Showing posts with label Nam June Paik. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nam June Paik. Show all posts

July 23, 2024

Danceteria & Madonna ~ 1983


 ~      
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
      




In 1983 I was in New York for my first time after a diving shoot with Pink Floyd in the Caribbean (link below). My friend Yuval took me around to some of the hot disco spots, the only one I remember is the Danceteria. It was jammed & noisy, of course, & incredibly exciting.                 
 
Danceteria was a nightclub that operated in New York City from 1979 until 1986. The club was located in various locations over the years, a total of three in New York City and four in the Hamptons. The most famous location, opened in February 1982, was the second location, a four-floor venue at 30 West 21st Street in Manhattan that served as the location for the disco scene in the film Desperately Seeking Susan.          

In 1982, John Argento hired Jim Fouratt and Rudolf Piper to promote and book the talent which became the 21st Street Danceteria. The club operated out of the first three floors in an old industrial 12-story building. (Later the 4th floor was used as Congo Bill, and the abandoned 5th floor was once used as a performance space by Karen Finley.) The roof was also open in the warmer months with frequent barbecues.       
 
 
Danceteria roof top - 1983
 photo by Robert Carrithers
 
 
It was an incubator for era-defining figures such as Madonna, Devo, B-52's, the Beastie Boys, and pop artist Keith Haring. There was hedonism, of course — at one point, employees had to rig special sheets of lucite to keep cocaine out of the AV equipment. New York's Daily News called the atmosphere "hard-edged, smoky, and menacing — in a cartoon sort of way." The club was, according to that outlet, "a punk version of Disneyland."                 
 
Adam Horovitz described the second Danceteria as "the closest thing we had in Manhattan to an amusement park."             
 
 
Danceteria Opening poster - 1982
 
 
Horovitz gave a detailed account of the club's layout: First there was the basement, where "weird stuff would go on" and the goth crowd tended to congregate, especially after Danceteria's management painted it black and started hosting "BatCave" goth nights there in 1983. The main floor hosted live bands, while now-legendary DJ Mark Kamins held court on the dance floor one flight up. The third level was devoted to a first-of-its-kind experimental video lounge where video artists Kit Fitzgerald and John Sanborn curated film and video pieces by David Lynch, Kenneth Anger, and groundbreaking video artist Nam June Paik. The vibe changed again on the fourth floor, which was devoted to a swanky, members-only club called Congo Bill, which mixed midcentury music with retrofuturistic décor. Finally, there was the rooftop, which, when the weather allowed, became an open-air party and dance space known as "Wuthering Heights."     
 
The patrons often found themselves dancing to punk one minute and funk the next. While Danceteria was first and foremost a music club, music was far from the only artform that awaited club-goers on any given floor of the multilevel space. There was also a strong emphasis on visual arts, and on any given night you might've seen the work of some of the New York art scene's most vibrant creators. Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat were recruited to paint murals on the walls (though Basquiat was promptly fired by club co-founder Rudolph Piper, who claimed his work on the job was "f****** terrible.") The venue regularly hosted fashion shows and exhibitions showcasing a wide range of visual and performance art, including paintings, photography, "light sculptures" projected from the rooftop, and more. Filmmakers such as Jim Jarmusch screened their work there, and up in the third-level video lounge, you might have caught early creations by video art pioneer Nam June PAIK (백남준).           
 
 
 
 
According to Stacy Gueraseva's 2011 book "Def Jam, Inc.," Def Jam Recordings founder Russell Simmons, who frequented the venue, would sometimes tip the bartenders with vials of cocaine. When those clubs wound down for the night, their patrons made their way to Danceteria, where the party was just getting started. "The five floors of this supermarket of style were where gays, straights, artists, junkies, goths, skinheads, lost uptowners, sexy Jersey chicks, pinheads, Studio 54 leftovers, B&Ts ['bridge-and-tunnels,' or people from New York City's outer boroughs or suburbs], weirdos from outer space, drag queens, S&M freaks, hookers, performers of all sorts, East Villagers galore, not to mention musicians of all kinds, got together," Danceteria co-founder Rudolph Piper told Time Out in 2014.            
 
