Terrence writes;
the secret is the reply e-mail and
Patricia wrote:
And only then will the little fluxter (fluxter??? I would think fluxer)
achieve enlightenment? Or is the fable of the pebble feeble and peppered
with handy parables? What is the sound of one pebble passing from the
Hi Scott,
the Anti Redundancy Targeting System will be a fun, exciting (and
foolproof) way
to make certain that your art ideas are absolutely 100% Original©®.
have you ever wondered how to either stop or start making residual and
derivative art?
Your idea reminds me of a pataphysics club that
Hi all, in particular Emily if you're reading,
The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated catalog on Le Cabinet
Anatomique published by the Emily Harvey Gallery with a text by the art
critic Otto Hahn, translated and introduced by Henry Martin.
Will I be able to get hold of one of these
AK:
finds was great. The range of color, that it was apparently used as body
paint, the fact that painting predates the physical evolution of the
Thanks !
H.
One could, of course, do these at any similar conglomerative store, or take
them to any other venue where the action would work. I especially like #29,
and it seems to me one of the most versatile Enjoy the days! Melissa
50 Fun Things To Do At Wal-Mart
1.
Emily Harvey Gallery, 537 Bway, NYC
---
Dear Emily. What does the Spoerri catralog cost plus shipping?
Please send email answer and forms of payment accepted. -Thanks, Don Boyd
In a message dated 05/08/2000 12:46:35 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Terrence writes;
The Fable of the Fluxus Pebble...
"...a my little fluxter, you will know only when you can take the
Fluxus Pebble from my hand..."
T.
The Fable of the Fluxus Princess and
In a message dated 05/08/2000 1:06:51 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
*gasp*
Princess Petal
Er, I didn't realize you'd referred to yrself as Princess. My Princess Fable
had nothing to do with yr Princess, Patricia. Only the Pebble thing reminded
me of the princess
the Pebble thing reminded
me of the princess and the pea story, one of the childhood stories that most
captured my imagination as a kid, and everytime my mom served peas, I'd
examine them and think of that story. I just couldn't imagine even a princess
being so sensitive. Then later, I met
thanks for the feedback.
mtaa have been resting after finishing some projects, we'll be back in
action soon
==
twhid
http://www.mteww.com
--
From: Patricia [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FLUXLIST: websiteunseen
Date: Fri, May 5, 2000, 10:58 AM
In a message dated 05/08/2000 1:01:19 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Patricia, I did take a look, and the thing on the 400,000-yr-old pigment
finds was great. The range of color, that it was apparently used as body
paint, the fact that painting predates the physical
I personally think MP3's are the coolest thing going. I have pretty
compulsive music interests, so its great to be able to find stuff by most
artists for free. I download a lot of stuff that I'd never just go out and
buy.
To me, its no real difference than dubbing an album on cassette or
-Original Message-
From: . m e . [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 07 May 2000 13:05
Subject: I-ZONE
perhaps you can forward this
to all of those with work in
your i-zone gallery:
greyletter press presents:
I-ZONE PROJECTS' PORTRAIT
SERIES
this will
I would be outraged at others taking my work
without my permission and sharing it. Let alone the loss of
income.
I would think a majority of recording artists do what they do on
a full time basis. Take away their income and they'll find another
means by which to earn a living. I believe
Well to put my two cents in on this issue...there is a good side and a bad
side to it. As a creative musician who produces music that major labels do
not deem as commercially viable, mp3.com and napster are a great way to get
your music out there. My Spiritpark webpage gets 20-30 hits and
I personally think MP3's are the coolest thing going.
No, I think that belongs to MiniDisc. I wish I knew why so many
people tend to think of audio files only in terms of the pre-recorded.
MP3s compress more than twice as much as do MiniDiscs and you just
can't go about with microphones on
of artists' rights. I would be outraged at others taking my work
without my permission and sharing it. Let alone the loss of
income.
This is an old topic, but if you are interested, I prefer gnutella,
because it works without central database.
And "privat copying" is ok. As it ever was.
or is it possibly changing the way it all works. As it becomes easier and
easier to produce your own website and distribute/sell your music through
MP3's yourself, for a lot less money than a record company, maybe you'll
find you really don't need a big record deal and a big record company.
she is Pretty and nice,
intelligent And informed.
i'm Talking about
our favoRed
fluxlIst member,
who loves Cats and all of us
at least I hope she
does And that's all. Don
But you can record it with minidisk and convert it to mp3 in a second
step. For email etc.
