Title
Not wanting to say anything about Marcel. Plexigram IV, from the series Not wanting to say anything about Marcel
1969
Artist
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Details
- Date
- 1969
- Media categories
- Print , Sculpture
- Materials used
- eight colour screenprints on plexiglass, wood base
- Edition
- A/P XV/XVIII [edition of 125 + 18 Roman numeral artist's proofs]
- Dimensions
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36.5 x 61.0 x 36.9 cm installed
:
a-h - 8 plexiglass sheets, 35.6 x 50.9 x 0.3 cm, each panel
i - wood base, 1.9 x 61 x 36.9 cm
j - book of text, 35.6 x 51 x 0.3 cm
- Signature & date
Signed l.r. wood base, ink "John Cage". Signed l.r. wood base, ink "Cal Sumsion". Not dated.
- Credit
- Gift of Fred Genis 1991
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 62.1991.a-j
- Copyright
- Artist information
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John Cage
Works in the collection
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About
Composer and artist John Cage is best known for his conceptual composition 4’33” 1952, a piece in which the performer remains silent on stage for 4 minutes and 33 seconds. It has been called the ‘silent piece’, but Cage created this work to encourage the audience to listen to the ambient sounds around them.
‘Not wanting to say anything about Marcel’, a series of eight plexigrams and two lithographs, produced in collaboration with graphic designer Calvin Sumsion and master printer Fred Genis, are Cage’s earliest graphic works. Created as a tribute to Marcel Duchamp, the work derives it title from a remark made by artist Jasper Johns to Cage in response to an art magazine’s request for their response in memoriam to Duchamp’s death.
Cage was interested in the use of chance as a way of determining composition, image and colour in his work. For the series, he said:
“I subjected a dictionary to the ‘I Ching’; I picked words, then letters from those words, and finally their arrangement in space by chance operations. I distributed these words according to a typography likewise based on chance, on sheets of Plexiglas. I put the eight sheets of Plexiglas parallel to each other on a wooden base. Thus the letters appear in depth, they are superimposed and combined as we look at them… The whole thing comes from chance, including the colours. It is an object that has no meaning and which cannot be said to refer to a text. And yet, it seems to me that Duchamp would have been, as he used to say, ‘amused’ by that object.”1
1. John Cage ‘For the birds: John Cage in conversation with Daniel Charles’, Marion Boyars, London 1981, p114
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
YES YES YES YES: Graphics from the 1960s and 1970s, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 22 Dec 2016–19 Feb 2017
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Bibliography
Referenced in 1 publication
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Susan Tallman, The contemporary print (from pre-Pop to Postmodernism), 'Johns and Rauschenberg', pg. 33-48, London, 1996, 35, 36 (illus.). plate no. 24
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