YONGIN.- Nam June Paik Art Center announces that the 8th Nam June Paik Prize 2024 will be awarded to Joan Jonas. Jonas is a world-renowned artist who has had a significant influence on the development and diversity of contemporary art from the late 1960s to the present in a variety of media, including video, performance, sculpture, and installation. Her early works, which combined then-new technologies such as portable video cameras and television monitors with performance, questioned how people see, think, and act in the video age and raised questions that remain relevant. More recently, her work has challenged the dichotomies of civilization and nature and human and non-human, providing opportunities for critical reflection on anthropocentrism, and she continues to explore and deepen her artistic practice. Jonas was the representative artist for the United States Pavilion at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015 and had a solo retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in early 2024.
Supported by Gyeonggi Provincial Government and hosted by Nam June Paik Art Center, the Prize was launched in 2009 and awarded seven times as the Nam June Paik Art Center Prize until 2021. Over the past two years, the prize has been reorganized and the criteria used to select artists who have promoted understanding and contributed to world peace through their art practice have been revised, augmenting the established criteria of creativity, experimentation, and innovation. In addition, the significance of holding a solo exhibition at Nam June Paik Art Center, Korea, and the potential to spread values have served as key criteria. Jonass award is thus an encouraging outcome of the reorganization of the prize and its renaming as Nam June Paik Prize.
In 2024, Nam June Paik Art Center appointed experts from around the world to administer Nam June Paik Prize and focused on raising its global profile. The Executive Committee assembled the ten-members of the International Nominating Committee who nominated one artist or team each, and the five-member Jury reviewed the 10 nominees to select the final winner. The jury consisted of Namhee Park, Director of Nam June Paik Art Center, as an ex-officio member and world-renowned art experts such as Frances Morris, a distinguished professor at Ewha Womans University and former director of Tate Modern, London, Sungwon Kim, the deputy director of the Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul, Rein Wolfs, director of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, and Mami Kataoka, the director of the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo.
Frances Morris, chair of the jury, observed that Jonas not only played a key role in shaping early video and performance art but continues to explore urgent new terrain, most recently creating immersive installations that explore themes of ecology, landscape and kinship between humans and non-human species at a time of climate breakdown. Park Namhee, director of Nam June Paik Art Center attributed to Jonass work the power of art to promote understanding of difference and expand thought and stated We hope that the prize will encourage the rich interpretation and transmission of Joan Jonass art in the current moment. As a pioneer in video and performance art, Jonas is now often referred to as an artists artist, and her receipt of the award will not only provide an important impetus for young artists to continue their practice but also help introduce her work to audiences that have been difficult to reach in Korea.
Responded to the news about the award, Jonas said I am honored to receive this prize, especially to remember Nam June, a great artist. It will be a pleasure to work with Nam June Paik Art Center on the show in 2025. The award ceremony will take place on Thursday, November 28 at Nam June Paik Art Center. Jonas will receive a prize of KRW 50,000,000 and a trophy. In November 2025, Nam June Paik Art Center will host Jonass first solo museum exhibition in Korea.