Howard
Wise | The Howard Wise Gallery
Although Howard Wise is most closely associated with his visionary
and seminal support of video art (and artists) in the 1970s, he had
long been engaged with nontraditional art forms. Wise was committed
to supporting the nexus of art and technology, particularly multimedia
and kinetic art. In 1960 he opened the Howard Wise Gallery at 50 West
57th Street in New York, which became a locus for the kinetic art
movement, featuring artists such as Len Lye, Takis, Jean Tinguely,
and Group Zero. During a ten-year span, the gallery featured several
groundbreaking exhibitions, including On the Move (1964) and
Lights in Orbit (1967). Wise's most influential and provocative
show was TV
as a Creative Medium, the landmark 1969 exhibition that served
to link the kinetic and art and technology movements of the 1960s
with the emergent medium of video art. Seeking to support projects
in this new medium, Wise closed the gallery in 1970 to found the nonprofit
organization Electronic
Arts Intermix.
|