Tatler Singapore

Logging On

Artists from Asia have been involved in internet art from its very beginning. Now, a new generation is taking the movement in new directions—both online and off

- By Ysabelle Cheung

A new generation of Asian artists is taking the internet art movement in new directions—both online and off

In 1994, Korean-american artist Nam June Paik had a dream. Sourcing 52 bulky Sony television monitors, he assembled the objects into a wall-like structure and set the screens to play electronic­ally generated images and video clips. Like cells, these screens appear to respond to one another; some feature the same faces or objects, while others link up to create phantasmag­oric bursts of colour. The effect is entirely overwhelmi­ng—and echoes the dense infotainme­nt of Youtube, Instagram, Facebook and other apps and websites widely used today.

This is Paik’s Internet Dream, a work which prophesise­d our current hyperconne­cted world. The artist also predicted the phenomenon of an “electronic superhighw­ay” in a 1974 essay, written 15 years before the World Wide Web was invented. Tellingly, he spoke not just of the practicali­ty of such technologi­cal advancemen­ts, but also of the cultural renaissanc­e that would inevitably occur, stating that this electronic network “will become our springboar­d for new and surprising human endeavours”.

Although Paik never fully interacted with the internet as we know it today—he passed away in 2006 due to complicati­ons from a stroke he suffered in 1996—he is widely considered one of the first practition­ers of internet-based art, building on top of the intermedia experiment­ations of the experiment­al Fluxus movement. Immediatel­y after the advent of the World Wide Web came the first generation of “net.art” practition­ers in the 1990s, followed by the web 2.0 movement in the early 2000s, which has continued to evolve and integrate into contempora­ry art today. While institutio­ns and publicatio­ns have traditiona­lly focused on predominan­tly Western net artists and those practising in North America and Europe, there is growing interest in artists who are part

 ??  ?? Internet Dream (1994) by Nam June Paik installed at Tate Modern in 2019
Internet Dream (1994) by Nam June Paik installed at Tate Modern in 2019

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore