The Experimenters
Eva Diaz uses Black Mountain College to compare three competing experimental methods: Albers's disciplined perception, Cage's chance, and Fuller's comprehensive design. Fuller is one of several forces in a larger argument about what experimentation meant in postwar art and education.
Core structure
- Front matter and introduction
- Josef Albers and the ethics of perception
- John Cage and chance protocols
- R. Buckminster Fuller and total thinking
- Later chapters on their overlap, conflict, and legacy
Main ideas
- Black Mountain College was a laboratory for experimental education and art.
- Albers treated experiment as disciplined testing and perceptual training.
- Cage treated experiment as indeterminacy and the removal of purpose.
- Fuller treated experiment as holistic design aimed at future social use.
- The book shows that "experiment" was never a single method at Black Mountain.
Why it matters
This is the best contextual book in the corpus for Fuller's Black Mountain period. It places him among other major mid-century experimenters and clarifies how his design-science method differed from art-world chance and perception.
See Also
- A Fuller Explanation (A Fuller Explanation) — companion synthesis of Fuller's method and ideas
- Eva Díaz (Eva Díaz) — author of this study
- Black Mountain College (Black Mountain College) — the college whose experimental methods this study examines
- John Cage (John Cage) — Black Mountain experimenter this study examines
- Josef Albers (Josef Albers) — Black Mountain experimenter this study examines
- Merce Cunningham (Merce Cunningham) — Black Mountain figure in this study's milieu
Sources
- the_experimenters/ — book project directory (repo-local source tree)
- the_experimenters/index.md — book project index