Video/Art: The First Fifty Years

By: London, BarbaraMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Phaidon Press 2021Description: 280pISBN: 978-0714877594Subject(s): Art History | Video Art | Visual artDDC classification: ARTV
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Item type Current library Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Arthshila Santiniketan
Shelf: D1
ARTV/LON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available BK00222
Total holds: 0

Since the introduction of portable consumer electronics nearly a half century ago, artists throughout the world have adapted their latest technologies to art-making. This first-hand account by the curator who has been following video art from its beginnings in the late 1960s, when artists first adapted portable consumer technology to art-making, spotlights video’s ongoing importance in the art world, tracing the genre’s development alongside the advances in technology that have continued to open up new possibilities for artists. London has worked closely and personally with the artists she writes about, who span generations, including Joan Jonas, Nam June Paik, Bill Viola, Shirin Neshat, Pipilotti Rist, Miranda July, Ragnar Kjartansson, and Ian Cheng. The text is both art-historical and personal – weaving together background information and insightful interpretations with unique anecdotes and experiences to trace the history of video art as it transformed into the broader field of media art – from analog to digital, small TV monitors to wall-scale projections, and clunky hardware to user-friendly software. In doing this, she reveals how video evolved from fringe status to be seen as one of the foremost art forms of today.

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