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    yberneticzoo.com

    history of cybernetic animals and early robots

    Home

    964 Robot K-456 Nam June Paik (Korean) & Shuya Abe

    Japanese)

    http://cyberneticzoo.com/http://cyberneticzoo.com/
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    reators: Nam June Paik and Shuya Abe. Japan, 1964. (Construction started in 1963 with Nam Jun and hisother and was completed in 1964 with the aid of Abe helping with the electronics).

    escription: Originally intended to be a 30-channel radio-controlled robot, but ended up as a 20-channel radio-

    ntrolled anthropomorphic robot. In anthropomorphic terms, the robot started out in life as being an androgyne*.Japan, it had a sandpaper and flint penis. As some considered it bad taste, it was removed before going to

    merica. After then, K-456 was said to be feminine.

    An androgyne in terms of gender identity, is a person who does not fit cleanly into the typical masculine andminine gender roles of their society.

    ommentary: Named after Mozart's piano concerto (Kchel's Catalogue number 456), the robot first performed inprivate space (Robot Opera, at Judson Hall, in collaboration with Charlotte Moorman) and on the streets, both as

    art of the Second Annual New York Avant-Garde Festival. As Paik guided it through the streets, K-456 played acording of John F. Kennedy's inaugural address and excreted beans. K-456 is now in the Hauser and Wirthivate collection, in Zrich. More Recent images suggest K-456 is now in the Flick Collection.

    imensions: 6' x xx" x yy " (185cm x xxcm x yycm)

    om photos and descriptions, I've derived what are the most likely functions of Robot K-456 (1964 version)

    1. Doffing of hat (alumimium foil pie plate) via electric motor.2. Nodding of Head (motor at base of neck rotates wheel with cord attached).3. Twin motor-propellor eyes.4. Twin lamps for nose.5. Rotate left breast.

    6. Rotate right breast .7. Body bow. A winding motor in the 'pelvic' area allows the top section to lean forward. With a combinedhead nod, K-456 was known to fall forward on occasion.8. Raising of left arm .

    9. Lowering of left arm.

    10. Raising of right arm.11. Raising of right fore arm.12. Raising of right hand at wrist.

    13. Abdominal electric fan (for naval).14a. Defecating (dried, white beans). Mechanism appears to be located in the pseudo-anatomical position asa real person.14b. Urinating (NJP "Sudden shower"; Jasia Reichardt said it "peed on the floor".) It maybe the case that

    only one bodily function could be operated at one time. I've seen no mention of them operating together.15. Walking action via rod crank in 'hip' area. Note there are also motors in the feet. If this is reversible, andanother channel is required.

    16. Activation of tape recorder (including speech recording of the then Mayor-elect of New York, JohnLindsay). Another recording played back was John F. Kennedy's 1961 inaugural address speech.) Taperecorder may have been manually activated.17. Rolling left-leg forward via motorised foot.

    18. Rolling left-leg backward via motorised foot.19. Rolling right-leg forward motorised foot.20 Rolling right-leg backward motorised foot.

    cannot detect any sensors or limit switches. I've assumed that steering would have required a reversible motor in

    e feet.

    here is also a 10-channel data recorder on board. Although I've seen no mention of it in operation, I suppose thisfor re-play of commmands to reproduce a performance, for example.

    eyond Modern Sculpture Jack Burnham, 1968hapter Eight: Robot and Cyborg Art p351

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    22.14 | ACTION MUSIC IN BERLIN (1:43:04:00 1:44:38:00) 1965

    am june paikWest Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany (Western Germany).

    Title in German reads 'Unsinn du Siegst!'

    Various shots of June Paik and Charlotte Moorman giving performance of action music in Berlin streetand in a small club. It is referred to as nonsense! Woman makes various noises on cello while Asianman operates two[sic] hand made robots, small crowd looking on. A girl is American. In a small clubshe makes noises by using cello and breaking or hitting various objects. She breaks glass, talks,

    whistles, etc. People looking on. Man assisting her blows a balloon and another man pours water overhis head.

