SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Nam June Paik has continued to electrify the art world ever since his 1963 debut of television experiments in Exposition of Music Electronic Television, his first solo exhibition. Paik challenged visitors to participate by activating modified TV sets and playing radically transformed instrumentsblurring the distinction between performer and audience. Playful and interactive, Paiks immersive environment expanded the boundaries of art, music and technology, and laid the groundwork for his career as the founder of video art.
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art presenting the exclusive U.S. exhibition of Nam June Paik, a major retrospective of Paiks radical and experimental art, on view from May 8 through October 3, 2021. One of the first truly global artists, Paik (19322006) foresaw the importance of mass media and new technologies, coining the phrase 'electronic superhighway' in 1974 to predict the future of communication in an internet age. The exhibition celebrates his multidisciplinary and collaborative practice that encompassed art, music, performance and technology, all in dialogue with philosophies and traditions from both Eastern and Western cultures.
Bringing together over 200 works across all media spanning a five-decade career, from early compositions and performances to large-scale video installations and global satellite projects, Nam June Paik offers an in-depth understanding of the artists trailblazing practice. Paiks innovative, irreverent and entertaining works were informed by his musical background and his vision of an interconnected future. Organized by SFMOMA and Tate Modern, London, with additional presentations at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and the National Gallery Singapore, the retrospective is the first major Paik show in the U.S. in over 20 years and the first ever large-scale survey of his work on the West Coast.
Nam June Paik is famous for being the historic father of video art, but his groundbreaking and contemporary influence is even more based on his crossover between all media, said Rudolf Frieling, curator of media arts at SFMOMA. Paiks radical visual and musical aesthetic has a natural home here on the West Coast as a place for global connectivity.
Organized thematically, the exhibition unites many of Paik's most iconic and provocative works from throughout his career. In TV Buddha (1974), an 18th-century wooden Buddha appears to watch itself on a modern television, typifying the influence of Zen Buddhist philosophies on Paiks approach to art and technology. Also on view is TV Garden (197477/2002), an immersive installation featuring dozens of TV sets alongside lush foliage in a futuristic landscape where technology is an integral part of the natural world.
Nam June Paik partially restages the artists pivotal 1963 solo exhibition, Exposition of Music Electronic Television, and his concept of action music (as Paik said, Why is it music? Because it is not not music) is being demonstrated via musical interfaces and some of Paiks earliest manipulated televisions.
Unique to SFMOMAs presentation are two robots, one each dedicated to composer John Cage and choreographer Merce Cunningham, two of Paiks key collaborators along with artist Joseph Beuys and cellist Charlotte Moorman. John Cage Robot II (1995) and Merce / Digital (1988), among many other works, highlight Paiks creative partnerships and collaborative artistic practice.
The retrospective culminates in the dazzling installation Sistine Chapel (1993), a mesmerizing riot of sound and images from dozens of projectors, taken from the German pavilion which won the Golden Lion award at the Venice Biennale in 1993. Presented in its largest scale of any venue at SFMOMA, and exceeding that of all other works in the exhibition, Sistine Chapel envelops the audience in an audio visual remix of Paiks past videos and collaborators seen throughout the exhibition.
Born in Seoul during the Japanese occupation of Korea, Nam June Paik lived and worked in Japan, Germany and the U.S., reflecting a global connectedness that transcended borders and cultural differences. He studied music theory and trained as a musician before experimenting with performance and technology in the 1960s as a means of expanding his artistic production. He developed a multidisciplinary practice across media and has become synonymous with the electronic image through a prodigious output of manipulated TV sets, live performances, global television broadcasts, single-channel videos and video installations.
Paik collaborated with a community of avant-garde artists and musicians, and played a pivotal role in Fluxus, an international network of artists, composers and poets who engaged in experimental art performances. His groundbreaking work has influenced art, media, music and popular culture for decades, including musicians such as David Bowie, Laurie Anderson and Devo's Mark Mothersbaugh, among many others.