TV as a Creative Medium
In May 1969, TV
as a Creative Medium opened at the Howard Wise Gallery in
New York. This seminal exhibition heralded a burgeoning development
that came to be known as "video art." The first exhibition
in the United States devoted to video, TV as a Creative Medium
signaled radical changes, inspiring a generation of artists to take
up video and provoking commentary that extended well beyond the channels
of art discourse. Among the twelve artists in the show were Nam
June Paik, Charlotte
Moorman, Paul
Ryan, Ira
Schneider, Frank
Gillette, and Eric
Siegel. Prescient in its diversity, the exhibition featured performance,
objects, closed-circuit tapes and installations, with works as varied
as Paik and Moormans TV Bra for Living Sculpture, Gillette
and Schneiders Wipe Cycle and Thomas Tadlocks Archetron.
As with other revolutionary exhibitions, TV as a Creative Medium
was both the grand finale of an idea the kinetic art movement
of the 1960s and an indication of the future the impact
of video and television in the hands of artists.
|