    Date found in the old record 21/06/1965.

    http://www.britishpathe.com/video/action-music-in-berlin
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    IDEO CLIP 2 of 2. Movietone VIDEO CLIP link here. You will need to register first (free), then login. Searchn Paik . Preview the video clip titled "THERE'S A MESSAGE THERE SOMEWHERE".

    artial transcription of video: 'Pop Art in Berlin. A robot, broadcasting what is pompously described asnstructions to humanity". Can we be so lacking as we need a machine to give us guidance? Anyway, the roboteeded a bit of guidance itself..

    http://www.movietone.com/
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    obot Opera, 1965

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    aik and Moorman trying in vain to perform in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, 1965. (Photo, Jrgenller-Schneck)

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    am June Paik with Charlotte Moorman and K-456. (Photo by Peter Moore at Paik's Lispenard Street studio, Aug7, 1964)

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    ublicity photos taken before Paik's and Moorman's first performance together, at the "Second Annual New Yorkvant-Garde Festival", August, 1964.

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    bove photos by Peter Moore)

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    ou can see the white beans on the floor after K-456 defecates.

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    Wuppertal, 1965

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    rt and the Future: Extract of Douglas Davis interview with Nam June Paik.

    You say you left Germany in 1963. Where did you go?To Japan, for two purposes. I wanted to make an electronically controlled robot and work with a color

    television set. I made a set with three cameras, feeding colors onto the same screen. I also made a spiral

    generator with Shuya Abe, the Japanese engineer, where you see a spiral on the screen. Since 1963,Mr. Abe has been my major collaborator in TV art. I cannot thank him enough.Why did you want to build a robot?

    I had read about robots in electronics magazines. I also discovered the equipment used in radio-controlled airplanes in Cologne, and I thought how to use it. I was dying to use every phase ofelectronicsaudio, visual, tactile, and then radio controlled, a radio-controlled robot to walk thestreets. So in Tokyo, I worked on the unit and made the robot. I had a thirty-channel control unit.

    Did you think of the robot in any sense as a work of art?I thought of it mostly as a Happening tool. I thought it should meet people in the street and give onesecond of surprise. Like a quick shower. I wanted it to kick you and then go on. It was a street-music

    piece. I took the robot with me to the United States in 1965, where it opened the Second Avant-GardeFestival that fall, in Judson Hall. Later I brought it to the streets of New York, to 57th Street, and thenPark Avenue, and one sunny Sunday in Washington Square. All the people screamed when they sawthe robot coming. One half-crazy black man screamed over and over: "God made this robot." The

    happiest moment in my life was when I brought the robot to Washington Square: it was really a bigsensation.

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    oseph Beuys (in hat) looks on. Robot is walking to the right.

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    am June Paik here deploys his new Robot K-456, historys first non-human action artist*. About the robot,

    hich he built in Japan, Paik wrote: It was more difficult and more expensive than my Wuppertal show, by whiche meant Exposition of Music Electronic Television, the exhibition likewise staged in the Galerie Parnass in

    963. The robot was purpose-built for street actions, in which it was supposed to mingle more or lessconspicuously with bypassers, as Paik recounts: I imagined it would meet people on the street and give them a

    lit-second surprise. Like a sudden shower.

    RH 2010- We know from our timelinethat, in fact, there were earlier robot performers.

    http://cyberneticzoo.com/?page_id=532
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    obot K-456 inRobot Opera (1964) Judson Hall, New York.

    rt in America Nov/Dec 1974

    he Avant Garde Festival : And Now, Shea Stadium by Peter Frank

    .The artist with whom [Charlotte] Moorman has worked most closely is Korean-born Nam JunePaik, a Fluxus-related musician and visual artist .. Paik's Robot Operawas the hit of the 1964

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    festival with K 456, its endearing mechanical androgyne, parading up and down in front of JudsonHall and performing with Paik and Moorman on stage.

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    the above photo, you can see the "white beans" on the floor representing defecated excrement.

    ectronic Design, Vol. 14, No. 1January 4, 1966

    During the past month, exhibits of electronic art have blossomed in New York with a frequency thatsuggests an aesthetic explosion in electronics or, at the very least, an electronic explosion in aesthetics.

    The word art is used advisedly. The creators of the works shown here do not represent these to be art

    in the classic sense. Not a single piece is fashioned of traditional material, nor with ordinary tools. In

    this new art, wire and junk iron replace marble and canvas; the welding torch and the screwdrivereliminate the chisel and the paintbrush.

