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In Manila, a New Nam June Paik Show Is Taken as a Sign of the Growth of the Contemporary Art Market in the Philippines

Co-organized with Gagosian and Leon Gallery International, the show marks the first time Paik’s work has been shown in the country.

Taylor Dafoe, November 15, 2018

U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim leads a performance of Nam June Paik’s piece One for Violin at the opening of “Nam June Paik in Manila” at León Gallery International. L-R: Curator Lisa G. Nakpil, collector Marcel Crespo, Nick Simunovic, Ken Hakuta, H.E Amb. Kim, Jaime Ponce de León, Jon Huffman, and Lina Juntilla. Courtesy of León Gallery International.
U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim leads a performance of Nam June Paik’s piece One for Violin at the opening of “Nam June Paik in Manila” at León Gallery International. L-R: Curator Lisa G. Nakpil, collector Marcel Crespo, Nick Simunovic, Ken Hakuta, H.E Amb. Kim, Jaime Ponce de León, Jon Huffman, and Lina Juntilla. Courtesy of León Gallery International.

A new Nam June Paik exhibition in Manila is making news. On view through November 30 at León Gallery International, a subsidiary of the Philippine’s auction house León Gallery, “Nam June Paik in Manila” brings together artworks made between 1983 and 2005, including a robot made of vintage Bakelite radios (Bakelite Robot, 2002), a projection of a candle housed in a TV monitor (One Candle, 1996), and several works on canvas.

It’s the first time Paik’s work has been shown in the Philippines. And it has been received warmly—all of the work has already sold, with most of it going before the opening.

The exhibition is a collaborative effort between three parties: León Gallery; Ken Hakuta, Paik’s nephew and the overseer of his estate; and Gagosian, who has represented Paik’s estate since 2015.

This is significant for a couple of reasons. For one, Gagosian rarely joins forces with other galleries in this capacity. Driven by Nick Simunovic, Gagosian’s Hong Kong director, the gallery lent all of the works on consignment. Simunovic says he saw the “exhibition as a unique opportunity to further share Nam June’s vision with a wider audience in Southeast Asia.” (He also notes that the gallery does not have any other projects planned in the Philippines at this time.)

“It is not an exaggeration to say that Paik was one of five or six foundational artists of the 20th century,” Simunovic tells artnet News. “His influence simply cannot be overstated. A visit to any contemporary art museum anywhere on the planet offers demonstrable proof.”

Nam June Paik, Tang Poetry on Color Bar Op. 36 (1982). Courtesy of León Gallery International.

This might be the first in a wave of major Paik show’s we’ll see in the upcoming years. In October of next year, the Tate Modern and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art will co-host a massive retrospective of his work, “Nam June Paik: The Future Is Now.”

The flourishing of interest makes sense, given Paik’s interest in the speed and profusion of technology. His work seems just as relevant as ever today—a fact that’s not lost on Simunovic.

“Nam June Paik was a prophet,” he says. “He coined the term ‘electronic superhighway’ in 1971, which in and of itself is astonishing. As far as technology goes, he prefigured almost everything about the world in which we currently live—Amazon, Skype, the iPhone—he foresaw it all. In spite of his uncanny ability to predict the ubiquity of technology in contemporary life, he did not fear this future or find it alienating. Rather, he believed in the possibility of harnessing and humanizing technology to serve creative ends.”

Nam June Paik, Untitled (Hieroglyphs and Color Bars) (1995). Courtesy of León Gallery International.

This out-of-the-box approach to art and technology was one of the reasons León Gallery pursued a Paik show. For Jaime Ponce de Leon, managing director of León Gallery International, Paik represents a distinctly Asian approach to art

“Paik was always acutely aware of his being an Asian artist,” Ponce de León says. “He once famously referred to himself as ‘a poor man from a poor country.’ That sense of ‘other-ness’ gave him a fresh perspective that was completely liberating: the world was free of the pre-conceived as well as the pre-digested. I think this being able to think out of the box is an Asian quality. It’s certainly a Filipino one.”

Nam June Paik and his nephew Ken Hakuta in a garden in Atami, Japan, 1950. Courtesy of the Nam June Paik Estate.

For Hakuta, this show is special for another reason: It symbolizes the burgeoning state of the Southeast Asian art world: “León Gallery International and Gagosian were right in the assessment that the Philippine market is ready for truly international art.”

Hakuta is an interesting figure unto himself. Aside from being Paik’s nephew, he was the titular host of The Dr. Fad Show in the late 1980s and early ‘90s, a children’s TV program focused on invention. Hakuta himself is behind many inventions, including the Wacky Wall Walker, one of the most popular toys in the 1980s.