 

Rudolph Piper (left) 
photo by Robert Carrithers


In 1982, Michigan-to-New York City transplant Madonna Ciccone was trying everything she could think of to break out of the New York club scene and into the mainstream spotlight. She had gigged around town in a couple of bands, drumming and singing for the Breakfast Club before fronting Emmy and the Emmys, but nothing stuck. She was reportedly so ambitious and competitive that some of her fellow club denizens held her at arm's length, but she found a willing partner — musically, professionally, and romantically — in music producer and Danceteria DJ Mark Kamins. After the two started dating, Madonna convinced Kamins to play a demo of her first solo single, "Everybody," at Danceteria. The crowd responded fairly well, and Kamins, who was also working for Island Records at the time, took it to label honcho Chris Blackwell. Blackwell was unimpressed, so Kamins' next stop in his Madonna promo tour was Seymour Stein of Sire Records. According to an interview with Kamins conducted by author and historian Tim Lawrence, Stein didn't like Madonna's music either, but he trusted Kamins and signed her anyway. She made her debut at Danceteria on December 16, 1982, for an audience of 300. I missed her debut by less than a month; I was there in January of 1983.             
            
On July 23, 1993, A gunman fired into the Danceteria club. Eric Tallman (Erotic Exotic) was injured when the bullet grazed his skull. Fortunately, I missed that by ten years.     
      
         
Viewfinder links:         
 
B-52's             
Jean-Michel Basquiat            
Beastie Boys          
Devo         
Keith Haring          
David Lynch ~ Eraserhead        
Madonna        
Music & Mayhem         
Nam June Paik             
Pink Floyd       
Pink Floyd ~ Shine On You Crazy Diamond        
        
Net links:        
        
Trey Speegle ~ Danceteria        
         
        
        
YouTube links:        
        
Robert Carrithers ~ Completed Circles         
CBS News ~ Keith Haring was here             
Desperately Seeking Susan ~ disco scene          
New York Dance Stand 1983 Danceteria episode (28 mins., 41 secs.)       
        
        
         
 

 
         



"I was there seven nights a week, week after week,” 
 “I never thought it would end. 
It wasn’t just a club; it was a lifestyle.” 
                    ~ Rudolf Piper
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
        
Styrous® ~ Friday, May 28, 2021                  
      
      
      
      
       
      
      
      
      

June 9, 2021

SFMOMA articles/mentions

   ~            
Robert Frank ~ The Americans        
Nam June Paik     
Nam June Paik & Erina Alejo     
The Styrous Viewfinder at 5           
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
SFMOMA   
photo by Henrik Kam 
      
     
     
      
     
        
        
        
        














May 16, 2021

Nam June Paik ~ The robots

  ~     
           
          
           
          
Li Tai Po - 1987
     
     
 
Being a Sci-Fi addict since my early teens, the robot/television installations of Nam June Paik were right up my alley; they snagged me completely and I've been fascinated with all of his other work ever since (link below).     
   
In 1963 Paik began visiting Tokyo regularly to study color television and robotics. It was there that he met Japanese engineer and electronics expert Shuya Abe, with whom he collaborated on his first robotic work, Robot K-456, in 1964.  
 
 
 
 
Fred Barzyk, Shuya Abe, and Nam June Paik 
WGBH-TV, Boston, circa 1969 
photo by Conrad White
  

This was an anthropomorphised robotic skeleton that was able to move, make noises and imitate a range of human actions.      
 
          
 
Robot K-456, 1964 
(above & below)
 

 
 
This and subsequent robotic works made by Paik reveal his ongoing interest in the connection between technology and the human body, one that continued until the end of his career when he made Bakelite Robot.     
   
Of all his robots, Bakelite Robot is my favorite, perhaps because although Bakelite was a product of the thirties, I remember the material still in use in the forties and radio was my form of entertainment. It is a smaller than life-size sculpture of a robot constructed from nine vintage Bakelite radios. The radios are joined together in a humanoid shape. The dials on the front of four of the radios have been removed, creating hollow circular spaces into which LCD television monitors have been inserted. These television monitors screen videotape specifically developed for the artwork, composed of footage from robot and science fiction films, recordings of vintage robot toys and footage from earlier video edits. Although the sculpture takes the form of a robot, it is not animated. An impression of the robot’s ‘movement’ is instead given by the video footage playing on the screens, which are situated on the hands, knee and hip of the robot (link below).     


Bakelite Robot 2002 
 
 
Bakelite Robot was produced in 2002, late in Paik’s career, when the artist was working in New York. Acquired from thrift stores and markets, the radios in Bakelite Robot have a vintage appearance. Bakelite had been developed by Belgian-born chemist Leo Baekeland in Yonkers, New York, in 1907 and was one of the earliest plastics to be introduced into the modern home. It was favored for its heat-resistant properties, electrical non-conductivity and the fact that it was inexpensive and hard-wearing, and was used in a number of products including radio and telephone casings, kitchenware and children’s toys.         