    All of the works move and most of them make funny noises. In theory, there is no reason why artobjects shouldn't make noise, yet when the clatter of the other art completely drowns out the oneyou're trying to listen to, you quickly develop a respect for quiet museums. The creators of thesecontraptions may or may not be competent artists, (history must decide that), but they certainly have

    senses of humor. Marshall McLuhan, Canadian philosopher, observes that modern art is always one technology behindlife.This is amply illustrated by these electronic efforts in our nuclear age. But Oscar Wilde said, "Life

    imitates art" and, indeed, there are pop-art people who bend every effort to look like the chap in thebottom photo on this page. The most electronically sophisticated work was produced by a Korean, Nam June Paik. His "Robot-

    K456" (see photo above) is directed by two 10-channel transmitters. Twenty radio-controlledmechanisms are powered by a battery on each foot. Robot-K456 can bow, walk, give a speech(recorded by the then Mayor-elect of New York, John Lindsay), lift each arm independently andwiggle its representational torso. It also defecates on the floor of the gallery by remote control.

    Paik's robot looks mechanically unreliable and he admits that it needs constant attention. It hascrashed to the floor twice when taking too deep a bow, He made it for next to nothing. When asked if

    it could be improved, he said, "In electronics you can do anything if you spend the time and money."

    Admittedly, these efforts merely represent a start. Whether the path will really ever be run or whetherelectronics artists will fade, as did the fist and shoulder pianists, is hard to predict. Certainly these examples in no way approach the present "state-of-the art." Perhaps a flurry of artistic

    activity among electronics design engineers will contribute to the culture as well as the technology offuture generations.

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    -456 featured in the 1968-9 "Cybernetic Serendipity" exhibition.

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    ou can just see K-456 in the distant background, between Bruce Lacey's ROSABOSOM and MATE in the

    reground.

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    bove: Image from the movie "A Tribute to John Cage", 1973.

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    d Yalkut.Robot K-456 encounters the public on the streets of New York, 1965. From P+A (K), a 16-mm colorm. The film itself is dated 1966, and K-456 is walking down Canal Street one Sunday.

    don't know if it was filmed, but K-456 took a stroll from the Galeria Bonino on 57th Street in 1965. (Nam Juneaik:Electronic Art. Bonino Gallery (Galeria Bonino), New York, 1965 .)

    om Focus: reading for success - Richard L. Allington, Scott, Foresman and Company 1985

    During a show at a gallery in New York [Galeria Bonino], Paik decided to have some fun. He openedthe door and aimed his robot for the street. "Mrs Bonino!" a nervous visitor cried to the owner of thegallery, "One of your sculptures is walking down 57th Street!"

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    aik's first solo exhibition "Electronic Art" in the USA at Galeria Bonino, Nework. 1965. Paik never sold a piece during his ~10 years with Galeria Bonino. However, Bonino gained mediatention during that time, and Paik had an outlet to show his art.

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    aik needed some money to stay in New York. He decided to sell K-456. Here is a copy of a letter he penned tohn Cage (c1970) regarding this situation:

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    xtract of essay following Paik's death in 2006 by John Hanhardt, Guggenheim Museum. See herefor fulltroduction.

    The Worlds of Nam June Paik is an appreciation of and reflection on the life and art of Nam JunePaik. Paik's journey as an artist has been truly global, and his impact on the art of video and television

    has been profound.To foreground the creative process that is distinctive to Paik's artwork, it isnecessary to sort through his mercurial movements, from Asia through Europe to the United States,

    http://www.paikstudios.com/essay.html
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    and examine his shifting interests and the ways that individual artworks changed accordingly. It is myargument that Paik's prolific and complex career can be read as a process grounded in his earlyinterests in composition and performance. These would strongly shape his ideas for mediabased art at a

    time when the electronic moving image and media technologies were increasingly present in our dailylives. In turn, Paik's work would have a profound and sustained impact on the media culture of the latetwentieth century; his remarkable career witnessed and influenced the redefinition of broadcasttelevision and transformation of video into an artist's medium. .

