Titel Media Sites highsnobiety.com highsnobette.com selectism.com curatedmag.com radcollector.com
-
Columns
Benjamin Ferencz
James Wilson / Secret Forts for FairEnds Tweed Camp ...
Read more
Brandon Day
Our Japanese made collaboration with N. Hoolywood just came ...
Read more
Simon Beckerman
I just came back from New York where I've been invited ...
Read more
Jeff Carvalho
This is a thank you post. While our Pitti Uomo and ...
Read more
Jason Dike
It was Bowie's birthday yesterday, so happy belated ...
Read more
Nick Schonberger
Directed by my man Ian Pons Jewell and staring my cousin ...
Read more
Features
We speak to Charlie Allen about making clothing for ...
Read more
We recently caught up with Kenneth MacKenzie, of 6876, ...
Read more
We take a look at how Jacket Required went. ...
Read more

Daily News

“Looking At Music,” MOMA

12 August 2008, 21.38 | Posted in Art | No comments »

selectism - looking at music, moma

“In the 1960s, the decade that saw astronauts land on the moon, artists were likewise seeking to expand boundaries of time and space and to have new experiences. At the same time, portable video equipment reached the consumer market—suddenly simultaneity and "now," the present and the past, became content. Musicians led the way in developing new working methods, and music was at the forefront of interdisciplinary experimentation during the early days of media art. This exhibition looks at the dynamic connections that occurred from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s with a display of early media works by Nam June Paik, Bruce Nauman, Steve Reich, Joan Jonas, Yoko Ono, Laurie Anderson, and David Bowie presented alongside related drawings, prints, and photographs by John Cage, Jack Smith, Ray Johnson, and others.”

Organized by Barbara London, associate curator, department of media, Looking at Music is open at MOMA from August 13.


 Looking At Music, MOMA


Related posts:
» What Was Good Design? MoMa’s Message 1944-56
» MOMA’s South Korean Design Collection
» MOMA Store Tokyo Opens
» Twitter Giveaway | MOMA Lace-up Boots
» James Ensor
Leave comment