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Henry Flynt Quotes


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Henry Flynt
1940 -
Nationality: American
Category: Artist
Subcategory: American Artist

Basically, I viewed any work of art as an imposition of another person's taste, and saw the individual making this imposition as a kind of dictator.

   

When I came to New York, I began to meet the people who became the most famous artists of our time. I was insecure about my own level of ability, I didn't know whether I could compete with these people and, at the same time. I was wondering what is this anyway?

   

Rock became an incredible commercial success, people just became bored with serious music, and it was forgotten.

   

When I began competing with the other artists in New York, I discovered classical North Indian music.

   

Around 1967 I began backing away from dogmatic Leninism, not so much because I thought it was false, I just decided there was nothing utopian about it.

   

I was a student at Harvard, and that's where I learned about so-called avant-garde music. Jackson Pollock, abstract expressionism and painting were well known at this time.

   

I began composing works which were imitative of the music I was being told about. I was also very interested in translating the music into visual terms.

   

I'm trying to assemble materials for a different mode of life.

   

At the same time, I was listening to black music, and I began to think that the best musicians were receiving the worst treatment. The people who were doing the greatest work were despised as lower class, with no dignity accorded to what they did.

   

I have a picture of an ideal consciousness.

   

The whole drive of western culture, the part of it which is serious, is towards an extreme objectification. It's carried to the point where the human subject is treated almost as if it's dirt in the works of a watch.

   

When somebody says that all statements are false, the obvious problem is that as an assertion it's self-defeating.

   

I'm actually a great fan of lucidity.

   

In classical oil painting, there seemed to be a radical turn to seeing things as the camera sees them, with that technological modification. I began to have a tremendous problem with all of this.

   

I began demonstrating against serious culture. In hindsight, the actual course of events has been very humiliating for me, because no one picked up on the intellectual critique I made.

   

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