Vito Acconci, Pornography in the Classroom, 1975 video and projected-image installation with sound dimensions variable.ģ. Marina Abramovic, Cleaning the Mirror #1, 1995 five-channel video installation with stacked monitors dimensions 112 x 24 1/2 x 19 inches.Ģ. The works included in today’s announcement join 180 single-channel works the Kramlichs have given to NAT since its inception in 1997, making it one of the richest archives of media art in the world.ġ. The museums in the group are consortium members of the New Art Trust (NAT) founded by Pamela and Richard Kramlich in 1997 with the goal of advancing media arts through the support of research and scholarship in the field. A younger generation of artists who have built upon the aesthetic groundwork of their predecessors, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Doug Aitken, Matthew Barney, Stan Douglas, Steve McQueen, Diana Thater, and Keith Tyson, to name a few, is also represented in the gift. They represent a range of contemporary explorations in time-based art spanning 1970 to 1999 including works in various media – video, slides, film, audio, and computer-based installations – by artists broadly considered to be pioneers in film and video installation, such as Marina Abramovic, Vito Acconci, Dara Birnbaum, Marcel Broodthaers, Peter Campus, James Coleman, Valie Export, Dan Graham, Gary Hill, Beryl Korot, Bruce Nauman, Nam June Paik, Thomas Struth and Klaus vom Bruch, and Bill Viola. The Kramlich gift includes 21 works including some of the most important achievements in the field of media art from the last three decades. Tate with the Museum of Modern Art, New York (MoMA), the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and the nonprofit media-art center Bay Area Video Coalition (BAVC) is the recipient of a major gift of seminal video and new-media works from San Francisco-based contemporary art collectors Richard and Pamela Kramlich.
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