    In 1982, my longtime fascination with Paik's work resulted in a retrospective exhibition that Iorganized for the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.

    . This introduction concludes with a photograph documenting Paik's Robot K-456 (1964) in

    an "accident" staged in front of the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1982. Paik removed hisremote-controlled robot from his retrospective exhibition at the Whitney and guided it up the sidewalkalong Madison Avenue. As the robot crossed the avenue, it was struck by a car and fell to the ground.Paik declared this to represent a "catastrophe of technology in the twentieth century," stating that the

    lesson to be gained from these tentative technological steps is that "we are learning to cope with it."Paik's staged event drew attention to the fragility of humankind and of technology itself.Twenty yearsafter his first experiments with the television set, this street performance was made for television: afterthe performance, he was interviewed by television news reports; Paik took this playful moment as an

    opportunity to recall the need to understand technology and make sure that it does not control us.Paik's staged event with his manmade robot was a humanist expression of a technology that subvertedthe dominant postinstitutions. Paik, who remade the television into an artist's instrument, reminded usthat we must recall the avant-garde movements of the 1960s and learn from their conceptual

    foundation, which expressed. the need to create alternative forms of expression out of the verytechnologies that impact our lives. Robot K-456 is a statement of liberation, demonstrating that thepotential for innovation and new possibilities must not be lost, but must be continually reimagined andremade by the artist.

    t some stage, K-456 was modified to accept commands for even more functions. The right leg now carries

    veral banks of relays, and Paik uses up to 4 transmitters, all visible in some later images. One article I've seenDouglas Davis] has Paik mentioning a 30-channel R/C controller [which was the intended number of channels ofe original design].

    The First Catastrophe of the 21st Century"

    ocation: 75th Street and Madison Avenue, Manhattan, outside of The Whitney Museum. 1982.

    escription: Staged accident in which the Robot K-456 was hit by a car

    ommentary: For this performance, K-456 was removed from its pedestal at the Whitney Museum of Americanrt, which hosted Paik's retrospective exhibition, and guided by the artist down the street to the intersection of 75threet and Madison Avenue. When crossing the avenue, the robot was "accidentally" hit by an automobile driven

    y artist Bill Anastasi. With this performance Paik suggested the potential problems that arise when technologies

    llide out of human control. After the "collision", K-456 was returned to its pedestal in the Museum.

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    3 photos here by George Hirose)

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    ehicle driven by artist William "Bill" Anastasi.

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    hance in a lifetime: John G. Hanhardt on Nam June Paik

    rtForum, April, 2006 by John G. Hanhardt

    Only in part was Paik remaking and humanizing technology in a carnivalesque spirit of play and

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    freewheeling invention. Consider his remote-controlled automaton Robot K-456, 1964, which he usedin performances both onstage and in the street. Outfitted with tape recorders and a messy mass of wiressnaking around a metal frame in a blocky humanoid shape, this comic mobile sculpture was featured in

    Paik's Robot Opera as part of the Second Annual New York Avant-Garde Festival, which also tookplace in 1964, the year Paik moved to New York. Robot K-456 shuffled down the sidewalk, playingpolitical speeches by John F. Kennedy and, as Paik would say, "shitting" beans out its backside. WhenI organized Paik's 1982 retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Paik set Robot K-456

    in motion again, this time down the sidewalk and across Madison Avenue, where a car ran into it in astaged accident. When a television reporter asked Paik what had happened, he replied, it was the"catastrophe of technology in the twenty-first century. And we are learning how to cope with it."

    -456 knocked to the ground. I wonder if the owner's knew that that was going to happen to their prizedossession!

    erce Cunningham: the modernizing of modern dance By Roger Copeland ,2004

    Dancing for the Digital Age p202

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    These "inanimate movers" in Cunningham's work may well have been inspired by Nam June Paik'sgrowing interest in robotics during this same period of time. In 1960, Paik became fascinated withwireless remote-control devices such as children's cars and model airplanes. Four years later, in 1964,

    Paik presented a public performance featuring his Robot K-456, a human-sized automaton constructedfrom metal and wire. But Robot K-456, unlike the robots in much of science fiction and Hollywoodfantasy, is no lean, clean, fighting machine. K-456 was a rather vulnerable-looking, sticklike creaturewho resembled an ordinary human more than a Robo-Cop style cyborg. (On occasion, K-456 even

