Intimate Addresses: Nam June Paik

I Don’t Want to Be Over Whelmed by Glory

Exploring the personal and electronic networks of a boundary-pushing artist

Nam June Paik

I Don’t Want to Be Over Whelmed by Glory

Jump to transcript
Paik holds a screen in front of his face, looking directly at the camera. The screen is filled with vertical characters.

Nam June Paik portrait, 1979, Harry Shunk. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (2014.R.20). © J. Paul Getty Trust

By Tess Taylor

Oct 17, 2023 33:19 min

Social Sharing

Body Content

In the mid-1960s, Nam June Paik is living in a run-down studio in SoHo, struggling to make ends meet.

But even as he jokes about his ongoing battle against cockroaches, he is building his network, seeking out support for his artist friends, and always experimenting with form. Paik’s vibrant personality is on full display in a letter from this period to musician David Tudor. Partially typewritten, partially handwritten, and full of wild punctuation and inside jokes, the letter’s main purpose is to help find work for his friend, Japanese musician Takehisa Kosugi.

In this episode of Recording Artists: Intimate Addresses, you’ll meet the wildly charming artist whose theories on technology and our relationship to it remain eerily prescient today; the man who coined the phrase “electronic superhighway” and advocated for artists to be at the vanguard of using the newest tech; and the person who tirelessly looked out for his friends. Host Tess Taylor unpacks some of Paik’s best-known artworks and traces his evolving thinking about art and tech. Anna Deavere Smith reads the letter. Korean American artist Sueyeun Juliette Lee and art historian and conservator Hanna Hölling help you make sense of Paik’s networks—both personal and electronic—and his legacy.

The Getty Patron Program is a proud sponsor of this podcast.

One-page letter that is partially typewritten, partially handwritten.

Nam June Paik to David Tudor, mid-1960s, David Tudor papers. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (980039)

A large, boxy TV in a cabinet has its insides replaced by a chicken in a nest watching a smaller TV. In the cabinet below are collections of colored eggs.

Chicken Box, Chicken Farm, 1986, Nam June Paik. Courtesy Carl Solway Gallery, Cincinnati

Back to Top