The US Ambassador to the Philippines, H.E. Sung Kim [left], discussing a Nam June Paik mixed media portrait of Joseph Beuys with Mr. Ken Hakuta (right), Courtesy of León Gallery International.

The US Ambassador to the Philippines, H.E. Sung Kim [left], discussing a Nam June Paik mixed media portrait of Joseph Beuys with Mr. Ken Hakuta (right), Courtesy of León Gallery International.

The Filipino art market has grown immensely in recent years, and now stands as the 17th largest art auction market in the world, according to Ponce de Leon.
 

“I think it’s a measure of how developed the Philippines art market has become,” the gallerist says. “To have a highly sophisticated artist like Paik so well received in Manila demonstrates how international in outlook the Filipino collector is becoming.”

“Nam June Paik in Manila” is on view through November 30 at León Gallery International in Manilla.


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Nam June Paik, father of video art, comes to Manila
Korean-American musician-artist invented the term ‘electronic superhighway’ to express the many facets of multimedia art forms and communications

“Untitled”

The first ever exhibition in the Philippines of works by renowned Korean-American video artist Nam June Park will open on Oct. 22.

“Nam June Paik in Manila” is presented by León Gallery International in collaboration with Gagosian Gallery, which has represented the Nam June Paik estate since 2015.

 

Considered the “father of video art,” the Korean-born artist was a major influence in late 20th-century art and his works and ideas continue to influence artists in the new century.

“We are truly honored to partner with the giant that is Gagosian to jointly exhibit a most respected Asian-American artist,” said Jaime Ponce de León of León Gallery International, a subsidiary of León Gallery.

 

Gagosian is a contemporary art gallery owned and directed by Larry Gagosian with 16 art venues in New York, Beverly Hills, San Francisco, London, Paris, Rome, Athens, Geneva and Hong Kong.

“It is a privilege to be granted the trust as the front act of this gargantuan undertaking,” said Ponce de León.

Visionary

Nam (1932-2006) has been described by critics as a visionary artist who foresaw the influence of the television screen and the internet not only on art but on the world at large.

A classical musician who trained in Germany, Nam eventually settled in New York City.

“RCA Television-Radio”

His writings show the influences of Asian and Western philosophies, as well as developments in technology and science.

As a result, Nam was able to radically chart the future of communication technologies and predict the emergence of the global media culture.

 

But he was first and foremost, a citizen of the world, said Ponce de León.

Avant-garde

“Nam was an important member of the international avant-garde,” said the León owner.

“He quickly and presciently grasped that advances in consumer technology were not fleeting oddities but would have a lasting impact on culture, sex and politics.”

Nam came up with the term “electronic superhighway” to express the many facets of multimedia art forms and communications and would give the word “installations” to his works.

“Nam June Paik in Manila” will feature 24 pieces from 1983 to 2005, including several iconic objects that blur the lines between art and technology, the past and the future, philosophy, fame and commercialism.

Among the works to be exhibited are “One Candle,” with an analog-live candle ensconced in a TV casing; and “TV Buddha,” showing Gautama contemplating his own image captured on closed-circuit TV.

Nam was also fascinated by robots, another prophetic obsession. “Bakelite Robot” is covered in TV screens as well as blinking electric lights.

Works on canvas—as well as entire video cameras and radio-televisions—combine graffiti elements or smiling TVs with instantly recognizable color bars.

Other works on exhibit will feature miniature screens embedded with calligraphy of ancient poetry.

“One Candle”

Images of his fellow artists from the Fluxus movement such as its founder George Maciunas, as well as longtime muse Charlotte Moorman and counter-culture conspirator Joseph Beuys will also be on show.

“Very few Asian-American artists have achieved the same level of Western respect that Nam got,” said Ponce de León.

Nam has been the subject of numerous exhibitions, including two major retrospectives, and has been featured in international art exhibitions including Documenta, the Venice Biennale and the Whitney Biennial.

Most recently, he was the subject of a Gagosian exhibit at the 2018 Armory Show in New York.

Nam will next have a major retrospective, “Nam June Paik : The Future is Now,” at Tate Modern, London in October 2019. —CONTRIBUTED

“Nam June Paik in Manila” will open on Oct. 22 at León Gallery’s newest premises, G/F Corinthian Plaza, 121 Paseo de Roxas Ave., Makati.



Read more: https://lifestyle.inquirer.net/308068/nam-june-paik-father-video-art-comes-manila/#ixzz5XwEyPI5U 
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