Buddha Watching TV

Item

Buddha Watching TV
Title (Dublin Core)
Buddha Watching TV
Description (Dublin Core)
"“The real issue implied in “Art and Technology” is not to make another scientific toy, but how to humanize the technology and the electronic medium, which is progressing rapidly—too rapidly.” —Nam June Paik

Paik, undoubtedly the single most important figure in the history of video art, established the medium in the early 1960s. Buddha Watching TV comes from one of his most celebrated video sculpture series. Paik created the original concept in 1974 and made this example in 1997.

Here a stone Buddha head from Indonesia, partially embedded in dirt and signed dramatically across the back by Paik in Chinese and English, appears to observe itself on television. A live image of the unchanging head is continuously relayed to the monitor by the closed-circuit camera on the tripod. The Buddha thus generates and receives its own image in an infinite temporal loop, updating the act of contemplation for the age of technology."
Creator (Dublin Core)
Paik, Nam June, 1932-2006
Date (Dublin Core)
1974 / 1997
Format (Dublin Core)
Stone sculpture
soil
Television
video cameras
tripods (stands)
remote control
electric cables
outlet box with cord
wood base
Extent (Dublin Core)
Other (.a buddha head): 18 1/2 × 12 × 12 7/8 in. (46.99 × 30.48 × 32.7 cm)
Other (base): 24 × 62 × 41 in. (60.96 × 157.48 × 104.14 cm)
Type (Dublin Core)
Media-Based Art
Subject (Dublin Core)
Televisions
Source (Dublin Core)
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Site pages
Paik's Television