Henry Flynt
Henry Flynt (born 1940 in Greensboro, North Carolina) is a
philosopher, avant-garde musician, anti-art activist and
exhibited artist often associated with Conceptual Art, Fluxus
and Nihilism.
Henry Flynt’s work devolves from what he calls cognitive
nihilism; a concept he developed and first announced in the 1960
and 1961 drafts of a paper called Philosophy Proper. The 1961
draft was published in Milan with other early work in his book
Blueprint for a Higher Civilization in 1975. Flynt refined these
dispensations in the essay Is there language? that was published
as Primary Study in 1964.
In 1961 Flynt coined the term concept art in the Neo-Dada,
proto-Fluxus book An Anthology of Chance Operations (published
by Jackson Mac Low and La Monte Young) that was released in
1963. An Anthology of Chance Operations contained seminal works
by Fluxus artists such as Al Hansen, George Brecht and Dick
Higgins. Flynt's concept art, he maintained, devolved from
cognitive nihilism, from insights about the vulnerabilities of
logic and mathematics. Drawing on an exclusively syntactical
paradigm of logic and mathematics, concept art was meant jointly
to supersede mathematics and the formalistic music then current
in serious art music circles. Therefore, Flynt maintained, to
merit the label concept art, a work had to be an object-critique
of logic or mathematics or objective structure. It has nothing
to do with concept art as the term is used to describe a form of
illustration in the realm of the digital arts.
In 1962 Flynt began to campaign for an anti-art position. Thus
he demonstrated against cultural institutions in New York City
(such as MOMA and Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) with
Tony Conrad and Jack Smith in 1963 and against the composer
Karlheinz Stockhausen twice in 1964. Flynt wanted avant-garde
art to become superseded by the terms of veramusement and brend
- neologisms meaning approximately pure recreation. Flynt read
publicly from his text From Culture to Veramusment at Walter De
Maria's loft on February 28, 1963 - an act which can be
considered performance art.
From about 1980, Flynt has given a great deal of time to two
endeavors which did not achieve the notoriety of the early
actions: his concepts of meta-technology and personhood
theory. In 1987 he revived his "concept art" for tactical
reasons; and spent seven years in the art world. Following that
period, Flynt began to publish recorded but unreleased musical
compositions. Over 10 audio CDs have appeared as of 2007.
Flynt's writings on a wide variety of subjects are available on
his website:
Henry
Flynt: Philosophy.
Henry Flynt is also known for his musical work, often with him
performing on violin, that attempted to fuse avant-garde noise
music (particularly the hypnotic aspects of minimalism) with
free-jazz and hillbilly country music. Some of his more
dissonant violin performances can be compared to the no wave
noise music violin performance art of Boris Policeband.
Much of Henry Flynt's recorded output has been released on the
Locust Music record labels. The Locust Music releases (curated
and designed by Dawson Prater) showcase the full range of his
musical interestes from minimalism, hillbilly country and garage
rock. "C Tune" (Locust, 2002) documents a 1980 live
improvisation with Catherine Christer Hennix on tamboura and
Flynt on electric violin. "Raga Electric: Experimental Music
1963-1971" (Locust, 2002) is the seminal anthology of Flynt's
most challenging avant-garde work that includes "Raga Electric"
(1966) and "Free Alto" (1964). "Back Porch Hillbilly Blues -
Volume 1" (Locust, 2003), with "Acoustic Hillbilly Jive" and
"Blue Sky Highway and Tyme", and "Back Porch Hillbilly Blues
Volume 2" (Locust) ahowcase a meeting of Flynt's vision of rural
roots music and American minimalism. "I Don't Wanna" (Locust
Music, 2004) documents a garage-punk band, the Insurrections,
that Flynt led in 1966 with Walter De Maria and Paul Breslin.
"Purified by the Fire" (Locust, 2005), recorded in December
1981, repeats the format of "C Tune": Catherine Christer Hennix
on tamboura and Flynt on electric violin. The 41-minute raga is
dominated by the languid phrases of the violin that tests the
border between melodic fragments and distorted tones. The
"Indian" element is the background of hypnotic tamboura drones,
but Flynt's improvisation at the violin betrays the influence of
jazz music."Henry Flynt & Nova'Billy" (Locust, 2007) collects
material recorded between 1974 and 1975 by his rock band
Nova'Billy. "Dharma Warriors" (Locust, 2008) showcases another
meeting between Catherine Christer Hennix & Flynt recorded in
1980 in Woodstock, New York.
This article is
licensed under the
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It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Henry Flynt".
Henry Flynt links
Buy Henry Flynt CDs at Amazon.com
HenryFlynt.org
Henry Flynt @ Locustmusic.com
Henry Flynt @ Julian Cope's Head Heritage
Henry Flynt interview
Henry Flynt @ Discogs.com





