 1998. Fondazione Bonotto, Molvena (VI))
Atsuko Tanaka. Untitled. 1956.
Atsuko Tanaka âElectric Dressâ
Atsuko Tanaka  âDenkifukuâ (Electric Dress)
(1956) Atsuko Tanaka wearing her Electric Dress suspended from the ceiling at the 2nd Gutai Art Exhibition in Ohara Hall, Tokyo, 1956 © Kanayama Akira and Tanaka Atsuko Association, Photo: Courtesy of Nakanoshima Museum of Art, Osaka
Atsuko Tanaka
Work (Bell) is an interactive sound installation that comprises twenty alarm bells laid across some forty meters of exhibition space. Visitors were invited to follow the instruction âPlease push this buttonâ and thereby switch on a mechanism that activated a sequence of ringings, moving first away and then back toward the visitor over the course of a few minutes. Fellow Gutai collective members described Tanakaâs acoustic composition as âliving soundâ as a painting âin which the line is drawn clearly with oneâs inner vision.
Gutai art does not alter matter; it gives matter life... In Gutai art, the human spirit and matter, opposed as they are, shake hands... My respect goes out to the works of Pollock and Mathieu. Their works are the cries uttered by matter: by oil paint and enamel themselves.
Yoshihara, Gutai manifesto, 1956
Plans for Work(Bell) appeared in Gutai
Atsuko Tanaka, Work (Bell), (1955-1993)
Work (Bell) is an interactive sound installation that comprises twenty alarm bells laid across some forty meters of exhibition space. Visitors were invited to follow the instruction âPlease push this buttonâ and thereby switch on a mechanism that activated a sequence of ringings, moving first away and then back toward the visitor over the course of a few minutes. Fellow Gutai collective members described Tanakaâs acoustic composition as âliving soundâ as a painting âin which the line is drawn clearly with oneâs inner vision.