        
 
 
 
 
 
 
Porodica Robota - Baba I Deda - 1986



Porodica Robota - Mama i Tata - 1986



Porodica Robota - 
Tehnoloski Napredno Dete 30a-s - 1987




Robot Skulptura - 
Powel Crosley, Junior, 1992
      
      
Viewfinder links:       
        
Nam June Paik         
SFMOMA: Nam June Paik     
     
Net links:       
         
Asia Society ~ Becoming Robot         
Hyperallergic ~ Nam June Paik’s Robot Dreams   
Tate Museum ~ Bakelite Robot (2002)    
     
YouTube links:      
         
Andy Warhol Robot (1994)         
Asia Society ~ Becoming Robot        
Ken Hakuta ~ My Crazy Uncle         
John Cage Robot II (1995) (8 mins., 30 secs.)   
Robot K 456        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, May 16, 2021        














2fer @ the MOMA: Nam June Paik & Erina Alejo

  ~            
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) is presenting a double whammy; installations by Nam June Paik ~ Transcending Genre and Tradition and the exhibition entitled, Mission, by Erina Alejo (links to both exhibitions below).   
                          
      
Nam June Paik ~ Transcending Genre and Tradition 
Sistine Chapel - 1993
photo by Andrew Dunkley 
 
 
Nam June Paik was ahead of his time: In 1974, visionary genre-leaping artist Nam June Paik coined the term "electronic superhighway." Nearly 50 years later, in a time unimaginable without the internet, SFMOMA is presenting Nam June Paik, his first-ever West Coast retrospective and the only U.S. venue for 200 spectacular works by the father of video art.    

May 8 – October 3, 2021
 
 
    
 
 
Erina Alejo ~ Mission


Artist and researcher Erina Alejo, born and raised in San Francisco, works across time and place to construct archives on labor, displacement, family, and communal history. She is a third-generation renter with her family in an Francisco, documented through their long-term project, A History of Renting (2015–ongoing). Alejo’s SFMOMA commission, My Ancestors Followed Me Here, explores the textures, cultural landmarks, objects, and people before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along The city's vibrant Mission Street. (Floor 3)  
     
closing September 6, 2021
     
     
     
      

Viewfinder links:       
         
Erina Alejo         
Erina Alejo's Mission
Nam June Paik        
Nam June Paik ~ Transcending Genre & Tradition    
     
Net link:       
        
SFMOMA ~ Bay Area Walls        
      
YouTube links:       
         
SFMOMA ~   
    Erina Alejo and Adrian L. Burrell Artist Talk  
        
         
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, May 16, 2021        
        
        














May 15, 2021

SF MOMA: Nam June Paik

  ~          
Nam June Paik lying among televisions, Zürich, 1991
photo by Timm Rautert


May 8 – October 3, 2021


 PRESS RELEASE
 
SAN FRANCISCO, CA (October 30, 2020; updated April 15, 2021) — Nam June Paik has continued to electrify the art world ever since his 1963 debut of television experiments in Exposition of Music – Electronic Television, his first solo exhibition. Paik challenged visitors to participate by activating modified TV sets and playing radically transformed instruments — blurring the distinction between performer and audience. Playful and interactive, Paik’s immersive environment expanded the boundaries of art, music and technology, and laid the groundwork for his career as the founder of video art.

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) will present the exclusive U.S. exhibition of Nam June Paik, a major retrospective of Paik’s radical and experimental art, on view from May through October 2021. One of the first truly global artists, Paik (1932–2006) foresaw the importance of mass media and new technologies, coining the phrase ‘electronic superhighway’ in 1974 to predict the future of communication in an internet age. The exhibition will celebrate his multidisciplinary and collaborative practice that encompassed art, music, performance and technology, all in dialogue with philosophies and traditions from both Eastern and Western cultures.

Bringing together over 200 works across all media spanning a five-decade career, from early compositions and performances to large-scale video installations and global satellite projects, Nam June Paik offers an in-depth understanding of the artist’s trailblazing practice. Paik’s innovative, irreverent and entertaining works were informed by his musical background and his vision of an interconnected future. Organized by SFMOMA and Tate Modern, London, with additional presentations at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and the National Gallery Singapore, the retrospective will be the first major Paik show in the U.S. in over 20 years and the first ever large-scale survey of his work on the West Coast.

“Nam June Paik is famous for being the historic father of video art, but his groundbreaking and contemporary influence is even more based on his crossover between all media,” said Rudolf Frieling, curator of media arts at SFMOMA. “Paik’s radical visual and musical aesthetic has a natural home here on the West Coast as a place for global connectivity.”

