Nam
June Paik (1932 Korea - 2004 New York) studied in Japan and Germany,
in 1963 he was the first to work consistently and in a number of ways
with television as a medium that could be used by art, thus becoming
the much-discussed "father of media art." Since 1964 he
has lived mainly in New York, holding a chair in Düsseldorf from
1979-1995 - the first for video art in any academy. His own video
art, inspired by music, and making a crucial mark on the Fluxus movement
in the early sixties, was shown internationally after the epoch-making
"Exposition of Music - Electronic Television" exhibition
in Wuppertal.
Paik's neon and video sculpture Nam Sat was designed for DaimlerChrysler
Services' entry hall in Potsdamer Platz in Berlin. It
is also visible from the outside through the glass façade in
Eichhornstraße. Paik adapted sensibly to the commission situation
to realize one of his few, permanently visible "in-situ"
works in Germany: the economical geometric neon structures cover the
internal walls; thin, multiplying neon lines join to produce abstract
forms and concrete signs like hearts, on the one hand forming an independent
light sculpture, and on the other hand arraying themselves around
series of monitors grouped in several circles around one of the building's
large, load-bearing columns. The monitors show parts of Paik's video
compositions as well as rhythmical sequences of abstract-ornamental
images