Joseph Beuys

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sonne Statt Reagan 00:00 Tools
Ja Ja Ja Ne Ne Ne 00:00 Tools
11 Sonne stat reagan, 1982 00:00 Tools
Sonne Stat Reagan 00:00 Tools
Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee 00:00 Tools
Sonne stat reagan, 1982 00:00 Tools
Krafte Sammeln 00:00 Tools
Sonne statt Reagan 1982 00:00 Tools
B1. 1970 Dilettantism No.3 00:00 Tools
B2. 1971 Dilettantism No.6 00:00 Tools
B4. 1973 Endless Music 00:00 Tools
B11. 1976 Genesis, Cosey, Car 00:00 Tools
B7. 1974 Zirkus 00:00 Tools
B10. 1975 Endless Music 00:00 Tools
B3. 1972 Musik Der Stille und 00:00 Tools
B6. 1974 Joseph Beuys - Albre 00:00 Tools
A 1980 Endless Music Goes Zen 00:00 Tools
B8. 1975 Endless Music 00:00 Tools
B5. 1974 Endless Music 00:00 Tools
Sonne stat reagan (1982) 00:00 Tools
B9. 1975 A und B Gross Gerau 00:00 Tools
Ja ja ja ja ja, nee nee nee nee nee 00:00 Tools
Kräfte Sammeln 00:00 Tools
B16 1985 Abstract Energy 00:00 Tools
B14 1981 Instant life, Instan 00:00 Tools
B15 1982 Marie Kawazu + Albre 00:00 Tools
Sonne Stat Reagan 1982 00:00 Tools
Verschiedene Teile Des Konzerts 00:00 Tools
Excerpt from Cooper Union Dialogue 00:00 Tools
Zusammenhängender Teil 00:00 Tools
Joseph Beuys 00:00 Tools
interview 00:00 Tools
Dilettantism No.6 00:00 Tools
Scottische Symphonie (aus Celtic) 1 00:00 Tools
01 - In diesem Wahrnehmen 00:00 Tools
Scottische Symphonie (aus Celtic) 2 00:00 Tools
Sol En Lugar De Reagan 00:00 Tools
08 A Conversation 00:00 Tools
Abstract Energy 00:00 Tools
Spontanes Konzert 00:00 Tools
Joseph Beuys - Jeder Mensch ist ein Künstler CD1 00:00 Tools
Sonne statt Regеn 00:00 Tools
01 - Hier sind wir an einen Punkt angekommen 00:00 Tools
Endless Music 00:00 Tools
Endless Music Goes Zen 00:00 Tools
Schütze Die Flamme 00:00 Tools
Op. 50: Requiem of Art (aus Celtic) Fluxorum Organum II 00:00 Tools
01 - Verehrte Anwesende 00:00 Tools
Ja Ja Ja Ne Ne Ne Excerpt 00:00 Tools
Sonne statt Reagen 00:00 Tools
Joseph Beuys - Jeder Mensch ist ein Künstler CD2 00:00 Tools
01 - Ich bin mir ganz bewusst (Diskussion) 00:00 Tools
Sonne statt reagan (1982) 00:00 Tools
A Conversation 00:00 Tools
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Joseph Beuys was born in 1921 in Krefeld, a city in northwestern Germany near the Dutch border. He grew up in the nearby towns of Kleve and Rindern, the only child in a middle class, strongly Catholic family. During his youth he pursued dual interests in the natural sciences and art, and he chose a career in medicine. In 1940 he joined the military, volunteering in order to avoid the draft. He was trained as an aircraft radio operator and combat pilot, and during his years of active duty he was seriously wounded numerous times. At the end of the war he was held in a British prisoner-of-war camp for several months, and returned to Kleve in 1945. Coming to terms with his involvement in the war was a long process and figures, at least obliquely, in much of his artwork. Beuys often said that his interest in fat and felt as sculptural materials grew out of a wartime experience--a plane crash in the Crimea, after which he was rescued by nomadic Tartars who rubbed him with fat and wrapped him in felt to heal and warm his body. While the story appears to have little grounding in real events (Beuys himself downplayed its importance in a 1980 interview), its poetics are strong enough to have made the story one of the most enduring aspects of his mythic biography. On his return from the war Beuys abandoned his plans for a career in medicine and enrolled in the Düsseldorf Academy of Art to study sculpture. He graduated in 1952, and during the next years focused on drawing--he produced thousands during the 1950s alone--and reading, ranging freely through philosophy, science, poetry, literature, and the occult. He married in 1959 and two years later, at the age of 40, was appointed to a professorship at his alma mater. During the early 1960s, Düsseldorf developed into an important center for contemporary art and Beuys became acquainted with the experimental work of artists such as Nam June Paik and the Fluxus group, whose public "concerts" brought a new fluidity to the boundaries between literature, music, visual art, performance, and everyday life. Their ideas were a catalyst for Beuys' own performances, which he called "actions," and his evolving ideas about how art could play a wider role in society. He began to publicly exhibit his large-scale sculptures, small objects, drawings, and room installations. He also created numerous actions and began making editioned objects and prints called multiples. As the decades advanced, his commitment to political reform increased and he was involved in the founding of several activist groups: in 1967, the German Student Party, whose platform included worldwide disarmament and educational reform; in 1970, the Organization for Direct Democracy by Referendum, which proposed increased political power for individuals; and in 1972, the Free International University, which emphasized the creative potential in all human beings and advocated cross-pollination of ideas across disciplines. In 1979 he was one of 500 founding members of the Green Party. His charismatic presence, his urgent and public calls for reform of all kinds, and his unconventional artistic style (incorporating ritualized movement and sound, and materials such as fat, felt, earth, honey, blood, and even dead animals) gained him international notoriety during these decades, but it also cost him his job. Beuys was dismissed in 1972 from his teaching position over his insistence that admission to the art school be open to anyone who wished to study there. While he counted debate, discussion, and teaching as part of his expanded definition of art, Beuys also continued to make objects, installations, multiples, and performances. His reputation in the international art world solidified after a 1979 retrospective at New York's Guggenheim Museum, and he lived the last years of his life at a hectic pace, participating in dozens of exhibitions and traveling widely on behalf of his organizations. Beuys died in 1986 in Düsseldorf. In the subsequent decade his students have carried on his campaign for change, and his ideas and artwork have continued to spark lively debate. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.