“An innovative and revelatory account of George Maciunas’s paradoxical position as the visionary and officious administrator of Fluxus’s collective and avowedly anonymized endeavors. Chamberlain’s vivid writing weaves these oftentimes unassuming and absurdist works within the larger social fabric of bureaucratic modernity, accentuating the materiality and corporeality that shaped Maciunas’s principally paperwork practice.”
— Robert Slifkin, New York University
“This creative, interdisciplinary book explores how Maciunas’s artistic sensibility and organizing efforts influenced the development of residential lofts and changed how we think of artists’ housing needs in New York City and beyond.”
— Aaron Shkuda, author of The Lofts of SoHo: Gentrification, Art, and Industry in New York, 1950–1980
“Revealing how Maciunas’s practice firmly embedded art making into the very infrastructures of everyday life, Chamberlain offers a path forward for an art history that takes the operation of administration seriously without letting it obscure what artists and artworks do. Brimming with lucid insights concerning the interrelationships of government agencies, official and unofficial regulation, the market, and artistic communities, Fluxus Administration suggests how artists might shape a civil society with which we can live and from which we can hopefully move forward.”
— Joan Kee, University of Michigan
“Chamberlain’s readers will be rewarded with several marvelous books, ingeniously interleaved: a study of an underappreciated artist, an inquiry into the New York avant-garde, and a model work of media history and theory. They will also be rewarded with a beautifully crafted object, with care given to word and image alike. Maciunas would have been pleased.”
— Ben Kafka, author of The Demon of Writing: Powers and Failures of Paperwork