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George Brecht (George Ellis MacDiarmid) was born on 27 August, 1926 in New York, United States, is an American conceptual artist and composer (1926–2008). Discover George Brecht's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 82 years old?

Popular As George Ellis MacDiarmid
Occupation N/A
Age 82 years old
Zodiac Sign Virgo
Born 27 August 1926
Birthday 27 August
Birthplace New York, United States
Date of death 5 December, 2008
Died Place Cologne, Germany
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 27 August. He is a member of famous artist with the age 82 years old group.

George Brecht Height, Weight & Measurements

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George Brecht Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is George Brecht worth at the age of 82 years old? George Brecht’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from United States. We have estimated George Brecht's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1926

George Brecht (August 27, 1926 – December 5, 2008), born George Ellis MacDiarmid, was an American conceptual artist and avant-garde composer, as well as a professional chemist who worked as a consultant for companies including Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, and Mobil Oil.

Brecht was born George Ellis MacDiarmid in New York, August 27, 1926.

His father, also George Ellis MacDiarmid, was a professional flautist who had toured with John Philip Sousa's marching band before settling in New York to play bass flute for the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and the NBC Symphony Orchestra.

After his father's death from alcoholism when Brecht was 10 years old, he moved with his mother to Atlantic City, New Jersey.

1943

He enlisted for military service in 1943, and it was whilst he was stationed near the Black Forest, Germany, 1945, that he changed his surname to 'Brecht' – 'not in reference to Bertolt Brecht, but because he liked the sound of the name'.

1951

After World War II, he studied chemistry at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy & Science, finishing his degree and marrying his first wife Marceline in 1951.

1953

After working briefly for Charles Pfizer & Co as a quality control inspector, he took a job as a research chemist for Johnson & Johnson in 1953, settling in New Jersey.

Over the next decade he would register 5 US patents and 2 co-patents including four patents for tampons.

His only son Eric was born in New Jersey in 1953.

1954

Initially influenced by Jackson Pollock, and Robert Rauschenberg – Rauschenberg's exhibition of grass seeds, Growing Painting, 1954, left 'a significant impression on him' – he began to formulate ideas about 'chance method schemes' that would eventually be printed as a booklet by the Something Else Press as Chance Imagery (1957/66).

The work was 'a systematic investigation of the role of chance in the 20th century in the fields of science and avant-garde art... reveal[ing] his respect for Dadaist and surrealist projects as well as for the more complex aspects of the work of Marcel Duchamp, whom he considered the embodiment of the 'artist-researcher'.

Artworks in this period included bed-sheets stained with ink he called Chance Paintings.

1957

In 1957, Brecht sought out the artist Robert Watts, after seeing his work exhibited at Douglass College, Rutgers University, where Watts taught.

This led to lunch meetings once a week for a number of years at a cafe between the university and Brecht's laboratory.

Watts' colleague Allan Kaprow would also regularly attend these informal meetings.

The two had originally met in 1957 when Brecht heard that Cage was planning to hunt mushrooms in the New Jersey area; he rang him up and invited him to 'stop by and say hello'.

Cage accepted, and returned the invitation; it was whilst Brecht, Kaprow and their families were visiting his house in Stony Point on the Hudson, that Cage invited them to attend his classes in New York.

Ironically, musicians found the course far harder than the visual artists who had enrolled;

"Cage... was very keenly a philosophical mind, not just an artist's mind; his sense of aesthetics was secondary and thought was primary. He impressed me immediately. So I thought, well, who cares if he's a musician and I'm a painter. This is unimportant. It's the mind that transcends any medium..... "The rate of attrition was something fierce.

The end result was that there were very few musician types and the event nature of the class became apparent.

George Brecht's understanding of an intimate situation was far greater than mine.

I needed more space to really work.

But George really came to life in that situation..... He became a leader; and immediately he influenced not only me, but everybody else: Jackson Maclow, Higgins, Hansen.

George Segal stopped by, and so did Dine, Whitman and Oldenburg." Allan Kaprow Initially writing theatrical scores similar to Kaprow's earliest Happenings, Brecht grew increasingly dissatisfied with the didactic nature of these performances. After performing in one such piece, Cage quipped that he'd "never felt so controlled before." prompting Brecht to pare the scores down to haiku-like statements, leaving space for radically different interpretations each time the piece was performed. Brecht would later refer to Cage as his 'liberator', whilst, in the opinion of some critics, moving beyond Cage's notion of music; Cage was still writing scores to be performed. Brecht had replaced this with a world permeated with music. "No matter what you do," he said, "you're always hearing something."

1958

Brecht studied with John Cage between 1958 and 1959, during which time he invented, and then refined, the Event Score which would become a central feature of Fluxus.

Typically, Event Scores are simple instructions to complete everyday tasks which can be performed publicly, privately, or negatively (i.e., deciding not to perform them at all).

These ideas would be taken up and expanded upon up by La Monte Young, Yoko Ono and many other avant-garde artists who passed through these classes.

1959

In October 1959, fresh from studying with Cage, Brecht organized his first one-man show at the Reuben Gallery, New York.

Called Towards Events: An Arrangement, it was neither an exhibition of objects or a performance, but somewhere in between.

Comprising works that emphasised time, the works could be manipulated by the viewer in various ways, revealing sounds, smells and tactile textures.

One, Case, instructed viewers to unpack the contents and to use them 'in ways appropriate to their nature.' This work would become Valoche (see ), the last Fluxus multiple that George Maciunas, the 'Chairman' of Fluxus, would work on before his death 19 years later.

In a frequently retold anecdote used to describe the origins of one of Brecht's most personal Event Scores, the artist recalled an incident when his father had a 'nervous breakdown ' during a rehearsal at the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra;

'[A] soprano was bugging everybody with temper tantrums during rehearsal.

At a certain point the orchestra crashed onto a major seventh and there was silence for the soprano and flute cadenza.

1962

He was a key member of, and influence on, Fluxus, the international group of avant-garde artists centred on George Maciunas, having been involved with the group from the first performances in Wiesbaden 1962 until Maciunas' death in 1978.

One of the originators of participatory art, in which the artwork can only be experienced by the active involvement of the viewer, he is most famous for his Event Scores such as Drip Music 1962, and is widely seen as an important precursor to conceptual art.

He described his own art as a way of "ensuring that the details of everyday life, the random constellations of objects that surround us, stop going unnoticed."

Discussions at these lunches would lead directly to the setting up of the Yam Festival, 1962–63, by Watts and Brecht, seen as one of the most important precursors to Fluxus.

The meetings also led to both Brecht and Kaprow attending John Cage's class at The New School for Social Research, New York, often driving down together from New Brunswick.

1965

Whilst working as a chemist (a job that he would keep until 1965), Brecht became increasingly interested in art that explored chance.