    "defecated" a trail of dried beans.) The robot's fragility was most poignantly dramatized nearly twodecades later, in 1982, as part of The Whitney Museum's Nam June Paik retrospective. Outside themuseum, at the intersection of Madison Avenue and 75th Street, Paik staged what he called "The First

    Catastrophe of the 21st Century." As he guided K-456 across the avenue via remote control, the robotwas hitand mangledby a car. The driver was the visual artist William Anastasi"The First Catastrophe of the 21st Century" recalls Cage's comment about Rauschenberg: "Now thatRauschenberg has made a painting with radios in it, does that mean that even without radios, I must goon listening even while I'm looking, everything at once in order not to be run over?" (1961).

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    ou can clearly see the extra electronics and relays in K-456's right leg. I'm not sure when these were added, but at

    ast from 1982. The four transmitters can be seen in the foreground. The paper notes stuck on the transmitterntrols would be to name and hence match the command to the corresponding function as labelled on the relays

    n the legs.

    urther, from my first-hand knowledge of Bruce Lacey's ROSABOSOMbuilt in the same era, he had to upgrade

    om the earlier Radio Control technology (being pulse/escapement-type receiver/transmitter combinations to theow proportional/servo type transmitters. Lacey simply added servos to operate the existing on-off relays. So

    aybe most, if not all, the additional electrics and electronics as seen on K-456's right-leg are to marry the twofferent technologies. All the four transmitters in the above photo appear to be 'modern' proportional controllers.

    omeone out there probably actually knows for sure. Maybe they could contact me or post a comment to adviserther.

    peaking of Bruce Lacey and his ROSABOSOM, I find it ironic that Lacey built ROSA as a reaction to Concrete

    oetry by Paiks contemporarys, to use Lacey's words "take the piss", whereas Paik built K-456 exemplifying the

    http://cyberneticzoo.com/?p=2146
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    uxus objectives, and has the basic functions to eat, shit, and piss on you!

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    obot K-456 in the Flick Collection. Foto: S. Rtheli, Zrich

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    s unclear to me whether or not these modern K-456 look-alikes are Paik's or made in hommage to Paik. Ifmeone knows, maybe they could sent an email or post a comment to enlighten us all! The exhibition is in Korea.

    ontjang' from comments below says "it is known that the newer one is made by Paik himself in 1996, the same

    ear he had a stroke."

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    don't know who to credit for the above images)

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    uite extensive and excellent article on Paik's robots written by Wulf Herzogenrath. Extract from Haywardallery 1988 exhibition catalogue "Nam June Paik Video Works 1963-88".

    The Robot K-456, 1963/64

    The 'simultaneity of the other' suggested here, to adapt an exhibition title by Jrgen Glaesemer9, can

    be charted particularly clearly with reference to one theme: the theme of the robot.The simultaneity of too fast and too slow, or the idea of working simultaneously on an installation with382 running TV sets (Tricolor Video, Pompidou Centre, Paris, 1982) (page 20) and on an old TV

    cabinet, empty of19technology, decorated only with a burning candle (page 29) these oppositions can also be seen inthe comparison of theRobot K-456 of 1963/4 and the Family of Robot he produced some twenty yearslater. For Paik, apparent contradictions are part of the unity of the work: only the next phase in a video

    tape determines the significance of what has gone before, only the sequence of images in the monitorcan reveal the meaning of the sculpture. For that reason I want to discuss the early robots that Paikstarted to make in Japan at the end of 1963: the famous Robot K-456, frequently used andphotographed (now part of the bequest of the late Wolfgang Hahn in Cologne); a second, more simple

    version owned by Charlotte Moorman; and a third 'nude model' now in the possession of Paik himself

    (page 23[similar to above]) [see Note-**]. As early as 1960 he became fascinated by the possibilitiesof wireless remote control of aeroplanes, ships or children's cars. He tells enthusiastically10of how he

    visited a toy shop in Cologne and a specialist do-it-yourself shop selling electronic components, inorder to inform himself and to familiarise himself with the low cost technical possibilities.After his arrival in Tokyo in 1963 he began to build the first robot with his brother. It was to be remote

    controlled via 30 channels, so that it could walk, talk and move its arms. But it turned out to be verycomplicated to get even20twenty channels working side by side. Shuya Abe helped him with the technical details.

