TERRY FOX „CHILDREN'S TAPE“ (1974), VIDEOSTILLS © ESTATE OF TERRY FOX, VG BILD-KUNST, 2019
TERRY FOX „CHILDREN'S TAPE“ (1974), VIDEOSTILLS © ESTATE OF TERRY FOX, VG BILD-KUNST, 2019
© ESTATE OF TERRY FOX, VG BILD-KUNST, 2019i

VIDEO BOX 8.3

Narrating Video Archives: Even better than a real thing; The Object in Early Video Art

When video art began, various objects were already being sought or found in order to describe, study, or interact with them in front of and by means of the camera. Sometimes it is about the relationship of art objects and everyday objects. For example, John Baldessari said of Folding Hat, a video he produced in 1970–71 for the now legendary Düsseldorf video gallery of the cameraman and gallerist Gerry Schum: “I was thinking of ephemerality, mutability, fashion and that the division between a useful object and an art object is about intent.”

In any case, many artists were attracted to the technological possibilities to measure and capture objects in space-time but also to change them and link them to other things and ideas. Thus the pioneers of video art gave birth to the videographic ready-made.

Program

John Baldessari, Folding Hat (1970/71), 29:54 min. (10 min. excerpt)
Terry Fox, Children’s Tape (1974), 30:19 min. (10 min. excerpt)
Jacques Louis Nyst, L’objet (1975), 10:46 min.
Jacques Louis Nyst, Le robot (1975), 1:43 min.
Klaus vom Bruch, Das Softyband (1980), 19:55 min.

Free admission

Curated by Holger Otten
Ludwig Forum Aachen

 

The Project "Videoarchive erzählen" is funded by
Cooperation partner

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