HomeVideo Art
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Video Art

Regular price $39.86 USD
Regular price Sale price $39.86 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
In Stock
Weight

About this book

This book is the first detailed overview of an art form born less than forty years ago and now ubiquitous internationally. Made possible by the introduction of the Sony Portapak in 1965 video art has moved from brief showings on tiny screens in alternative art spaces to dominance in international exhibitions and artistic events in which vast video installations sometimes occupy factory-size buildings or video projections take over the walls of an entire city block. The story of video art embraces all the significant art ideas of recent timesabstraction conceptual art minimal art performance art pop art photography and moviesthanks to the power of the computer. Video has been used creatively to extend repeat fast-forward retard and speed up time as well as to cause it to stop. Abundantly illustrated with frames and sequences Video Art offers a history of the medium seen from the multiple perspectives of its early practitioners through the vast array of conceptual political and lyrical installations of the 1980s and 1990s to the present revolution of digital technology. The idea of using the video camera as an extension of the artists own body was first seen in the work of artists such as Bruce Nauman and Martha Rosler in the USA VALIE EXPORT in Austria and Hannah Wilke in Germany and has continued to the present day with work by Steve McQueen in Britain and Pipilotti Rist in Switzerland among others. Video art has also produced new narrative forms from nonlinear autobiographies to futuristic fantasies from defining the political to redefining the sexual as exhibited in the work of Bill Viola (USA) Inigo Manglano-Ovalle (USA/Spain) Marcel Odenbach (Germany) and many others. And in the postmedium age artists from Pierre Huyghe (France) to Rodney Graham (Canada) and Lynn Hershman (USA) are currently exploring the hybridization of technology in which video is combined and recombined with other materials often in interactive installations. 383 color illustrations.