Current:Home > ContactNew film explores how 'the father of video art' pioneered an art form -Wealth Legacy Solutions
New film explores how 'the father of video art' pioneered an art form
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-03-11 04:43:31
In a world saturated with digital technology, video art now seems like a given. But sourcing video, electronics and computers to make fine art feels obvious, in part, because the pioneering artist Nam June Paik made it so. Widely referred to as the father of video art, Paik – who died in 2006 – is the subject of the new documentary, Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TV.
The film emphasizes the prescience of his work, and the courage he showed in dedicating his life to the moving image at a time when painting topped the art world hierarchy. "Film was considered a form of entertainment," explains Alexandra Munroe, Senior Curator of Asian Art at the Guggenheim Museum and one of the contemporary artists and curators who sing Paik's praises on-screen. "It wasn't considered an art form yet, and what did Nam June choose? He chose the media of video."
Directed by Amanda Kim, Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TV (which premiered at Sundance in January) tells the story of Korean-born Paik's life and legacy through interviews with art world luminaries, readings of Paik's written words, media coverage and archival footage of his work. Born in 1932 to one of Korea's most affluent families, Paik's development as an artist took a critical turn after he went to Munich in 1956 to study music and saw avant-garde composer John Cage perform. "My life started one evening in 1958," Paik wrote, "1957 was B.C. (Before Cage)." Cage gave Paik "the courage to be free." Smashing a violin, setting a piano on fire, and using his body as an instrument could be art, and not just art, but rebellion: against the Western order and otherwise constricted notions of freedom. These new possibilities would inform the rest of Paik's career.
Foreseeing that television would eventually replace the radio, Paik decided to buy a TV, and became inspired when he opened up the back. He aimed to do to television what he thought Cage did to music: take the seriousness out of it. "I use technology in order to hate it more properly," he said. But for years, few took Paik seriously. A critic's review of Paik's first TV exhibition in 1963 (which also happened to be the world's first TV exhibition) headlined: "Plenty of Noise, Few Ideas. The Young Korean Wanted to Shock – But the Results Were Vapid."
What ultimately put Paik on the map was his 1974 piece TV Buddha, a video sculpture that depicts a Buddha statue watching its own image on an adjacent television screen. The installation meditates on varying themes – from the relationship between self-absorption and technology to the contrasts and parallels between East and West. After its premiere, magazines like The New Yorker described Paik as a "video visionary" and outlets like The Today Show wanted an interview with him. By 1982, Paik had a show at the Whitney Museum of Modern Art; it was the first museum retrospective in history to honor a video artist.
But while Kim takes time to illustrate Paik's transformation into an influential figure in the art world, she is more concerned with bringing him to life and tracing the origins of his philosophies than cleanly stating the influence of his work. The most direct way she demonstrates Paik's inspiration to other artists is when she places clips of his video art (most are from his 1973 Global Groove montage) side-by-side with those that came after it, such as a 1984 7UP commercial or Prince's "When Doves Cry" music video. For those completely unfamiliar with Paik, this absence of detailed explanation on how his impact can be seen today might seem unsatisfying. However, Kim's approach parallels Paik's own persistence in creating art that expands possibilities, and also honors the importance of his work, regardless of the way it shaped the work of others. The revolutionary artist's legacy is best defined not only by his willingness, but also his need for constant experimentation – to break things, to take them apart and to predict the future while doing so.
The documentary builds to a transcendent finale, in which Kim provides a window onto a spectacular exhibit in 2000 at the Guggenheim, called "The Worlds of Nam June Paik." One of its installations, titled Jacob's Ladder, features a magnificent, zig-zagging green laser beam running through a seven-story waterfall. At the top of the atrium is a spiraling, laser-projected cyclone known as Sweet and Sublime. The camera pans up and down the Guggenheim's giant rotunda, framing the ladder as a spear that dissolves into the swirling abyss. Paik died a handful of years after that, and though we'll never know his thoughts on iPhones or AI or TikTok, his work continues to interrogate the relationship between art and the ever-evolving technologies around us.
veryGood! (37829)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Biden says questioning Trump’s guilty verdicts is ‘dangerous’ and ‘irresponsible’
- American Airlines removed Black men from flight after odor complaint, federal lawsuit says
- WNBA All-Stars launch Unrivaled, a 3-on-3 basketball league that tips in 2025
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- RFK Jr. plans to file lawsuit against Nevada over ballot access
- Ambulance services for some in New Mexico will rise after state regulators approve rate increase
- Eight or nine games? Why ESPN can influence debate over SEC football's conference schedule
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Nurse fired for calling Gaza war genocide while accepting compassion award
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- 'Summer Fridays' are said to increase productivity, so why don't more businesses do it?
- Chief Justice John Roberts rejects Senate Democrats' request for meeting after Alito flag controversy
- Another Michigan dairy worker has bird flu, the third US case this year
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Sarah McLachlan struggled to find musical inspiration as a 'wealthy, middle-aged white woman'
- Judge to mull overturning Polly Klaas killer Richard Allen Davis' death sentence
- Dramatic video shows Texas couple breaking windshield to save man whose truck was being swallowed in flooded ditch
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Mets pitcher Jorge Lopez blasts media for igniting postgame controversy
Boeing firefighters ratify a contract with big raises, which they say will end a three-week lockout
Congressional Republicans stick by Trump after conviction, call it a travesty of justice
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
A pregnant stingray with no male companion now has a ‘reproductive disease,’ aquarium says
Oldest living National Spelling Bee champion reflects on his win 70 years later
Surprisingly, cicada broods keep going extinct. Some experts are working to save them.