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Untitled from The New York Collection for Stockholm by Nam June Paik

Untitled from The New York Collection for Stockholm by Nam June Paik

Clifton Gallery

Screenprint

1973

Edition Size: 300

Image Size: 30.5 x 22.9 cm

Sheet Size: 30.5 x 22.9 cm

Signed

Condition: Excellent

Details — Click to read

Untitled from The New York Collection for Stockholm

By Nam June Paik

Nam June Paik (1932–2006) was a pioneering Korean American artist widely regarded as the father of video art. Blending technology with artistic expression, he was among the first to use televisions and video as creative media. Paik’s work often explored the intersection of art, music, and electronic media, and he collaborated with influential figures like John Cage and Charlotte Moorman. His innovative installations, such as TV Buddha and Electronic Superhighway, challenged conventional notions of art and anticipated the digital age.

1973

Screenprint from a portfolio of seventeen screenprints, nine lithographs, two lithographs with screenprint, one photocopy, and one photograph.

30.5 x 22.9 cm

Hand-signed and numbered by Paik

Edition of 300

£950.00

The Artist

Nam June Paik

Born in the 1930s, South Korean artist Paik Nam June studied in Korea, Japan and West Germany before moving to the United States to pursue his artistic career. Known as a trailblazer and credited with creating the field of Video Art in the 1960s, he was highly competent in a variety of media and was open to working with new technology to create innovative forms of art. Video Art is said to have been born when Paik used a Sony video camera to shoot footage of Pope Paul VI in New York City in 1965 and went on to exhibit the work.

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