Electronic Superhighway is Nam June Paik’s tribute to the United States, his adopted
homeland. Paik, born in Korea in 1932, moved to New York in 1964 and lived in
America until his death in 2006.
Though the outlines of the fifty states are familiar, Electronic Superhighway challenges
the viewer to look with new eyes at the cultural map of the United States. Each state is
represented by video footage reflecting the artist’s personal, and often unexpected,
associations with the place. He celebrates some states for their connections to his artistic
friends and collaborators--composer John Cage in Massachusetts, performance artist
Charlotte Moorman in Arkansas, and choreographer Merce Cunningham in Washington.
Some states he knows best through classic movies---The Wizard of Oz for Kansas,
Showboat for Mississippi, and South Pacific for Hawaii. Sometimes he chose video clips
or flickering slideshows evoking familiar associations, such as the Kentucky Derby,
Arizona highways, and presidential candidates for Iowa. Topical events such as the fires
of the 1993 Waco siege, or Atlanta’s 1996 summer Olympics create a portrait of a
moment in time. Old black-and-white TV footage and audio of Martin Luther King
speeches recall Civil Rights struggles in Alabama. California has the fastest-paced
imagery, racing through the Golden Gate Bridge, 0s and 1s of the digital revolution, and a
fitness class led by O. J. Simpson. A mini-cam captures images of Superhighway’s
viewers and transmits their images onto a tiny screen representing Washington, D.C.,
making visitors a part of the story.
Nam June Paik is hailed as the “father of video art” and credited with the first use of the
term “information superhighway” in the 1970s. He recognized the potential for media
collaboration among people in all parts of the world, and he knew that media would
completely transform our lives. Electronic Superhighway—constructed of 336
televisions, 50 DVD players, 3,750 feet of cable, and 575 feet of multicolor neon
tubing—is a testament to the ways media defined one man’s understanding of a diverse
nation.
Electronic Superhighway is Nam June Paik’s tribute to the United States, his adoptedhomeland. Paik, born in Korea in 1932, moved to New York in 1964 and lived inAmerica until his death in 2006.Though the outlines of the fifty states are familiar, Electronic Superhighway challengesthe viewer to look with new eyes at the cultural map of the United States. Each state isrepresented by video footage reflecting the artist’s personal, and often unexpected,associations with the place. He celebrates some states for their connections to his artisticfriends and collaborators--composer John Cage in Massachusetts, performance artistCharlotte Moorman in Arkansas, and choreographer Merce Cunningham in Washington.Some states he knows best through classic movies---The Wizard of Oz for Kansas,Showboat for Mississippi, and South Pacific for Hawaii. Sometimes he chose video clipsor flickering slideshows evoking familiar associations, such as the Kentucky Derby,Arizona highways, and presidential candidates for Iowa. Topical events such as the firesof the 1993 Waco siege, or Atlanta’s 1996 summer Olympics create a portrait of amoment in time. Old black-and-white TV footage and audio of Martin Luther Kingspeeches recall Civil Rights struggles in Alabama. California has the fastest-pacedimagery, racing through the Golden Gate Bridge, 0s and 1s of the digital revolution, and afitness class led by O. J. Simpson. A mini-cam captures images of Superhighway’sviewers and transmits their images onto a tiny screen representing Washington, D.C.,
making visitors a part of the story.
Nam June Paik is hailed as the “father of video art” and credited with the first use of the
term “information superhighway” in the 1970s. He recognized the potential for media
collaboration among people in all parts of the world, and he knew that media would
completely transform our lives. Electronic Superhighway—constructed of 336
televisions, 50 DVD players, 3,750 feet of cable, and 575 feet of multicolor neon
tubing—is a testament to the ways media defined one man’s understanding of a diverse
nation.
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