Dara Birnbaum
Chris Burden
Gregory Green
Doug Hall
Chip Lord
Jody Procter
Christian Jankowski
Antonio Muntadas
Inigo Manglano-Ovalle
Nam June Paik
neuroTransmitter
TVTV
Siebren Versteeg
Irene Hofmann
An exhibition of 13 works by an international group of artists who, since the 1960s, have engaged, critiqued, and inserted themselves into official channels of broadcast television and radio. It include single-channel monitor-based videos, video-projection works, photography, installations, and interactive broadcasting projects. "The works in the exhibition remind us that, even with such democratizing new broadcast outlets, the power and control of our traditional media outlets is still held only by a few powerful entities." (Irene Hofmann)
Pratt Manhattan Gallery will present “Broadcast,” an exhibition of
thirteen works by an international group of artists who, since the 1960s, have engaged, critiqued, and
inserted themselves into official channels of broadcast television and radio. The exhibition will run from
February 20 – May 2, 2009 and will include single-channel monitor-based videos, video-projection
works, photography, installations, and interactive broadcasting projects.
“Broadcast” is a traveling exhibition co-organized by the Contemporary Museum, Baltimore, and iCI
(Independent Curators International), New York; circulated by iCI; and guest-curated by Irene Hofmann.
The exhibition comes to Pratt Manhattan Gallery from Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit, and
Contemporary Museum, Baltimore. The exhibition and tour are made possible, in part, with support from
the iCI Exhibition Partners.
Work in the exhibition dates from the late 1960s and 1970s, when artists began to broadcast on their own,
seeking a parallel system to commercial broadcast television, and when others began to cooperate with
progressive public television stations that invited artists to participate in residency programs.
“With works that directly engage, challenge, or subvert the structure and authority of broadcast media, the
artists in this exhibition post provocative questions about the impact that radio and television can have in
shaping the events of our time,” said guest curator Hofmann. “At a time when YouTube invites us all to
“Broadcast Yourself,” the works in the exhibition remind us that, even with such democratizing new
broadcast outlets, the power and control of our traditional media outlets is still held only by a few
powerful entities.”
The artists in this exhibition work in one of two ways—by creating or inserting themselves in original
broadcasts or by appropriating existing ones. Within each of these strategies, there are two impulses
followed by the artists—either an iconoclastic, aggressive position, at times intended to question Federal
Communications Commission regulations, or a more cooperative and collaborative position.
Examples of broadcasting in the exhibition will include Top Value Television’s (TVTV) Four More
Years, a subversive view of the American electoral process featuring irreverent coverage of Richard Nixon’s 1972 presidential campaign and the Republican National Convention; and Chris Burden’s TV
Hijack, where the artist took a television interviewer hostage on live television to illustrate the control
television has on our lives.
Examples of work that appropriates and re-interprets broadcasts in the exhibition will include video and
installation artist Dara Birnbaum’s Hostage, which features archival media coverage from the 1977
kidnapping of the German industrialist Hanns-Martin Schleyer by the Baader-Meinhof group; and multi-
media installation artist Antoni Muntadas’ The Last Ten Minutes, which studies broadcasting conventions
in different times in history.
Other works from the exhibition include conceptual artist Christian Jankowski’s Telemistica, which
features footage from live broadcast footage of psychics on Venetian television stations answering
questions from the artist on how his work would be received at the 1999 Venice Biennale; and media and
sound performance group neuroTransmitter’s 12 Miles Out, a visual and sound installation that explores
the practice of offshore pirate radio in 1960s and 1970s Europe.
The exhibition also features work by artist and renegade broadcaster Gregory Green; performance and
video artists Doug Hall, Chip Lord, and Jody Procter; sculptor and video artist Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle;
photographer, videographer, and installation artist Antoni Muntadas; pioneering video artist Nam June
Paik; and computer-driven video installation artist Siebren Versteeg.
Guest-curator Irene Hofmann is Executive Director of the Contemporary Museum in Baltimore. Recent
exhibitions include “Cell Phone: Art and the Mobile Phone” and “St. Cecilia,” a solo exhibition of works
by Joseph Grigely. Hofmann previously served as Curator of Contemporary Art at the Orange County
Museum of Art, where she co-curated the 2002 and 2004 California Biennials and the photography and
video exhibition “Girls’ Night Out.” She has organized exhibitions and projects with artists such as
Kutlug Ataman, Mark Dion, Jason Dodge, Fabrice Gygi, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, and Marjetica Potrc.
The exhibition is the last of the “Politics and Media” series at Pratt Manhattan Gallery. The first, “Party
Headquarters: Voting is Just the Beginning,” an exhibition of political art works guest-curated by Eleanor
Heartney and Larry Litt, took place from September 25 – November 4, 2008; the second, “Zones of
Conflict,” took place November 19, 2008 – February 7, 2009, and was guest-curated by T.J. Demos,
presented images of current struggles and blurred the distinction between document and artistic practice.
A cell phone audio tour led by the curator featuring commentary from five of the artists in the exhibition
will be available on site.
Broadcast is co-organized by the Contemporary Museum, Baltimore, and iCI (Independent Curators International), New York, and circulated by iCI. Broadcast is curated by Irene Hofmann, executive director of the Contemporary Museum. The exhibition is made possible, in part, with support from the iCI Exhibition Partners.
Image:
Gregory Green, M.I.T.A.R.B.U. (Mobile internet, television, and radio broadcast unit), Mixed media with 35-watt pirate FM broadcast system, 100-watt pirate television broadcast system, and internet broadcast system, 2000.
Media contact:
Amy Aronoff 718.636.3554 or amyaronoff@pratt.edu
Opening Reception: 6–8 p.m. Thursday, February 19
Pratt Manhattan Gallery
144 West 14th Street, 2nd Floor
Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.