National Gallery of Art - EXHIBITIONS
In the Tower: Nam June Paik
March 13–October 2, 2011

The Tower Gallery is host to a series of exhibitions focusing on developments in art from midcentury to the present.

This exhibition is no longer on view at the National Gallery. Please follow the links below for related online resources or visit our current exhibitions schedule.

Related Resources

Notable Lecture: In the Tower: Nam June Paik Symposium
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Works by
Nam June Paik
in the Gallery's Collection

View Related
Collection Tour
Modern and Contemporary Painting and Sculpture

Press Materials

Image: Installation view of In the Tower: Nam June Paik, Photo by Rob Shelley, National Gallery of Art, Washington Nam June Paik (1932–2006) is a towering figure in contemporary art. Born in Korea and trained in Japan and Germany in aesthetics and music, Paik settled in New York in 1964 and quickly became a pioneer in the integration of art with technology and performance. The exhibition features a selection from Paik's estate as well as from the Gallery's own collection. The centerpiece is One Candle, Candle Projection (1988–2000), one of the artist's simplest, most dynamic works. Each morning a candle is lit and a video camera follows its progress, casting its flickering, magnified, processed image onto the walls in myriad projections. Two other closed-circuit works share the main gallery—one involving eggs, the other a bronze Buddha.

The adjoining room features works on paper and a short film about the artist. The exhibition also highlights an important new acquisition: Untitled (Red Hand), 1967, gift of the Hakuta Family, which includes a 19th-century Japanese scroll, a flashing bulb, and the artist's handprint. Here—as in so much of Paik's work—tradition and technology, elegance and humor, meditation and irreverence, come together in surprising harmony.

Organization: Organized by the National Gallery of Art.

Sponsor: The exhibition is made possible by The Exhibition Circle of the National Gallery of Art.