True, but there are a gazillion people out there who think they have
no use for MiniDiscs because they have MP3 capability. For some crazy
reason, people see them as competing mediums when really MP3
Terrence writes;
I think trading is OK. Kids used to trade pogs. It's not much different with
pop music that is specifically aimed at exploiting a youth market, especially
Metalica; ~pogs dun dun dun dun draang drannng dun dun dun dun dun pogs
pogs pogs.~
T.
Sol Nte wrote:
- all the
Sol wrote in response to Patricia:
I think that's the case here. People are too hung up on possibly losing
money that they haven't even made yet - all the artists who complain about
this kind of thing are loaded anyway.when it comes down to it you can't
really own anything. You come
Hello, I'm still trying to dig up info on Thomas Schmit. Found a reference
that there were 200 Sanitas, published in German. Drat.
Anyways, there are 15 sound files from Schmit, Higgins, Jo Jones, Philip
Corner and others at:
http://strano.net/town/music/fluxus.htm
I can't listen to them on
lectures, all the furniture of fame) and less from the actual sale of works,
whereas lesser-known writers who derived a larger proportion of income from
actual sales of works favored copyright. So it's been kind of a little-guy
Think it was about libraries, what should they pay to the authors
[EMAIL PROTECTED],.Internet writes:
Hello, I'm still trying to dig up info on Thomas Schmit. Found a
reference
that there were 200 Sanitas, published in German. Drat.
Josh and others who are interested- I happen to have the catalog (tomas
schmit, published by the Kolnischer kunstverein in 1978
Can we ask bands to return cd money for the portion of the cds that aren't
any good? Like when you have to buy a whole cd to get two or three songs you
really like? Why do we have to pay for all the songs when we don't want em?
How about we cut out the bits of paintings we don't like, too, and demand our
money back? How come people who complain about spending their hardearned money
on art always follow up by criticizing artists for being too desirous of money?
Like bitching about spending an extra ten bucks isn't
Terrence writes;
Paintings are different. They are more like a fabulous concert played only once.
They are one of a kind. (Mp3's are more like cheap posters but better). Packaged
and distributed cd's are the fancy seriographs. But you know the new money making
concept for soft media. Design once
Terrence writes,
Minidisc and has the size and tactilty and physical archiving/ labeling
and I prefer. Anything that makes the recording and handling pleasurable
is great.
syquest 135 is/was better to use and faster but zip became the standard.
Even if it gets skipped as a standard Minidisc
High!
The International Parallel Union of Telecommunications
inform the list about 2 important statements by Eric Andersen
declared during his lectures in Budapest (H):
1. All the authentic Fluxus artists consider the Fluxlist
to be a truly absurd parody.
2. Eric
I only wish that there was a visual-image equivalent to Napster. (Record
companies don't pay the majority of 'their artists' much at all. The Net
will eventually provide a much better income/audience for artists.)
Check-out the following message; these folks project my 12hr-images in
UK
In a message dated 05/08/2000 6:20:32 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
How about we cut out the bits of paintings we don't like, too, and demand
our
money back? How come people who complain about spending their hardearned
money
on art always follow up by criticizing
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Mon, 8 May 2000 17:13:29 -0500
From: LPDC [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: June 11 Vigil in Support of Peltier's Parole
Dear Friends,
Below is an announcement for the June 11 vigil the LPDC is organizing in
support of Leonard
this interview is to be published on http://www.artbreak.net, check
ARTBREAK for another exciting MTAA article on etoy's stay in
manhattan, with an interview with agent.NASDAQ, the glorious
toy.WARRIOR.
--twhid
+++
MTAA (M.River T.Whid Art Assoc.) interview etoy.CORPORATION.
A
The Brad Brace 24hr Dance Beat
12hr-images in
UK music-clubs!
All you animals hop to the beat all you animals look at the floor
all those blurs are movin' feet movin' to the sound bad bad sound movin'
them up and movin' them down
buildings rockin' in your town I can hear the dogs
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