Nam June Paik | MoMA
Nam June Paik. Global Groove. 1973. Video (color, sound), 28:30 minutes. Gift of the John D. Rockefeller III Foundation

“Our life is half natural and half technological. Half-and-half is good.”

Nam June Paik

“I come from a very poor country and I am poor. I have to entertain people every second,” Nam June Paik has said.1 The tongue-in-cheek, self-deprecating nature of the quip is characteristic of Paik’s attitude toward art making. A member of the international avant-garde Fluxus movement, Paik is best known for creating massive sculptural installations dominated by television monitors. His prediction that we would one day develop international telecommunications networks has prompted scholars to dub him a visionary, while his early experiments with the emerging technology of video have earned him the oversize epithet “father of video art.”

Paik’s career began in music. Born in 1932 to a wealthy family of textile manufacturers, Paik trained as a classical pianist in Seoul before fleeing to Japan with his parents and siblings upon the outbreak of the Korean War. He enrolled at the University of Tokyo, where he wrote a thesis on the German composer Arnold Schoenberg, then moved to West Germany to pursue graduate studies at Munich University. An electrifying encounter in 1958 with the composer John Cage inspired Paik to incorporate objects, theatrical interruptions, and pre-recorded sounds into his compositions. Termed “action music,” works like Étude for Pianoforte (1960)—which concluded when Paik leapt into the audience and cut off Cage’s tie—caught the attention of artists like Karlheinz Stockhausen, who wrote a part for Paik in Originale (1961), and George Maciunas, who invited Paik to join Fluxus. In 1964, Paik moved to New York, where he met the cellist Charlotte Moorman. The pair embarked on a decades-long partnership that generated performances including Variations on a Theme by Saint-Saëns (1964) and Opera Sextronique (1967), during which they were arrested for indecent exposure.

Paik made his first foray into video in 1963 with an exhibition in Wuppertal, West Germany, that featured Zen for TV (1963/1981) and other television sets whose receptions he had altered. With the engineer Shuya Abe, Paik began to develop more advanced technical interventions, such as Robot K-456 (1964), a remote-controlled robot that “defecated” dried beans while playing snatches of John F. Kennedy speeches, and the Paik/Abe Video Synthesizer (1969), which enabled anyone to distort the color and shape of video images in real time. Later experiments with the medium spawned films like Global Groove (1973) as well as installations like Fin de Siècle II (1989) and sculptures like Untitled (1993). As with his incursions into performance, many of these pieces drew on or honored Paik’s collaborative relationships with other artists. In the two-part homage Merce by Merce by Paik (1975–76, 1978), for example, Paik worked with filmmaker Charles Atlas and fellow video pioneer Shigeko Kubota (to whom Paik was married) to celebrate the artist Marcel Duchamp and the choreographer Merce Cunningham.

Until his death in 2006, Paik believed in technology’s ability to foster connections among people, between nations, and across cultures. His politics emerge in the mock documentary Guadalcanal Requiem (1977/1979)—in which Paik and Moorman perform an antiwar tribute on the site of the first major World War II offensive mounted by US troops against Japan—and in the international satellite broadcast Good Morning Mr. Orwell (1984), a live program that aired simultaneously in the US, France, Germany, and South Korea on New Year’s Day 1984, in rebuttal to George Orwell’s dystopian projections. But Paik’s love for technology was always mediated by his commitment to humanity. “Our life is half natural and half technological,” he declared in 1986. “Half-and-half is good. You cannot deny that high-tech is progress. We need it for jobs. Yet if you make only high-tech, you make war. So we must have strong human element to keep modesty and natural life.”2

Oriana Tang, Intern, Department of Publications

  1. Martin Pops, “Nam June Paik: Ales and Cake,” Bennington Review (Nutley, NJ), no. 14 (winter 1982), 29–30.

  2. Douglas C. McGill, “Art People,” New York Times, Oct. 3, 1986.

Wikipedia entry
Introduction
Nam June Paik (Korean: 백남준; RR: Baek Nam-jun; July 20, 1932 – January 29, 2006) was a Korean artist. He worked with a variety of media and is considered to be the founder of video art. He is credited with the first use (1974) of the term "electronic super highway" to describe the future of telecommunications. Born in Seoul to a wealthy business family, Paik trained as a classical musician, spending time in Japan and West Germany, where he joined the Fluxus collective and developed a friendship with experimental composer John Cage. He moved to New York City in 1964 and began working with cellist Charlotte Moorman to create performance art. Soon after, he began to incorporate televisions and video tape recorders into his work, acquiring growing fame. A stroke in 1996 left him partially paralyzed for the last decade of his life.
Wikidata
Q158056
Information from Wikipedia, made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Getty record
Introduction
Paik is known for his sculpture and installations employing television sets, video screens and junk assemblage, and is considered the inventor of video art. He began his career as a musician and wrote his thesis at Tokyo University on Arnold Shoenberg. He continued his studies in Munich and Freiburg, and gravitated to the avant-garde music scene in Cologne and Darmstadt, where he worked with Karlheinz Stockhausen. He met John Cage and began incorporating elements of what would become performance art into musical events, which led to an involvement with the Fluxus group. He exhibited the first known art work to incorporate television sets in 1963, and is perhaps most widely known for his collaborations with Charlotte Moorman, beginning in 1965, which resulted in the creation of his "TV Bra for Living Sculpture." He is credited with coining the phrase "electronic superhighway." Major retrospectives of his work were held at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1982, and the Guggenheim Museum in 2000.
Nationalities
South Korean, American, Korean, German
Gender
Male
Roles
Artist, Writer, Teacher, Musician, Installation Artist, Performance Artist, Sculptor, Video Artist
Names
Nam June Paik, Naum June Paik
Ulan
500118744
Information from Getty’s Union List of Artist Names ® (ULAN), made available under the ODC Attribution License

Works

106 works online

Exhibitions

Publications

  • Signals: How Video Transformed the World Exhibition catalogue, Paperback, 188 pages
  • MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art Flexibound, 408 pages
  • MoMA Now: Highlights from The Museum of Modern Art—Ninetieth Anniversary Edition Hardcover, 424 pages
  • Being Modern: Building the Collection of the Museum of Modern Art Exhibition catalogue, Hardcover, 288 pages
Licensing

If you would like to reproduce an image of a work of art in MoMA’s collection, or an image of a MoMA publication or archival material (including installation views, checklists, and press releases), please contact Art Resource (publication in North America) or Scala Archives (publication in all other geographic locations).

MoMA licenses archival audio and select out of copyright film clips from our film collection. At this time, MoMA produced video cannot be licensed by MoMA/Scala. All requests to license archival audio or out of copyright film clips should be addressed to Scala Archives at [email protected]. Motion picture film stills cannot be licensed by MoMA/Scala. For access to motion picture film stills for research purposes, please contact the Film Study Center at [email protected]. For more information about film loans and our Circulating Film and Video Library, please visit https://www.moma.org/research/circulating-film.

If you would like to reproduce text from a MoMA publication, please email [email protected]. If you would like to publish text from MoMA’s archival materials, please fill out this permission form and send to [email protected].

Feedback

This record is a work in progress. If you have additional information or spotted an error, please send feedback to [email protected].