STANFORD, CA.- John Cage, the most prominent American experimental composer of the 20th century, also creatively explored with visual art forms. Beginning June 13, the
Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University presents some of his earliest graphic works. The exhibition, which continues through November 11, includes the Sept. 5th centennial of Cages birth.
In 1969, Cage created a series of eight plexigrams collectively titled Not Wanting to Say Anything about Marcel, to honor his good friend and fellow artist Marcel Duchamp who had died in 1968. The title refers to a comment Jasper Johns made to Cage when artists were encouraged to respond in memoriam to Duchamp's death. Johns said, in effect, I don't want to say anything, and Cage used this for his title.
Cage created Not Wanting to Say Anything about Marcel at Eye Editions, Cincinnati. Each of the eight constructions, produced in an edition of 125, consists of eight Plexiglas panels silkscreened with images and text, set on edge in a slotted wooden base. Cage determined the content as well as the color and placement by a group of chance outcomes obtained from the Chinese I Ching system. The works are also installed with regard to chance, with the panels in a different order each time the plexigrams are displayed.
In 1973, Stanford acquired four of the eight in the series as a gift from John and Nancy Merryman. The four plexigrams are on view in the Cantor Arts Centers Lynn Krywick Gibbons Gallery. The exhibition is made possible by the Lynn Krywick Gibbons Exhibitions Fund.
Stanfords Music Department celebrates Cages centennial with concerts on Oct. 10 and 11 and a symposium on Friday, Oct. 12.