DIY Life Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fluxus (programming environment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxus_(programming...

    Fluxus is a live coding environment for 3D graphics, music and games. [1] It uses the programming language Racket (a dialect of Scheme / Lisp) to work with a games engine with built-in 3D graphics, physics simulation and sound synthesis. All programming is done on-the-fly, where the code editor appears on top of the graphics that the code is ...

  3. Fluxus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxus

    Fluxus was an international, interdisciplinary community of artists, composers, designers, and poets during the 1960s and 1970s who engaged in experimental art performances which emphasized the artistic process over the finished product. [1] [2] Fluxus is known for experimental contributions to different artistic media and disciplines and for ...

  4. Dick Higgins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Higgins

    Dick Higgins. Dick Higgins (15 March 1938 – 25 October 1998) was an American artist, composer, art theorist, poet, publisher, printmaker, and a co-founder of the Fluxus international artistic movement (and community). [1] Inspired by John Cage, Higgins was an early pioneer of electronic correspondence. [2] Higgins coined the word intermedia ...

  5. Allan Kaprow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Kaprow

    Fluxus. Website. allankaprow .com. Allan Kaprow (August 23, 1927 – April 5, 2006) was an American performance artist, installation artist, painter, and assemblagist . He helped to develop the "Environment" and "Happening" in the late 1950s and 1960s, as well as their theory. His Happenings — some 200 of them — evolved over the years.

  6. Flux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flux

    Flux as flow rate per unit area. In transport phenomena ( heat transfer, mass transfer and fluid dynamics ), flux is defined as the rate of flow of a property per unit area, which has the dimensions [quantity]· [time] −1 · [area] −1. [6] The area is of the surface the property is flowing "through" or "across".

  7. Flux (metallurgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flux_(metallurgy)

    A flux pen used for electronics rework. Multicore solder containing flux. Wire freshly coated with solder, held above molten rosin flux. In metallurgy, a flux (from Latin fluxus 'flow') is a chemical cleaning agent, flowing agent, or purifying agent. Fluxes may have more than one function at a time.

  8. Fluxus 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxus_1

    Fluxus 1 is an artists' book edited and produced by the Lithuanian-American artist George Maciunas, containing works by a series of artists associated with Fluxus, the international collective of avant-garde artists primarily active in the 1960s and 1970s. Originally published in New York, 1964, the contents vary from edition to edition, but ...

  9. George Maciunas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Maciunas

    Early life Maciunas' Fluxus Manifesto, copies of which were thrown into the audience at the Festum Fluxorum Fluxus, Düsseldorf, February 1963. His father, Alexander M. Maciunas, was a Lithuanian architect and engineer who had trained in Berlin, and his mother, Leokadija, was a Russian-born dancer from Tiflis affiliated with the Lithuanian National Opera and, later, Aleksandr Kerensky's ...