Robert Adrian X has been working on installations, music and radio projects, as well as interventions in public space since 1957. From 1979, he pioneered work in the telecommunication field and was one of the first artists to work with the global electronic networks that preceded the Internet. Adrian X’s early installations with surveillance videos as well as projects like his website Art and Politics have shown the conceptual potentialities in the politicization of contemporary art. In other works, like his Modern Art series or his self-built Seascape boats, Adrian X questions the validity of (post) modern works as well as the value of the art product. For the exhibition at the Nam June Paik Art Center focus was concentrated on his more critical work like his Surveillance piece from 1984, a subject Adrian X worked on long before it became a buzz in the art scene. His Green Room, a light and sound installation that resonates in the audience’s body, is a direct comment on the Iraq war, at the outbreak of which it was first installed. Two installations, Modern Art I and IV, express an almost sarcastic view towards the art (market) production while highlighting the non-commercial and technology based practice the artist dedicated himself to developing. Adrian X’s DIY approach, which he used in the works produced for (art) galleries as well as in his telephone/fax/slow-scan Happenings, are a classic mix of specialized knowledge and a hands on approach.
“For this year’s inaugural prize we were hoping to select creative individuals who, like Nam June Paik, have been steadily pursuing their activities through a fusion of media and concepts that operates politically by refusing certainties in favour of the complex and ambivalent” Nam June Paik Art Center Director Youngchul Lee explains. “Impressively, although the artist’s work in diverse fields and media, the underlying edginess we had been hoping for is present in their practices and underpins how their works fit remarkably well together and with the legacy of Nam June Paik.”