A few more images from 'Liquid Reality' MoMA's new exhibition catalog on the pioneering video sculpture of Shigeko Kubota. “I am a sculptor, I want to make video, but I also wanted to make objects,” Kubota said in 1983. “So the video part is my mirror for my memory, of my life, but the object is creating my creation.” For those who associate video art and sculpture more readily with Kubota’s husband and sometime collaborator Nam June Paik, this book will be absolutely essential to understanding her importance to the history of Fluxus and video sculpture. “In the beginning Paik only used the television set, just like that, bare, without anything,” she is quoted. “Then I told him that a television by itself is not a work. It could be found in any store, he needed to add something. He didn’t listen to me, so I decided to do it myself, in the late Sixties. Video Sculptures with all kinds of materials, with super 8 and moving images from films.” Read more via linkinbio. Edited with text by Erica Papernik-Shimizu. Text by Gloria Sutton. @themuseumofmodernart #shigekokubata @e.p.shimizu #videosculpture #liquidreality https://www.instagram.com/p/CUU05J_ARBw/?utm_medium=tumblr












