Video Art: The Castello di Rivoli Collection
By (Author) Ida Gianelli
By (author) Marcella Beccaria
Skira
Skira
18th August 2006
Italy
General
Non Fiction
709.04
Paperback
304
Width 150mm, Height 210mm
770g
Over the last four decades video art has undergone numerous transformations. If in its early years, during the mid sixties, video was used by artists to record performances created in an isolated studio, it also offered an important creative environment which defined new spaces and an alternative language to the mass codes used by television. In the '80s video took on the form of a projected image that was capable of defining a totally new type of space inside which spectators could move while surrounded by a hypnotic electronic embrace. More recently with digital technology artists can compete with the magic of cinema and develop a singularly fertile exchange with it that has been fundamental in developing the poetic language of video works today.
Ida Gianelli is director of the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, and author of numerous publications. Marcella Beccaria is curator of the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art.