The Museum of Modern Art presents Signals, through Jul 8, which brings together a diverse range of work from the past six decades, revealing how artists have posed video as an agent of global change—from televised revolution to electronic democracy. Video is everywhere today—on our phones and screens, defining new spaces and experiences, spreading memes, lies, enthusiasm, and power. Shared, sent, and networked, it shapes public opinion and creates new publics. In other words, video has transformed the world.
The exhibition highlights over 70 media works drawn primarily from MoMA’s collection, with many never before seen at the Museum. Featured artists include John Akomfrah, Gretchen Bender, Dara Birnbaum, Tony Cokes, Amar Kanwar, New Red Order, Nam June Paik, Sondra Perry, Martine Syms, Stan VanDerBeek, and Ming Wong. Signals enable audiences to experience video art’s wildly varied formats, settings, and global reach, from closed-circuit surveillance to viral video, from large-scale installation to social networks.
With this broad range of forms and media, artists have championed and questioned the promise of video. Some have hoped to create entirely new networks of communication, democratic engagement, and public participation. Others have protested the rise of commercial and state control over information, vision, and truth. Signals focuses on how artists have used video to ask urgent questions about society and propose new models of public life.
Special selection of videos from the exhibition divided into nine programs:
https://www.moma.org/calendar/channels/1.