Organized thematically, the exhibition will unite many of Paik’s most iconic and provocative works from throughout his career. In TV Buddha (1974), an 18th-century wooden Buddha appears to watch itself on a modern television, typifying the influence of Zen Buddhist philosophies on Paik’s approach to art and technology. Also on view will be TV Garden (1974–77/2002), an immersive installation featuring dozens of TV sets alongside lush foliage in a futuristic landscape where technology is an integral part of the natural world.

Nam June Paik will partially restage the artist’s pivotal 1963 solo exhibition, Exposition of Music – Electronic Television, and his concept of “action music” (as Paik said, “Why is it music? Because it is not ‘not music’”) will be demonstrated via musical interfaces and some of Paik’s earliest manipulated televisions.

Unique to SFMOMA’s presentation will be two robots, one each dedicated to composer John Cage and choreographer Merce Cunningham, two of Paik’s key collaborators along with artist Joseph Beuys and cellist Charlotte Moorman. John Cage Robot II (1995) and Merce / Digital (1988), among many other works, will highlight Paik’s creative partnerships and collaborative artistic practice.

The retrospective will culminate in the dazzling installation Sistine Chapel (1993), a mesmerizing riot of sound and images from dozens of projectors, taken from the German pavilion which won the Golden Lion award at the Venice Biennale in 1993. Presented in its largest scale of any venue at SFMOMA, and exceeding that of all other works in the exhibition, Sistine Chapel will envelop the audience in an audio-visual remix of Paik’s past videos and collaborators seen throughout the exhibition.
 
Born in Seoul during the Japanese occupation of Korea, Nam June Paik lived and worked in Japan, Germany and the U.S., reflecting a global connectedness that transcended borders and cultural differences. He studied music theory and trained as a musician before experimenting with performance and technology in the 1960s as a means of expanding his artistic production. He developed a multidisciplinary practice across media, and has become synonymous with the electronic image through a prodigious output of manipulated TV sets, live performances, global television broadcasts, single-channel videos and video installations.

Paik collaborated with a community of avant-garde artists and musicians, and played a pivotal role in Fluxus, an international network of artists, composers and poets who engaged in experimental art performances. His groundbreaking work has influenced art, media, music and popular culture for decades, including musicians such as David Bowie, Laurie Anderson and Devo’s Mark Mothersbaugh, among many others.

In conjunction with Nam June Paik, SFMOMA will present Paik’s work Video Commune online. Originally broadcast on live TV in 1970, Video Commune was an improvised montage of distorted TV imagery accompanied by songs by the Beatles. At the time, Paik invited random passersby into the studio and let them remix video images as they aired. The presentation in the exhibition galleries is a condensed videotape of the broadcast filmed from a TV screen.    


Nam June Paik
Still from Video Commune: Beatles from Beginning to End 1970
Video, colour, sound
240 min
© Nam June Paik Estate 
 
 
Video Commune will be made accessible as a participatory work on SFMOMA’s Nam June Paik exhibition webpage: visitors to the webpage will be invited to watch the silent video from the comfort of their home and create a soundtrack of their choice from a selection of Beatles songs. A second video, Electronic Opera #1, combines abstract electronic patterns with an invitation to the audience to close and open their eyes. 

Virtual Public Programs

SFMOMA is proud to present the online film series Dances for Camera: Nam June Paik, Merce Cunningham, Charles Atlas on the museum website from June through August. Dances for Camera features three key works from 1960s San Francisco, 1970s New York, and 1980s London that exemplify the dance film genre. In addition, SFMOMA will host a virtual public performance and streaming program in collaboration with the National Gallery Singapore on September 24.
Catalogue

The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue from Tate Publishing. Edited by Sook-Kyung Lee and Rudolf Frieling, it features essays by the editors and contributions from Leontine Coelewij, Grace Deveney, Rachel Jans, Susanne Neuburger, Andrea Nitsche-Krupp, Valentina Ravaglia and David Toop, as well as excerpts of Paik’s own writings. 



Venues + Dates

Tate Modern: October 17, 2019–February 9, 2020

Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam: March 14–October 4, 2020

SFMOMA: May 8–October 3, 2021

National Gallery Singapore: December 2021–March 2022
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
         
         
         
        
        
        
Viewfinder links:       
         
Mark Mothersbaugh          
Nam June Paik        
     
Net links:       
         
Smithsonian American Art Museum ~ Nam June Paik: Global Visionary      
    
YouTube links:       
         
Electronic Superhighway        
Music for all Senses        
        
        
        
         
         
         
        
        
        
         
Styrous® ~ Saturday, May 15, 2021               
        














May 14, 2021

Nam June Paik articles/mentions


 ~      
The Robots      
SF MOMA: Nam June Paik     
     
     
     
mentions:     
Danceteria & Madonna 1983     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown