Synopses & Reviews
As the creator of "Happenings" and "Environments," Allan Kaprow is the prince and prophet of all we call performance art today. He is also known for having written some of the most thoughtful, provocative, and influential essays of his generation. From "The Legacy of Jackson Pollock" in 1958 to "The Meaning of Life" in 1990, Kaprow has conducted a sustained philosophical inquiry into the paradoxical relationship of art to life, and thus into the nature of meaning itself. With the publication of this book, twenty-three of Kaprow's most significant essays are brought together in one volume for the first time.
Kaprow charts his own evolution as an artist and also comments on contemporaneous developments in the arts. From the modernist avant-garde of the fifties to the current postmodern fin de siècle, Kaprow has written aboutand from withinthe shifting, blurring boundaries of genre, media, culture, and experience. Edited and introduced by critic Jeff Kelley, these essays bring into crisp focus the thinking of one of the most influential figures in the varied landscape of American art since the late 1950s.
Synopsis
"Kaprow has shown how certain ordinary experiences and events, if properly conceptualized and performed consciously, could be 'art' and how art if properly contexted could be experienced as co-existent with 'life'. His writings not only explain but inspire; they are theoretical in the deepest sense of making one
see and
experience thought."Richard Schechner, University Professor, New York University
"Kaprow's writings are one of the most important bodies of work documenting the feeling, at the end of the 1950s and throughout the 1960s, that art itself had reached an impasse and become so formalized that it had evolved into a rarefied, elitist mode of cultural hegemony, and in order to make meaningful art one needed, somehow, to sidestep the art world altogether."Henry Sayre, Oregon State University
Synopsis
"Allan Kaprow's essays sound fresh and new. . .. Artists of the world, read this--you have nothing to lose but your equilibrium."--Lucy R. Lippard, author of Mixed Blessings: New Art in a Multicultural America
About the Author
Allan Kaprow is Professor of Visual Arts at the University of California at San Diego. Jeff Kelley is a critic and teacher living in Oakland, California. He was instrumental in organizing "Precedings," a thirty-year retrospective of Kaprow's works in 1988.