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Really Happening!

Bob Dickinson explores the 'Happening', that essential artistic event of 1960s bohemia. Could it make a comeback? From 2010.

Back in the 1960s the Happening was what was really happening, on the international visual art scene.

Instead of people visiting galleries to look at art objects, audiences became involved in a series of events that made no distinction between observer and observed, and sometimes didn't seem to have a beginning, middle or end. Happenings paved the way for performance art and live art. And the 60s wouldn't have been half as groovy without them.

Early Happenings, like Allan Kaprow's 18 Happenings in 6 Parts, Claes Oldenburg's Snapshots From A City and Al Hansens' Requiem For W.C. Fields, inspired a generation of young artists, and grabbed the attention of the public.

Bob Dickinson re-imagines the Happening with contemporary artists and writers including RoseLee Goldberg, Ilana Mitchell, Andrea Cusmano, and Lorenzo Fusi.

He also investigates the way Happenings travelled around the world, to Asia and Europe, thanks to Nam June Paik in Korea and Japan, Adrian Henri in Liverpool, the Viennese Aktionists, Joseph Beuys in Germany, and Yves Klein in France.

As Happenings became part of popular culture, they became increasingly spectacular, and in 1967 Britain's biggest ever example of the activity was staged at Alexandra Palace in London - the 24 Hour Technicolour Dream. It was a high-point, in more ways than one, for the hippie counterculture, but it also marked the point when Happenings stopped being art.

We meet an eye-witness. Now, half a century after Happenings transformed the art scene, some contemporary artists, such as Tanya Bruguera, from Cuba, are revisiting and reviving several of Allan Kaprow's classic Happenings for a new audience - and we find out what happens when she tries them out on the streets and shops of Liverpool.

Producer: Bob Dickinson

First broadcast on 大象传媒 Radio 4 in October 2010.

30 minutes

Last on

Tue 29 Mar 2022 02:30

Broadcasts

  • Thu 21 Oct 2010 11:30
  • Tue 23 Jun 2015 06:30
  • Tue 23 Jun 2015 13:30
  • Tue 23 Jun 2015 20:30
  • Wed 24 Jun 2015 01:30
  • Tue 27 Feb 2018 06:30
  • Tue 27 Feb 2018 13:30
  • Tue 27 Feb 2018 20:30
  • Wed 28 Feb 2018 01:30
  • Mon 28 Mar 2022 14:30
  • Tue 29 Mar 2022 02:30