Difference between revisions of "Early media art in Czech Republic"

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; Video art
 
; Video art
 
* [[Woody Vasulka]], artist. After producing a pioneering body of tapes in collaboration with Steina Vasulka since 1969 in the USA, he has investigated the narrative, syntactical and metaphorical potential of electronic imaging. Co-founded [[The Kitchen]] in 1971.
 
* [[Woody Vasulka]], artist. After producing a pioneering body of tapes in collaboration with Steina Vasulka since 1969 in the USA, he has investigated the narrative, syntactical and metaphorical potential of electronic imaging. Co-founded [[The Kitchen]] in 1971.
* [[Video Salon]]. [[Radek Pilar]] was making video art tapes from 1987 and gathered a number of artists to form a video group. This "Video Salon" made their first exhibition in the summer of 1989 with numerous screenings and four video installations. The members had access to information on video installation because one of the members, Dr. Vancat, was then working for the National Art Archive where there were photos of works by Paik and Bill Viola. Filmmakers [[Petr Skala]], [[Tomáš Kepka]], [[Ivan Tatíček]], photographers [[Pavel Scheufler]], [[Pavel Jasanský]], [[Michal Pacina]], [[Jasoň Šilhan]], visual artists [[Lucie Svobodová]], [[Věra Geislerová]], [[Lenka Štarmanová]], [[Kateřina Scheuflerová]], [[Roman Milerský]], [[René Slauka]], and architect [[Miro Dopita]]. Active til mid-1990s. Since 1993 directed by [[Petr Skala]].
+
* [[Video Salon]]. A famous animation producer and illustrator [[Radek Pilar]] was making video art tapes from 1987 and gathered a number of artists to form a video group. This "Video Salon" made their first exhibition in the summer of 1989 with numerous screenings and four video installations. The members had access to information on video installation because one of the members, Dr. Vancat, was then working for the National Art Archive where there were photos of works by Paik and Bill Viola. Filmmakers [[Petr Skala]], [[Tomáš Kepka]], [[Ivan Tatíček]], photographers [[Pavel Scheufler]], [[Pavel Jasanský]], [[Michal Pacina]], [[Jasoň Šilhan]], visual artists [[Lucie Svobodová]], [[Věra Geislerová]], [[Lenka Štarmanová]], [[Kateřina Scheuflerová]], [[Roman Milerský]], [[René Slauka]], and architect [[Miro Dopita]]. Active til mid-1990s. Since 1993 directed by [[Petr Skala]].
 
* [[Petr Skala]], video artist, film director, screenwriter. Since mid-1980s experiments with video technology.
 
* [[Petr Skala]], video artist, film director, screenwriter. Since mid-1980s experiments with video technology.
 
* [[Original Video Journal]], the dissident video magazine started in 1986 with Vaclav and Olga Havel's initiative, was being edited and copied secretly on school equipment.
 
* [[Original Video Journal]], the dissident video magazine started in 1986 with Vaclav and Olga Havel's initiative, was being edited and copied secretly on school equipment.
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; Exhibitions
 
; Exhibitions
 
* [[Computer and Art]] exhibition in Filmový klub [[Prague]], 1968
 
* [[Computer and Art]] exhibition in Filmový klub [[Prague]], 1968
* [[Expo '67 Montreal]]. [[Laterna magika]], by Alfred Radok (film director) and Josef Svoboda (architect). [[Kinoautomat]].
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* [[Expo '67 Montreal]]. [[Laterna magika]], by Alfred Radok (film director) and Josef Svoboda (architect). [[Kinoautomat]] by [[Radúz Činčera]], back then, it was billed as "the world's first interactive movie." Everyone in the audience had a red and a green button in front of them and the results of voting were displayed around the screen. The movie itself was a dark comedy about a man, Mr. Novak, who believes he was responsible for his apartment building burning down, and is structured as a series of flashbacks leading up to the fire. After each scene the film would stop and a live performer would walk onto the stage and ask the audience to vote. Immediately, as if by magic, the voted scene was played.
  
  

Revision as of 01:57, 9 May 2008

under construction

Predecessors


Computer and computer-aided art


Video art


Experimental film


Sound art


Electroacoustic music


Media theory


Exhibitions
  • Computer and Art exhibition in Filmový klub Prague, 1968
  • Expo '67 Montreal. Laterna magika, by Alfred Radok (film director) and Josef Svoboda (architect). Kinoautomat by Radúz Činčera, back then, it was billed as "the world's first interactive movie." Everyone in the audience had a red and a green button in front of them and the results of voting were displayed around the screen. The movie itself was a dark comedy about a man, Mr. Novak, who believes he was responsible for his apartment building burning down, and is structured as a series of flashbacks leading up to the fire. After each scene the film would stop and a live performer would walk onto the stage and ask the audience to vote. Immediately, as if by magic, the voted scene was played.


1990s
  • In 1990, when the Fluxus artist, deconstructivist Milan Knizak, was elected as a dean of the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague all the professors of the old regime were removed. He replaced them, and set up an atelier of video art with Fluxus star Paik's student Michael Bielicky, fulfilling his iconoclasm against the authorities and the hierachy in both politics and art-history. Another provocative, ex-banned performing artist, Tomas Ruler, received a TV studio at the Technical University in Brno after the revolution and now runs an atelier of video art and multimedia performance there. Video was also the most effective media for him. [1]
  • Milan Guštar, he's been providing technical support for the works by David Černý, Silver, Federico Diaz, Miloš Vojtěchovský, Michael Bielický and others since 1987.
  • Michal Bielický, Silver, Lucie Svobodová, Keiko Sei, ..
  • Orbis Fictus new media art exhibition Prague 1994, organised by SCCA. Curated by Ludvík Hlaváček and Marta Smolíková.
  • Dawn of the Magicians? exhibition Prague 1996-7, organised by National Gallery. Curators: Jaroslav Anděl, Miloš Vojtěchovský, Ivona Raimanová.
  • Hi-tech/Art Brno 1994-97, annual international exhibition and symposium, organised by Video-Multimedia-Performance FaVU.
  • Terminal Bar venue Prague.


Bibliography