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Art Critic/ Greenwich Village Gazette


The Worlds of Nam June Paik
@ The Guggenheim Museum

   ne of the most notable artist of the 20th Century is the video and television installation genius of Nam June Paik from Korea. He is exhibiting now at the Guggenheim Museum in New York (Uptown). This exhibition draws on past works with those done in collaboration with Charlotte Moorman and recent versions of his past works. The show covers the interior rotunda of the museum and is a visually breath-taking experience because of the sound and the television screens which are portraying, I believe to be, Japanese music videos, a still picture of a full moon with birds flying by it and three people dancing. 

Each scene of Modulation in Sync (2000) is scattered in about eighty television sets. Here, Paik is showing part of his world through the use of the medium of television. The sound of the Japanese music videos and the darkness of the museum itself gives this "world" that Paik created an infinite study of life and interaction. Paik also uses video to establish a symbolist connection of his remaking of video into an artist’s medium. 

As you look up there are screens that are projecting the programs of Japanese television and farther up in the oculus of the rotunda is Sweet and Sublime, a laser show that forms into geometric shapes and spirals that rapidly change. Also in the main floor is Jacob’s Ladder, which is a seven-story waterfall with a green laser that cascades down the waterfall in zigzags that form a visual link that enhances sound, sight and energy.

Along the ramps are more of his works. One that is brilliant to me is TV Clock of 1963 (2000 version). This installation consists of twenty-four televisions arranged in a row. In each screen there is a neon light that reached from one end to the other. It definitely gives a futuristic frame of mind about how time will be in the 21st Century. Another quizzical installation is that of Video Buddha of 1976-1978. Here there is a bronze sculpture of a Buddha and a small television set that showing the sculpture. There is a film camera that is filming the sculpture. His interest in time and the historical documenting is captured in this work where a timeless figure is being viewed also in a video for mass exhibition. 

Another extension of this same concept is a camera filming the pendulum of a clock on the wall to three television sets. Each screen has a different rotation of the pendulum. Paik chooses to film the part of the clock that sways back and forth and capture the rotation of life and time. The fact that we can see the object itself in our world and then seen in the video world employs a transition from physicality to timelessness.

Video Fish of 1975 (2000 version) is a continuation of TV Clock, where the rhetorical aesthetic are arranged in a new way of seeing. Here, there are television screens on the background of the tank and are arranged in a row as TV Clock. The screen shows a man dancing and his silhouette dancing next to him. Nature is seen in front of a technological medium of man. The ironic joining of two polar substances are compared as similar ways of seeing, viewing through a barrier and collecting energy, time and sound as the world flows into the next century.

Family of Robots: Hi-Tech Baby, Grandfather and Grandmother of 1886 are sculptures made out of televisions and are represented as a family. The grandfather and the grandmother are built out of old television sets, thus representing the past and their age in historical contexts. The screens are displaying various abstract images. The baby is made out of more hi-tech and smaller televisions and represents the present, youth and the future. Thus, there is a continuation from the older family to the present family and all f the historical and past events are linked together.

Another part of the exhibition is Paik and the Worlds of Film and Video, 1965-1974. This part of his exhibition is a concentration on his performance pieces and an attribution to Charlotte Moorman, a celloist. Here, we see a video of someone doing a performance of breaking a violin. There is also a little room that one might sit and here classical music and look at black and white pictures of the performance. Performance Art for me is a credible maneuver from the traditional medium of the canvas to a more personal and intimate portrayal of the artist. John Cage, Laurie Anderson and Joseph Beuys are artists of this still rather new medium of art. Video installation is a continuation of this art form into a more present and reachable future. Bill Viola is an extraordinary artist that uses time and video together to express infinity and ways of seeing.

As our future becomes visualized as a more technological advanced society, and I believe that our world would be so consumed by computers and all of that "garbage" that computers bring, art has to be seen in this manner also. Because therefore, we can share in these new ideas and feelings that everyone feels because of technology. Therefore, artists like Paik takes a step further away from the canvas and paint and uses video and light to express aesthetics and expressions. Technology can be a way of destruction or advancement. It is the job of the art world to communicate with the growing of our future. Paik uses video to educate the mass of our world and the presence of changing cultures and virtues.

-Renata Bomtempo

 

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