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John cage biography imaginary landscape photoshop

          Imaginary Landscape is the title of several pieces by American composer John Cage..

          In the twenty-first century, the "imaginary landscape" becomes the wireless network.

          John Cage

          John Cage (b. 1912, Los Angeles – d. 1992, New York NY) was an influential avant-garde composer and theoretician who contributed to the development of minimalism, chance operations, and indeterminacy in postwar aesthetics.

          His influence extends across the fields of electronic music, the visual arts, performance, and modern dance and choreography. He briefly studied at Pomona College before moving to New York City to pursue more informal studies with composers Henry Cowell and Arnold Schoenberg.

          This is an image from the Nationaal Archief, the Dutch National Archives, donated in the context of a partnership program.

        1. This is an image from the Nationaal Archief, the Dutch National Archives, donated in the context of a partnership program.
        2. This is an ongoing project in which I am creating a series of landscape photographs that, through manipulation of the images and adding different elements.
        3. Imaginary Landscape is the title of several pieces by American composer John Cage.
        4. The influence of the artist and composer John Cage cannot be overestimated when studying music and arts of the mid 20th century.
        5. John Cage was an American composer known for incorporating chance-based procedures and extended techniques into his music.
        6. By 1939 he had begun to experiment with increasingly unorthodox instruments such as the “prepared piano,” tape recorders, record players, and radios in his effort to step outside the bounds of conventional Western music and its concepts of meaningful sound.

          The concert he gave with his percussion ensemble at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in 1943 marked the first step in his emergence as a leader of the American musical avant-garde. In the following years, Zen Budd