John Cage and the experimental composition classes Brecht met the artist
Robert Watts at
Rutgers University in 1957, and through Watts,
Allan Kaprow. The three started to meet regularly for lunch at a local branch of
Howard Johnson's, New Jersey. After a meeting with
John Cage organized by Brecht whilst the latter was in New Jersey hunting mushrooms, the three men started to attend Cage's experimental music composition classes at the
New School for Social Research in New York. In the classes, Cage encouraged his students to use chance and games as major elements in the creation of art. Initially writing theatrical scores similar to Kaprow's earliest
Happenings, Brecht grew increasingly dissatisfied with the didactic nature of these performances. After performing in one such piece, Cage quipped that he'd "never felt so controlled before." prompting Brecht to pare the scores down to
haiku-like statements, leaving space for radically different interpretations each time the piece was performed. As well as Cage's constructive criticism, Brecht was becoming increasingly interested in
Marcel Duchamp's theories on art, which he'd written about at length in
Chance-Imagery, a text written in 1957 but only published in 1966 by the
Something Else Press. It was only while reading Robert Lebel's 1959 monograph on Duchamp and pondering the consequences of the readymade that Brecht truly understood what he was searching for: Just as the readymade is an object lifted from its mere commodity status by being transported into an art context, the "event" would be an act--often a simple one performed daily, such as turning on and off a switch--on which he would cast his spotlight in order to force us to pay attention to it, in order, as the Russian formalists would have said, to "make it strange" and "de-automatize our perception." The final piece in the jigsaw, combining a Duchampian love of chance with a scientific belief in art as research, was an epiphany Brecht had in 1960, in which he decisively separated the artwork from the control of the artist;
The Yam Festival, 1963 Yam was a name thought up by Brecht and Watts in late 1962 to act as an umbrella project 'for all manner of immaterial, experimental, as yet unclassified forms of expression.' Specifically intending to provide a platform for 'art that could not be bought,' the earliest
Yam events involved mailing event cards and other objects stamped with the word 'Yam', or variations, to friends. Designed to increase anticipation, the project reached a head with a month-long series of events in May 1963, in New York, Rutger's University and
George Segal's farm. The
Yam Festival was held on a farm in South Brunswick, New Jersey on May 19, 1963, to actions and happenings by artists including
Dick Higgins,
Allan Kaprow,
La Monte Young, and
Wolf Vostell. The festival was organized as a wide-ranging series of events taking place throughout the month, whose main objective was to bypass traditional gallery outlets, giving artists and 'receivers' greater freedom.
Wolf Vostell made here his happening
TV Burying. Artists participating in the festival included
Alison Knowles, Allan Kaprow,
John Cage,
Al Hansen,
Ay-O,
Dick Higgins,
La Monte Young,
Karlheinz Stockhausen and
Ray Johnson. The festival has come to be seen as a proto-fluxus event, involving many of the same artists.
Yam evolved parallel to George Maciunas'
Fluxfests, set up with almost identical aims but currently operating only in Europe whilst Maciunas was stationed in Germany. The International Fluxus Festival of the Newest Music (
Festum Fluxorum), 1962–63, would feature the work of artists such as Cage,
Raoul Hausmann and
Nam June Paik. Brecht's event-scores, including the famous
Drip Event, were amongst the pieces Maciunas would perform, along with pieces by Kaprow, Watts,
Daniel Spoerri,
Robert Filliou,
Terry Riley,
Emmett Williams,
Joseph Beuys,
Wolf Vostell and
Dick Higgins.
Maciunas in Germany Clearly aware of the
Yam Festival, Maciunas brought together 73 of Brecht's event-scores whilst working as a free-lance designer for the
US army stationed at
Ehlhalten near
Wiesbaden, and placed them in a box with a fine example of his
graphic design pasted onto the cover. Maciunas referred to the box as 'Brecht's complete works' and intended it to be the first in a series compiling works by artists he admired. Few of these intended 'collected works' ever saw the light of day. The use of multiple
fonts derived from his interest in experimental
typography by
Dada figures such as
Hugo Ball and Raoul Hausmann, and was to prove crucial in defining a recognisable style for fluxus products. Published in spring 1963, the box was designed to be the cheapest and simplest way of disseminating art, and in keeping with Maciunas' beliefs, was neither numbered nor signed, although later editions would be published as limited, numbered editions. The box is the very first
Fluxkit, and the only published link between Brecht and Watt's
Yam Festival, and Maciunas'
FluxFests. ==Later versions==