Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website Stay at home Stedelijk - Watch & listen online: Nam June Paik 'The future is now'
april 11, 2020 - Stedelijk Museum

Stay at home Stedelijk - Watch & listen online: Nam June Paik 'The future is now'

STAY AT HOME STEDELIJK

WATCH & LISTEN ONLINE

 

The #stedelijkmuseum has closed the doors for visitors in line with national policy relating to the corona virus. But online we go on! On this page you'll find a selection of minidocs and audio tours about the most-talked-about exhibitions of the past years. We will keep on adding more content the coming weeks. 

Follow us on our social channels as well for your daily dose of art during your #stayathome days.

• Live Tour
The next live tour will be broadcasted on Instagram on Friday April 10. Director Rein Wolfs takes us on an easter egg tour through the collection Stedelijk BASE. Join Rein Wolfs him for his easter egg hunt for the more unknown facts and hidden messages in our art collection. Tune in at 2 pm (CET)!

 

During the Stay at Home day the #stedelijkmuseum will stream a live tour through the collection or one of the exhibitions every Friday at 2 pm (CET). Last Friday Director Rein Wolfs kicked off the series of Instagram live tours with a tour through Stedelijk BASE- The Collection. On March 27 curator Leontine Coelewij took us on a tour through the exhibition Nam June Paik: The Future is Now and on April 3, curator Hripsimé Visser showed us the photography of Bertien van Manen and other photographers in Beyond the Image. Bertien van Manen & Friends. ! The Live Tours will also be available on Facebook and YouTube afterward. Tune in!

Watch all live tours on YouTube

 

www.stedelijk.nl

 

 

NAM JUNE PAIK - THE FUTURE IS NOW

 

14 March until 23 August 2020

 

The #stedelijkmuseum presents the largest survey of Nam June. Paik predicted the power of mass media to shape our lives. He introduced the term ‘electronic superhighway’ to foretell the future of communication in an internet age. The exhibition The Future is Now tracks his artistic career over five decades, through large-scale installations, such as TV Garden and Sistine Chapel, video sculptures, modified television sets, and his early musical scores and robots.

 

Nam June Paik (1932 – 2006) was born in Seoul, but lived and worked in Japan, Germany, and the United States. His travels led him to question national borders and cultural differences in an increasingly connected world. His art reflects this global connectedness and a fascination with the philosophies and traditions of both Eastern and Western cultures.

Always innovative, his work encompassed a variety of artistic genres, from sculpture and performance to music and live broadcasting. A frequent collaborator, he worked internationally with artists, performers, and specialists from different disciplines. The exhibition highlights his collaborations with other artists such as composer John Cage, choreographer Merce Cunningham, cellist Charlotte Moorman and artist Joseph Beuys.

 

Paik had a long relationship with the #stedelijkmuseum: already in 1977 he had his first solo exhibition here. A year later his seminal work TV-Buddha was acquired by the Stedelijk, which laid the first brick for the museum’s important time-based media collection. In 1984 he participated in The Luminous Image, a group exhibition with twenty-four international video artists. The Stedelijk not only championed the new discipline by giving it a platform, but also purchased video art, including that of Paik, for its collection—one of the first museums to do so.

ICONIC ART WORKS
The exhibition brings together some of Paik's iconic works. An prominent installation from the Stedelijk collection is TV-Buddha (1974), in which an 18th-century wooden Buddha appears to ‘watch’ itself on a modern television, and typifies the influence of (Zen) Buddhist philosophies on Paik’s approach to art and technology. Also on view is TV garden (1974-77), an installation with TV sets alongside living plants. Paik imagined a futuristic landscape where technology is an integral part of the natural world.

Sistine Chapel (1993) will be the iconic culmination of the exhibition in the IMC Hall of Honour, a mesmerising riot of images from dozens of projectors, for which Paik received the prestigious Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale in 1993. Sistine Chapel is an audio-visual collage of new footage and samples from Paik’s past videos, it featured many of the friends, collaborators, and public figures seen in this exhibition. It was Paik’s own way of summarizing his artistic career with video.

 

 

NOTE FOR EDITORS:
For more information and press images you are welcome to contact the Press Office of the #stedelijkmuseum #amsterdam, +31 20 573 26 60 / 56 or pressoffice@stedelijk.nl

The exhibition Nam June Paik: The Future is Now is generously supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art and the Korea Foundation.

The exhibition is organized by Tate Modern, London and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in collaboration with #stedelijkmuseum #amsterdam.

Curated by Sook-Kyung Lee, Senior Research Curator, Tate and Rudolf Frieling, Curator of Media Arts, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in collaboration with Leontine Coelewij, Curator #stedelijkmuseum #amsterdam.

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