🍪 We use cookies to improve your experience
We use essential cookies for site functionality and analytics cookies to understand how you use our site. By clicking "Accept All", you consent to our use of cookies. Learn more in our Privacy & Cookie Policy.

EVENT Mar 15
ABSTRACT Mar 15
Abstract days left 27
Viewed 142 times

Edited Volume: Nam June Paik as a California Artist: West Coast Experiments, Networks, and Legacies

Categories: Pedagogy, Popular Culture, 20th & 21st Century, Aesthetics, Cultural Studies, Film, TV, & Media, History, Asian & Asian Diasporas
Event Date: 2026-03-15 Abstract Due: 2026-03-15

Edited Volume: Nam June Paik as a California Artist: West Coast Experiments, Networks, and Legacies

 

Introduction:

Nam June Paik’s artistic legacy is frequently framed through the lens of the Fluxus movement in New York and Europe. However, his rigorous engagement with California’s unique media ecology during the 1970s remains a critical, yet under-examined, chapter in the history of video art. This edited volume invites contributions that reevaluate Paik’s "California Period" (1970–1980), arguing that the West Coast provided a distinct "California Triangle" of infrastructure—broadcasting, education, and museum institutions—that was central to realizing his avant-garde vision.

 

Scope and Thematic Focus

We seek to explore how these three institutional frameworks intersected to democratize and institutionalize video art.

 

1. Broadcasting: We examine how regional public stations, particularly KQED in San Francisco, broadcast experimental works like Global Groove to general audiences. We welcome analysis of series like "Video Visionaries" that realized Paik’s vision of bringing avant-garde art into ordinary living rooms.

2. Education: We explore Paik’s tenure as faculty at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) from 1970 to 1972. Contributions may investigate his contributions to "bold education concepts" of rank-free learning and the development of the groundbreaking Paik-Abe Video Synthesizer.

3. Museum Institutions: We investigate the role of institutions like the Long Beach Museum of Art (LBMA), which established one of the first dedicated video art programs in the U.S. Research utilizing the LBMA Video Archive (now at the Getty Research Institute) regarding collection, production, and distribution is encouraged.

 

Topics of Interest

We welcome proposals from art historians, media scholars, and Asian American studies researchers addressing:

Institutional Innovation: Early video art support structures in California museums.

Broadcasting the Avant-Garde: Collaborations with public stations (KQED, KCET).

Experimental Pedagogy: Curriculum development and teaching methods at CalArts.

West Coast Networks: Collaborations with engineers, artists, and performers.

Technology: Technical and art-historical analysis of the Paik-Abe Video Synthesizer.

Trans-Pacific Connections: Paik’s work within Pacific Rim cultural exchange.

Legacies: The impact of California experiments on contemporary media art.

 

Editors:

Kyungso Min (Ph.D., Researcher, Visual Arts Institute, Seoul National University)

Jung-Ah Woo (Ph.D., Professor, POSTECH)

 

Submission & Contact

Please submit abstracts or inquiries to the editors:

kyungsomin@gmail.com

woojungah@postech.ac.kr

kyungsomin@gmail.com

Kyungso Min