Open
Circuits: An International Conference on the Future of Television
The groundbreaking Open Circuits: An International Conference on the
Future of Television, held at The Museum of Modern Art on January
23Æ25, 1974, gathered some 40 video artists, filmmakers, curators,
arts administrators, critics and others to discuss the problems and
prospects of artistsÍ television and video. It was originally conceived
in 1971 as an exhibition (with catalogue and
conference components) by artist/journalist Douglas
Davis and John
Hightower, director of MoMa. However, resistance to video art from
the
museum community suggested a need for a wide-open forum on art and
television. Redesigned as a three-day conference, Open Circuits was
co-organized by Davis, Fred Barzyk of WGBH-TV
in Boston, and Gerald OÍGrady (a media professor at SUNY, Buffalo)
with Willard Van Dyke of the MoMA Film Department and Richard Oldenburg,
who succeeded Hightower as MoMA director. The conference featured
illustrious presenters; new works and works-in-progress (for example,
the first sections of Nam
June PaikÍs landmark Global
Groove) rolled inevitably into the panel proceedings. The
atmosphere was electric and every session was packed, attended by
hundreds. The feisty conference proceedings were anthologized in The
New Television: A Public/Private Art (The MIT Press: 1977), a
seminal but under-recognized text of the early video era. |
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Read
Essay:
"Douglas Davis and Open Circuits"
By Ben Portis
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