A rare signed and numbered screenprint created for the tenth anniversary of Ursula Block's legendary gelbe MUSIK record store in Berlin. Edition of 60, signed and numbered, 54 x 100 cm. Founded by Block in 1981, gelbe MUSIK was one of the world's most important places for New Music enthusiasts, a gathering point for collectors, artists, and radical sound practitioners. Cage (*1912 Los Angeles – †1992 New York City), student of Henry Cowell and Arnold Schoenberg, was among the most influential composers and artists of the twentieth century. His compositions are key works of contemporary music, and his concerts had a lasting impact on the Fluxus movement. Internationally known for 4'33" (1952), the so-called silent piece, Cage combined music and everyday noises into unique sound events. Since the late 1960s, Cage increasingly worked as a visual artist, experimenting with various printing techniques and using chance operations to transfer his compositional methods to graphic works. Gelbe Musik embodies this practice—a visual translation of Cage's philosophy of indeterminacy, randomness, and the dissolution of boundaries between disciplines. Created just one year before his death, this work represents a homage to one of the radical spaces that supported experimental sound culture. With only 60 signed and numbered copies in existence, this is an exceptionally rare Cage work. For collectors of twentieth-century avant-garde art, experimental music documentation, and those who recognize Cage as a towering figure whose influence extends across all creative disciplines, this is an essential piece.