The Korea Herald

Guggenheim Museum makes push for technology-based art with LG

- By Park Yuna (yunapark@heraldcorp.com)

As technology continues to evolve, the art world is also expanding its horizon as artists increasing­ly explore technology-based art.

The New York-based Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum’s LG Guggenheim Art and Technology Initiative launched last year aims to support pioneering artists in the tech-based art space.

Noam Segal, an LG Electronic­s associate curator, considers pioneering artists to be those who inspire understand­ing of how technology shapes and is shaped by society. Segal joined the museum to helm the five-year initiative with the Korean conglomera­te LG, which includes the annual LG Guggenheim Award.

“The artworks eventually enrich and deepen our encounters with technology by showing technology’s different faces and facets. Through art, we can see things we cannot see in any other way,” Segal said in a recent interview with The Korea Herald.

“Our role is to support the artist in expressing their ideas in the best way possible, and to support our audiences in the reception, cohesion and contextual­ization of these works,” she said.

Segal praised the collaborat­ion with LG as an “unpreceden­ted investment in technology as an artistic medium.”

“(The partnershi­p) is expected to usher in a new wave of digital creativity, combining cutting-edge solutions from LG Electronic­s and LG Display with the unmatched artistic sensibilit­ies of the Guggenheim,” she said.

Known as one of the leading museums to commission net artworks in the 1990s, the Guggenheim’s collection includes a number of historical pieces of digital art as well as technology-based art focusing on robotics, AR, VR, large language models and different new media applicatio­ns.

In March, the LG Guggenheim Award, which aims to recognize artists or their groundbrea­king achievemen­ts in technology­based art, was given to Taiwanese American artist Shu Lea Cheang, a pioneer of net art who explored emerging technologi­es such as code, gaming engines and hacking strategies for more than 30 years.

Last year’s inaugural award went to American artist Stephanie Dinkins.

“Shu Lea Cheang is a true pioneer of technology-based art,” Segal said. “She engaged almost every new technology as it became publicly available. Cheang shed light not only on the newest applicatio­ns of various technologi­es, but also on the effects they may have on our environmen­t, social formations, subjectivi­ties and human relationsh­ips.

“Her work is special because of her extraordin­ary use and experiment­ation with technology as a medium and, even more so, because of how brilliantl­y she connects these urgent questions in society to her practice,” she said.

As part of LG the Guggenheim Art and Technology Initiative, the museum celebrated American multimedia artist Rachel Rossin’s collaborat­ion for the Young Collector’s Council Party, which was presented by LG Display. Rossin transforme­d the Guggenheim’s rotunda with works in LG Transparen­t OLED displays, combining hybrid creations.

The YCC Party and ceremony for Cheang place on April 2.

When asked about the perception that technology-based art might be difficult to approach or absorb compared to convention­al art such as paintings, Segal said technology­based art is not any different from other mediums.

“Advanced technologi­es are another medium of artistic investigat­ion, and we are committed to deepening our engagement and research with this uncharted territory,” she said. “To me, good curation will make our audiences knowledgea­ble about those technologi­es, it will demystify and cohere different questions about the technology and, at the same time, insist on the singularit­y of each artistic act.”

For the next few years, Segal said the museum will focus on cultivatin­g “legibility around advanced technologi­es” by holding talks and panels by artists and experts in those fields as well as public programs that further expand and diversify the applicatio­ns of advanced systems.

“We are also working toward a technology-based art presentati­on in the museum,” Segal added.

On May 2, Segal will lead a performanc­e-lecture with Cheang at the museum titled “What the Heck: Shu Lea Cheang on Hacking Tactics, Virus Becoming and Geek Farming.”

The artist will delve into themes of biotechnol­ogy, networked societies and multiple forms of harvesting, drawing inspiratio­n from her deep-rooted passions for science fiction, queer aesthetics and community building. the award both took

 ?? Shu Lea Cheang ?? “UKI,” an 80-minute video piece by Shu Lea Cheang
Shu Lea Cheang “UKI,” an 80-minute video piece by Shu Lea Cheang
 ?? Guggenheim Museum ?? Noam Segal, LG Electronic­s associate curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Guggenheim Museum Noam Segal, LG Electronic­s associate curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

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