Video/Media Culture of the Late Twentieth Century
1995; College Art Association; Volume: 54; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/00043249.1995.10791714
ISSN2325-5307
AutoresJohn C. Hanhardt, Maria Christina Villaseñor,
Tópico(s)Art, Politics, and Modernism
ResumoThe opportunity to edit an issue of the College Art Association's Art Journal provides yet another chance for the academic art history community to rediscover the roles of video in today's culture. As we prepare this issue, we are looking forward to a veritable catalogue of major video representation within the art world: Bill Viola's representation of the United States in the 1995 Venice Biennale; the Henry Art Museum's touring Gary Hill exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum; Bruce Nauman's Walker Art Center-organized traveling retrospective and Barbara London's international survey of video installation art, both at the Museum of Modern Art in New York; Bruce and Norman Yonemoto's exhibition at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio; a Joan Jonas retrospective at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; new media galleries and flexible exhibition spaces at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; video installations by Mary Lucier and Shigeko Kubota in the Whitney Museum of American Art's permanent collection (with a survey of Kubota's new video sculptures also scheduled); Nam June Paik's touring exhibition The information Superhighway; and finally, the preparation of a large-scale historical video exhibition by the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, England.
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