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Exhibition. Jun 21–Sep 12, 1995. Video Spaces: Eight Installations surveyed recent work by nine major video artists working in “environmental video”—three-dimensional video installation or video sculpture.
Visual artists and filmmakers use videos—and their moving images and sound—to create video art pieces.
Artists such as Gary Hill, Bill Viola, and Joan Jonas are considered pioneers of video installation as an art form, taking full advantage of the architectural features in a gallery, for example, to fully involve their work within the space.
Digital art installations offer new opportunities for viewers to actively participate in the artwork. Artists and designers have the opportunity to play with the “real-virtual” boundary between the viewer, or “user,” and the digital dimension.
Describe and compare significant innovations in digital video art and video installation. Recognize developments in digital video art and consider how this medium is connected to the broader history of visual culture. Explain how video art relates to the elements of New Media Art.
Video installation is a contemporary art form that combines video technology with installation art, making use of all aspects of the surrounding environment to affect the audience.
Signals enables audiences to experience video art’s wildly varied formats, settings, and global reach, from closed-circuit surveillance to viral video, from large-scale installation to social networks.
Today, the concept of video art covers a very broad range of attributes and practices and uses digital technology, video cameras, and editing tools to create immersive pieces of art. From what many know, video art installations blew up in the middle of the 20th century.
Meriem Bennani’s video installation “Party on the CAPS” (2018) will be shown at the Julia Stoschek Collection in Berlin when it reopens in September. Courtesy of the artist and C L E A R I N G,...
As video technology became more sophisticated, the art evolved from real-time, grainy, black and white recordings to the present day emphasis on large-scale installations in colour such as Bill Viola’s multi-screened works.