"If I had to Live my Life Over Again, I would Be a Botanist": John Cage’s Mycology Collection

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Pigza, Education and the Avant Garde: How Fluxus Artists Shaped the Arts at UC Santa Cruz.

In her article, Pigza examines how Fluxus based artists shaped ideas on education at UC Santa Cruz: 


When Gurdon Woods arrived in Santa Cruz in 1966 and assumed leadership of UC Santa Cruz’s Board of Studies in Art, he was tasked with designing an art program for the new campus. As part of this process he launched a yearlong study, funded via a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, to create a guiding philosophy to use in selecting faculty and identifying educational priorities.

The yearlong study unfolded during the 1967-1968 academic year, during which Woods hired Edmund Carpenter, Sidney Simon, and Robert Watts to design and lead experimental art courses. He also invited numerous scholars and avant-garde artists, including Allan Kaprow, John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Christopher Cornford, Dan Flavin, Ronald Resch, Leo Steinberg, and Colin Young, to come for shorter campus residencies and share their perspectives and observations. And an intrepid group of UC Santa Cruz students agreed to play a part in what faculty member Sidney Simon called this “modest experiment in participatory education.”

In addition to the action-oriented exploration of Woods’s project, UC Santa Cruz also welcome experimental arts to campus by acquiring work by Fluxus and other avant-garde artists of this time to its Library collections. And the earliest years of College Five, founded in 1969, reflect an openness and interest in supporting experimental forms of creativity.

 

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