Buckminster Fuller

4 October, 2009 - 10:00 - 18 October, 2009 - 17:00
Tuesday-Sunday 11 am - 5 pm
Curators: 
Guus Beumer

Buckminster Fuller had one of the most fascinating and original minds of his century. Born in 1895 in Milton, Massachusetts, he was the latest--if not the last--of the New England Transcendentalists. Like the transcendentalists, Fuller rejected the established religious and political notions of the past and adhered to an idealistic system of thought based on the essential unity of the natural world and the use of experiment and intuition as a means of understanding it. But, departing from the pattern of his New England predecessors, he proposed that only an understanding of technology in the deepest sense would afford humans a proper guide to individual conduct and the eventual salvation of society.

In reference to both Victor Papanek and Joseph Beuys – as presented in the exhibition Unresolved Matters in the main building of the Centraal Museum – Unforeseen Magic would like to add one more voice to this series of utopian thinkers. In this registration Fuller is asked how the world could be organized.

Comments

Transcript?

Would love a transcript of the Fuller video. He was talking quite fast in the video and I'm afraid the audience didn't hear everything, despite the sub-titles.