Smithsonian American Art Museum
This is the first in a series of monthly updates about film and media arts at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. First up, Michael Mansfield, associate curator of film and media art, fills us in on our upcoming exhibition Nam June Paik: Global Visionary, which opens on December 13.

Below is an excerpt of Michael's post, visit the blog for the full article.

-- Georgina
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Gardening in the Age of the Moving Image

Next month we will install 310 living plants in our gallery. An unruly mix of Warneckii, Aglaonema, Pathos, and Areca Palms, potting soil and planters will welcome visitors to our exhibition, Nam June Paik: Global Visionary. The plants are part of Paik's groundbreaking installation titled TV Garden, on loan from the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. Paik's garden also includes sixty-five Cathode Ray Tube televisions sets (CRTs), multiple video and audio amplifiers, speakers, cables, 2x4s, green paint, and the pioneering, single channel video Global Groove from 1973. But don't get too distracted by the flickering green spectacle. There is a great deal more to this beneath the topsoil.

The subject of the exhibition is the artist Nam June Paik. He died in 2006 but his art and legacy continue to inspire generations. We speak very fondly of him around the museum. Our senior curator of media art, John Hanhardt, was a friend of the artist and worked with him for many years. In 2009 we acquired his complete estate archive, which helps shape the foundation of our Film and Media Arts program. Nam June Paik's contributions as an artist cannot be overstated. He democratized technology and transformed video into an artist's medium. He redefined art making globally.

 

Normally, we would not place living plants in our gallery space. Paik was constantly challenging those conventions. Trained as a musician and acting as a performance artist in the early 1960s, he was an important part of the Fluxus network, an international art movement that exploded various disciplines and sought to mash-up high and pop cultures. Fluxus founder George Maciunas authored a manifesto stating that, among a host of other goals, Fluxors aimed to "PURGE the world of dead art" and "promote living art". In response and collaboration, Paik incessantly broke things, from musical scores and violins, to TV sets and robots. As an avant-garde artist, he mangled the mechanics of pianos, intervened in scores for performances, and manipulated the circuitry of CRTs. By doing so, Nam June Paik fused some humanity with our techno-cultural progress and changed the way we see art and ourselves.

 

Visit the museum's blog Eye Level for the full post, and mark your calendars to see Nam June Paik: Global Visionary, open December 13, 2012 -- August 11, 2013.

  

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Smithsonian American Art Museum
P.O. Box 37012
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