Richmond Home
photograph by Taylor Dabney
Nam June Paik (Korean, 1932-2006), Sonata II, 1996, lithograph, screenprint, and etching on Rives BFK paper, 21 x 26 inches, Joel and Lila Harnett Print Study Center, University of Richmond Museums, Museum purchase with funds from the Louis S. Booth Arts Fund, H2015.22.02 © Estate of Nam June Paik
Exhibition
Jan 09, 2017
throughJul 02, 2017

Sonata: Print Series by Nam June Paik

Print this event Add to Outlook Add to iOS Device Add to Google Calendar Add to Google Calendar

Sonata: Print Series by Nam June Paik is on view in the Harnett Museum of Art, University of Richmond Museums, January 9 through July 2, 2017.  Nam June Paik (Korean, 1932) is considered by many to be the father of video art, and he sought new modes of artistic expression in his music, performances, and intermedia sculptures. Paik was part of the Fluxus movement that took shape in the 1960s and 1970s, a loosely connected group of international artists, composers, and poets that shared the impulse to integrate life into art through an experimental approach to materials, sounds, and events. Influenced by Marcel Duchamp and John Cage, Fluxus included artists such as Joseph Beuys, George Macunias, and Yoko Ono. In his works, Paik utilized television sets, synthesizers, video, and installations combining these elements. He coined the phrase “electronic superhighway” in the 1970s predicting how media would transform our lives.

Images in this series include Paik’s historical Fluxus performances, events, video sculptures, his musical compositions, text, drawings, and photographs of the artist, his family, and artists associated with his work. Each print was screenprinted with silver ink to make a grid of sixteen television screens. Background images were printed over the screenprint using photo-lithographic plates created from the artist’s drawings.

Organized by the University of Richmond Museums and curated by Richard Waller, Executive Director, University Museums, the exhibition is made possible in part with funds from the Louis S. Booth Arts Fund.