Irmi Horn, Eva Bajic (piano) & Irma Servatius (viola)
Irmi Horn introduces the writer and translator Hedwig Lachmann as part of the kunstGarten series Women Empowerment and is accompanied by 3 outstanding musicians, Eva Bajic (piano) & Irma Servatius (viola), Yun-Han Lu (Sporan), who in turn introduce composers: Fanny Hensel, Graciane Finzi, Alma Mahler, Rebecca Clarke, Johanna Müller – Hermann, Varvara Gaigerova.
At the beginning Graciane Finzi (10. July 1945, Casablanca – Moroccan-French composer): And time passes (2020) … and in the end an abrupt cancellation.
ART’S BIRTHDAY is an annual event first proposed on January 17th 1963 by French Fluxus artist Robert Filliou. He suggested that 1,000,000 years ago “A man took a dry sponge and dropped it into a bucket full of water. Who that man was is not important. He is dead but art is alive.” Filliou’s ideas have inspired many artists until today.
“After Filliou’s death in 1987, some artists began to celebrate Art’s Birthday with mail art, fax and slow scan TV events in the spirit of his concept of “The Eternal Network” or “La Fête permanente”. The birthday parties took place in different cities across the world and artists were asked to bring birthday presents for Art – works that could be shared over the network.
Art’s Birthday Party has never been a formal event, but was always organized on an ad hoc basis through the network. Every participating location (and they are different every year) organizes its own party – from a few friends in a private studio to a performance evening in a museum or gallery. Filliou’s invention of Art’s Birthday is wonderfully absurd and humorous in the typical Fluxus tradition of serious fun. So the global birthday party for art has always tried to be fun while paying homage to Robert Filliou’s dream of The Eternal Network.“ (Robert Adrian, 2005)