The Littlest Spartan dead at 80

Blogged under Europe, Obituaries by ADD on Tuesday 28 March 2006 at 6:52 am

copyright Julie Bull/The Scotsman
ABOVE: Ian Hamilton Finlay in his sculpture garden, called Little Sparta, outside Edinburgh. Finlay died yesterday at 80.

Ian Hamilton Finlay, like many people do, kept a garden. But his was a little different, a little stranger, a little better than most. Little Sparta is a garden sitting on six acres in the Pentland hills just south of Edinburgh, and it was there that Finlay laid out his arrangements of sculptures and plants, turning it eventually into one big garden of conceptualism (although that term is a little too flashy to describe what he made). He worked at Little Sparta for about 40 years, evolving it from a garden with some sculptures in it to a work of art itself—a 2005 survey of Scottish artists named Little Sparta as their favourite art work.

Well, Mr. Finlay shuffled off this mortal coil yesterday at the age of 80, leaving behind his garden, which will be preserved through the Little Sparta Trust, a fund dedicated to maintaining Little Sparta for visitors. Finlay had only been receiving serious artistic consideration in the last few years, so while the recognition was probably nice, it’s a little bittersweet given that it was so overdue.

LINK: The Scotsman > ‘Concrete poet’ Finlay dies age 80

Video art pioneer Nam June Paik dead at 73

Blogged under Movements, Obituaries by ADD on Thursday 2 February 2006 at 6:21 am

copyright Nam June Paik/Paik studios
ABOVE: Nam June Paik, the pioneering video artist, died on Sunday at 73.

Nam June Paik, or Mr. Television as we call him around here, died on Sunday at the age of 73. He was married to fellow video artist Shigeko Kubota and had been in declining health since a stroke in 1996. Paik is famous for his pioneering and influential work in video and installation art, having been the first artist known to have used televisions in a sculpture (this according to the obit in the New York Times), and the first installation to make use of a portable video recorder.

There was a big retrospective at the Guggenheim in 2000, which further showed off Paik’s work with lasers, avant garde music, robotics, and massive arrays of TVs. For the legions of video artists who followed, and their cryptic, impenetrable, often deadly serious and equally deadly dull videos, Paik was Adam himself, a one-man big bang, and his witty, articulate, and humane artworks remain the gold standard.

LINK: New York Times > Nam June Paik, 73, Dies; Pioneer of Video Art Whose Work Broke Cultural Barriers

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