Skip to main content

Untitled, from the portfolio New York Collection for Stockholm

Artist/Maker (American, born in South Korea, 1932–2006)
Date1973
MediumColor silkscreen
DimensionsOverall: 12 1/16 × 9 1/8 in. (30.6 × 23.2 cm)
Credit LineGift of Robert Rauschenberg
Edition289/300
PortfolioNew York Collection for Stockholm
Object number1977.5.20
Status
Not on view
Copyright© Estate of Nam June PaikMore Information
Born in Korea, educated in Japan and Germany, and later living and working in the United States, Nam June Paik created a unique visual language by integrating traditions from multiple cultures. He first gained fame as a member of the influential avant-garde Fluxus movement in the 1960s.

In this print, Paik repurposed an advertisement from a 1944 popular science magazine to offer a “new design for [a] TV-Chair.” The print references one of his earlier works, TV Chair (1968), in which he placed a television monitor in the seat of the chair and a camera above it. Here, Paik added rough sketches of “TV chairs” under the figures in the advertisement, as well as a series of typewritten questions playfully predicting the ubiquity of video art. In the bottom-right corner of the print, Paik dedicated the print to Ray Johnson, who shared a similar interest in questioning artistic modes of display, distribution, and access. Like Johnson’s mail art, Paik’s print references and repurposes images found in the American cultural lexicon.
ProvenanceRobert Rauschenberg [1925-2008], New York; by gift 1977 to Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OHExhibition History
Complementary Exhibition to Prints in Series: Aldegrever to Warhol
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 11, 1978 - February 12, 1978 )
Andy Warhol: Prints, Paintings, Photographs
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (April 15, 2008 - August 10, 2008 )
Centripetal/Centrifugal: Calibrating an Asian American Art
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 5, 2019 - May 26, 2019 )
Collections
  • Modern & Contemporary