The Case for Video Art

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[Music] video art what is it even moving pictures that someone somewhere decided to call art distinct from all the other moving pictures that are apparently not art the explosion of technology that has reshaped our lives so dramatically in the past 50 odd years has also had a profound impact on the lives of artists since the 1960s artists have picked up video cameras for numerous reasons and involved moving images in their work in countless ways but what of it why does it need special designation and what sets apart these moving pictures from all the others this is the case for video art [Music] the first mechanisms for recording moving pictures were not terribly portable and even when they became more so they weren't easy to buy or use early cinema was experimental because well there was no other way to do it no one had done this before they were making up what it was that should be done with this technology and figuring out how we'd watch it whether it should be served to the public one by one or in a communal setting cinema caught fire and took hold and as it evolved artists made films to Italian futurists made films and Dadaist made films as abstraction was explored in painting so it was in moving pictures Marcel Duchamp experimented with the medium as did abstract painter Furnham leche whose non-narrative ballet mechanic made expert use of found footage cinema was used to great effect by the Surrealists as well bringing two startling life their trippy visions art and film have always been intertwined without clear boundaries dividing them but it wasn't until the Sony porta pact was introduced in the mid 1960s the video art was truly born battery-powered and self-contained the camera and recorder system could be carried and operated by a single person requiring neither studio nor crew artists loved it especially early adopters Nam June Paik and shikaku Kubota although Paik was no stranger to the Moving Image his 1964 works Zen for film is composed of an upright piano a double bass and a home movie screen onto which is projected 30 minutes of clear unprocessed 16 millimeter film it was about as minimal as film could be nothing appearing on the screen except for the dust and scratches inevitable in the projection process no images to get lost in just the mechanism itself to consider and behold Paik was captivated by the technologies that proliferated in modern life in the 60s and 70s and he was unafraid to use them as raw material reimagining and re-engineering them into hybrid works bridging video sculpture experimental music and performance he collaborated with Charlotte Morman on his TV cello which Moorman performed by running herbo across a stack of TVs that played pre-recorded images of her doing the same television entered the lives and consciousness of many in the years following World War two an artists were eager to think through its implications Joan Jonases 1972 vertical roll is titled after the technological glitch common to TV at the time she structured a performance in front of the camera that accounted for the videos rolling bar which fragments her body into disjointed frames Jonas and others used the medium to consider and critique how women were represented in film and on TV taking control of the means of production and distribution with the advent of the porta pack making moving pictures became cheap and easy women and people of color and artists living around the world could pick up a camera and make a moving picture and you didn't need the blessing of the narrow art world to do it video art appeared at a time of a great intermingling of media when artists unabashedly combined the traditional arts of painting sculpture and drawing with theater dance music and film experimentation came from all directions filmmaker Stan Van Der Beek called it expanded cinema when films exited movie theaters entered unusual spaces and challenged the role of the passive spectator Carolee schneemann x' 1967 work snows involved performers film slides strobe lights and a revolving light sculpture the movement of audience members in certain seats would trip an electronic system that activated elements of the installation art wasn't just sitting there anymore and you weren't supposed to either video has allowed artists to document performances that are fleeting and seen by few giving it form allowing it to live on and be represented in museums galleries libraries and archives some of these performances were public and others private performed by the artist only for the audience of the camera Bruce Nauman made a number of films in the late 60s in his studio just him in the camera recording his actions as he performed self-directed tasks like bouncing in the corner or walking in an exaggerated manner around the perimeter of a square his rationale was if I was an artist and I was in the studio than whatever I was doing in the studio must be art here the artists body was the raw material and the process of making the work itself from the beginning video art has excelled at analysing itself and the technologies that create it Anthony McCall's 1973 line describing a cone is just that an animated film of a white dot on a black background that traces a circle and becomes a thin arcing white line it's projected onto a wall in a room with mist from a smoke machine and the beam of light forms a three-dimensional hollow cone unlike traditional cinema consumed by a reclining spectator these moving pictures are sculptural filling the whole room and begging the viewer to walk around and even through the projection but video art doesn't just examine its own existence and it lives far outside galleries since its inception it's been able to exist in public spaces of many kinds able to integrate into life in ways a single fragile oil painting simply cannot for Dara Birnbaum's work technology transformation Wonderwoman she isolated and repeated the moment in the TV show when Lynda Carter as Diana Prince transforms into a superhero the piece was first shown not in an art context but broadcast on cable TV for the first time new technologies made possible the remix culture that in time would become second nature artists pulled from the ocean of existing media and freely adapted it for their own purposes this was not TV as a device for conformity and control but as a means of expression an opposition video can follow artists out in the world documenting gorilla performances and recording actions of all kinds it can share voices and images and stories of those far from the centres of the art world it is allowed artists to share personal accounts like Howard enup and Elle's 1980 recounting of the instances of racism she'd encountered in life like no other medium video has been an enormous leap our Philander lastik tool for addressing and exploring identity and reconsidering histories as technology has progressed way beyond the Porta Pak artists have pushed available technologies to do remarkable things and make possible images and experiences that our outstrip blurry little images on monitors although those can be pretty cool too the Internet has allowed video art to not only be shared far and wide but to also exist within and through online platforms the category has expanded to include experiences in virtual and augmented reality and the line between video art and not video art is blurrier than ever but it's always been blurry that haziness is a reminder that art doesn't belong to galleries or museums and it isn't created by people who are fundamentally different than you art is what we collectively decide it is and artists are people who make art including you so when you see a glow emerging from a darkened gallery or a pair of headphones dangling seductively from a hook take a leap into the unknown revel in not knowing what will happen next trust that it can widen your understanding of what can be done with new technologies beyond what's prescribed by our corporate overlords let it help you get to know your world a little better to understand what film is what TV is what digital moving images are and begin to fathom the complexity of the layered tabbed archived digital atmosphere were all breathing pippilotta wrist has likened her video installations to handbags because she says there's room in them for everything painting technology language music lousy flowing pictures poetry commotion premonitions of death sex and friendliness video art doesn't really describe what this is very well but neither do any of the other names really video is a catch-all term describing a moving image captured on magnetic tape or in digital format but video comes from Latin meaning I see and in the way it reflects how we now understand and process and see the world it works well enough [Music] [Music] [Music]
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Channel: The Art Assignment
Views: 200,481
Rating: 4.9500303 out of 5
Keywords: video art, art, art history, contemporary art, Nam June Paik, film, film history, cinema, Shigeku Kubota, artists, Pipilotti Rist, portapak, new media
Id: YcXpAHVAxwY
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 10min 1sec (601 seconds)
Published: Thu Jan 17 2019
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