[ISEA2002] Panel: Ina Blom – The Touch Through Time: Raoul Hausmann, Nam June Paik and the Transmission Technologies of the Avantgarde

Panel Statement

Panel: Intermedia Art in the Digital Age

The paper discusses the interchange between technology and historiography in Berlin Dadaist Raoul Hausmann s Optophon (1920), a synaesthetic instrument designed to transform sound signals into light signals and vice versa. Hausmann s invention was part of his attempt to formulate a new mode of perceptual presence, which involved both a particular notion of tele-visuality and a new interruptive form of tactility which could perhaps be described as the construction of a transactional synthesis beyond the realm of the corporeal. Hausmann s renewed focus on electronics in the 1960 s highlights the historiographic implications of this construction. The Optophon could on the one hand be seen as a rudimentary piece of groundwork which supported the technological consciousness from which new electronic-related art, such as Nam June Paik s new television art, was emerging. This was, notably, an art predicated in the telematic and the immersive. On the other hand, Hausmann s 1960 s elaboration on the theme made it increasingly clear that his investment in the telematic was destined to produce an interruption at the site where such art-historical legacies were constituted.

  • Ina Blom, Ph.D (Univ. of Oslo, Norway) is a writer, critic and art historian based in Oslo, Norway. From 1994-99 she was a Research Fellow at the Institute of Art History, University of Oslo, where she submitted her doctoral dissertation The Cut Through Time, A Version of The Dada/Neo-Dada repetition (1999). She is now senior curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Oslo. A former radio DJ and music critic, she is an editor of the art journal NU and the cultural journal Samtiden, and a regular contributor to Frieze and Flash Art.

Full text (PDF) p. 124-125