New York, NY, US, March 31, 2012 — The George Maciunas/Fluxus Foundation is pleased to present the conceptual web exhibition, Knowledge as Art: Chance, Computability, and Improving EducationKnowledge as Art: Chance, Computability, and Improving Education, in its newly renovated exhibition space at 454 West 19th St.

New York, NY, US, March 31, 2012 — The George Maciunas/Fluxus Foundation is pleased to present the conceptual web exhibition, Knowledge as Art: Chance, Computability, and Improving EducationKnowledge as Art: Chance, Computability, and Improving Education, in its newly renovated exhibition space at 454 West 19th St.

The new science and experimental philosophies of Thomas Bayes, Alan Turing, and George Maciunas sought to diagrammatically organize the factual clusters of the universe. As knowledge workers, their conceptual corpus is monument to the notion of knowledge as art.

Rev.Thomas Bayes, 18th century English experimental philosopher and mathematician, developed an elegant statistical theory which provided a versatile way of optimizing one’s suppositions to reach an accurate prediction. Its methodology, which is used to create models that learn and adapt to new information, has been used in a universal range of applications including medical diagnosis, ecology, geology, computer science, artificial intelligence, machine learning, genetics, astrophysics, archaeology, psychometrics, education performance, sports modeling among others.

British mathematician Alan Turing used Bayes’ Theorem to decipher the uncrackable Enigma code during World War II, a feat which arguably saved the Allies from losing the war. In turn, Turing used its principles to develop the Turing Machine, a conceptual ‘machine’ which has greatly contributed to the field of artificial intelligence. Bayes and Turing’s theoretical ideologies are expressed the diagrammatic solutions of Fluxus sage, George Maciunas. His aesthetic of organization sought to create an ‘actus purus’ of unfragmented knowledge.

The exhibition is also complemented by three paintings of Maciunas from the 1950's,which may be regarded as the visual counterparts to Maciunas’ research on Eastern chirography and Western epistemological paradigms. These canvases, which combine aesthetics of the ancient Far East and the Western avant garde, evoke a nostalgic exploration of figuration and abstraction. The exhibition, organized and produced by Harry Stendhal, opens on March 9 and continues through April 28, 2012.

George Maciunas Foundation Inc. 454 W19th St. New York, NY 10011, 212-675-4392, [email protected] www.georgemaciunasfoundation.org

* George Maciunas Foundation Inc. is exempt from Federal income tax under section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code
* George Maciunas Foundation Inc. is qualified to receive tax deductible bequests, devises, transfers or gifts under section 2055, 2106 or 2522 of the Internal Revenue Code Federal Tax Id Number: 26-3178359

Contact:
Harry Stendhal
George Maciunas Foundation Inc
454 West 19th Street
New York, New York 10011
212-675-4392
[email protected]
http://www.georgemaciunasfoundation.org