TATE ABOUT


TATE ABOUT

Press Office: Press Releases

2010 | Tate Liverpool

Nam June Paik

Tate Liverpool presents the first major uk retrospective of Nam June Paik

Friday 17 December 2010 – Thursday 31 March 2011
Admission £6.00 ( £5.00 (FACT- free) concessions)

Press release: 9 September 2010

Supported by The Korea Foundation and The Henry Moore Foundation

Video artist, performer and composer Nam June Paik (1932-2006) was one of the most innovative
artists of the 20th century and is widely considered to be the first video artist. From 17 December
2010 - 13 March 2011 Tate Liverpool, in collaboration with FACT (Foundation for Art and Creative
Technology), presents the first major retrospective of Paik’s work in the UK. Displaying works from
all phases of his career, many shown in the UK for the first time, the exhibition traces the artist’s
avant-garde and experimental spirit.

Born in South Korea, Paik began his career as a composer in Japan and Germany, later developing
an interest in electronic art and avant-garde movements including the Fluxus group. Influenced by
and working alongside artists such as John Cage, Joseph Beuys and Karlheinz Stockhausen, his
early years in Germany proved to be a formative experience for his practice. Paik continued his
experiments in performance and video art after moving to New York in 1964. His collaboration
with cellist Charlotte Moorman was particularly significant in the context of the New York avant-
garde.

Characterised by an inventive use of technology, Paik’s signature style has been established
through mesmerising closed-circuit video installations and manipulated TV works. Covering the
diverse yet coherent phases of his career, Tate Liverpool’s exhibition offers a definitive look at
Paik’s body of work, from the scores of early music performances and TV works, to robot
sculptures and large-scale video installations. In the late 1960s Paik and Japanese video engineer
Shuya Abe developed a sophisticated method of manipulating video images with the invention of
the ‘Video-Synthesiser’, which revolutionised video art by distorting the colour and shapes of
images on TV screens. Paik also undertook public broadcasting and satellite TV projects that were
revolutionary in demonstrating the power of decentralised public media, and his experimental use
of popular music and visual images are recognised as an early precursor to the ‘MTV generation’.

The exhibition also showcases a rich selection of documentary materials from Paik’s performances
and early exhibitions, including Exposition of Music – Electronic Television, the artist’s first solo
exhibition at the Galerie Parnass (Wuppertal, Germany) in 1963. Paik’s influential collaborations
are also explored in depth, including his friendship with artist Joseph Beuys, and its wider
significance in both artists’ practice.

Focusing on Paik's innovative use of creative technology, FACT will showcase Laser Cone for the
first time in the UK: a major laser installation representing Paik's 'post-video’ period and the
culmination of his continuous experiments with new technology and media. The presentation will
also include a number of single-channel video works, demonstrating the artist’s interests in the
digital manipulation of visual images as well as the possibilities of satellite technology in extending
the physical realm of video art. FACT’s display concludes the retrospective both in terms of its
chronology and its conceptual genealogy.

Nam June Paik is initiated and developed by Tate Liverpool and museum kunst palast, Düsseldorf,
curated by Sook-Kyung Lee and Susanne Rennert. The exhibition is presented in Liverpool by Tate
Liverpool in collaboration with FACT, with curatorial support from Laura Sillars, Programmes
Director, FACT.

museum kunst palast, Düsseldorf, will present the exhibition from 11 September – 21 November
2010.

-ends-

Notes to Editors

For further information, images or interviews please contact:

Rachel Skelton Press Officer, Tate Liverpool +44 (0)151 702 7444 rachel.skelton@tate.org.uk

Lucie Davies PR & Comms Officer, FACT +44 (0)151 707 4405 lucie.davies@fact.co.uk

Ami Guest Press Assistant, Tate L’pool +44 (0)151 702 7445 ami.guest@tate.org.uk

Bookmark and Share