    Paik wanted to build an anthropomorphic robot, because he was fascinated by the scientists' discovery

    that the human brain had begun to grow after man stopped walking on all fours and had to figure outwhat to do with his two 'free' hands. Walking upright posed the greatest problem for the robot'sconstructors, for during any fairly rapid movement the point of balance had to remain in the centre, so

    that the only movement possible at first was smooth rolling over level ground. Paik wanted a robot thatcould stride forward. To these complicated functions walking forwards and backwards but alsoturning to right and left was added speech, for the head of Robot K-456 was controlled by aloudspeaker, playing an audio tape.

    At first Paik planned to record his own texts, but soon he changed his conception and let the robotutter important statements by politicians, which one was accustomed to hearing on the radio. John F.Kennedy's appeal to his fellow citizens to ask not what their country could do for them but what theycould do for their country, as well as excerpts from speeches by Churchill and Hitler, could be heard in

    the streets when the robot was out and about. The premiere took place on August 30th 1964, at theSecond Annual New York Avant-Garde Festival in the Judson Hall, organised by Charlotte

    Moorman.11The Fluxus character of the robot can not only be read from its appearance (re-used 'poor'

    materials), or heard in its words (politicians' statements which have acquired a life of their own), butalso seen from its actions. Paik regretted that for all robots the problem of digestion was suppressed; byremote control K-456 excretes dried beans, which are easier to clear up than rice. Here the robot refersto Paik's own role: the first stage direction for his piece Simple of 1962 instructs the performer to throw

    beans into the audience12; and during his own appearance in Karlheinz Stockhausen's Originaleat theTheater am Dom, Cologne in 1961 Paik had himself thrown beans. Paik, the robot's friend, also

    thought about sex: K-456 is female with two breasts; a sort of penis made from sandpaper and flintwas removed in Japan, not only to avoid any unwanted suggestion of androgyny but also because itseemed in bad taste. For all its humour and playfulness, the social aspect of K-456 should not beforgotten. Paik is proud of having constructed a robot which, instead of taking away human jobs,

    created them. For this fragile robot needs at least four people to accompany it, operate it and bring it to

    life.13 It also likes travelling and is a symbol for the international unity of Fluxus ideas and for thequestion of

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    21the human dimension of technology. In 1965 the robots wandered around New York, visitingWashington Square, among other places, and gave out a leaflet entitledRobot Opera, which contained

    several Fluxus statements which referred particularly to the Met opera and to soap opera.14Here Paikalso gave a concealed clue to the meaning of the 'K' in the robot's title; it refers to the Kchel-Verzeichnis of the works of Mozart, in which K-456 designates a relatively unknown piano

    concerto.15But this reference to the musical context becomes clear when one reads the concludingwords of the leaflet: 'time, date, place, audience: INDETERMINATE' which is a homage by Paikto the respected master of new music, John Cage, who perceives the noises of everyday life, of the

    activity in each particular space, as the real music; who incorporates chance and uncertainty, theindividual structure. In the leaflet Paik declares himself to be against the increasing currency of the artobject as commodity: a young artist defines his position towards the older generation: 'Pollock is toosad Pop art is to pop's Awake! C'est dj midi!'

    In 1965, with this anti-technological technology16, this poor sculpture from rich New York, Paiktravelled, via Iceland the cheapest way to Paris. He still remembers with horror how the crateseemed to have got lost in the freight hold and only turned up in Paris several days later. Paik appeared

    with Charlotte Moorman, and sometimes with the robot, notably on 5th and 6th June, 1965, at themost famous German happening, 24 Hours, at the house of the Wuppertal architects the Jhrlings,together with Joseph Beuys, Bazon Brock, Ute Klophaus, Eckart Rahn, Tomas Schmit, Wolf Vostell.

    In the small format documentation with photographs by Ute Klophaus one can see Paik leading hisrobot through the streets of Wuppertal. In the documentation Paik published a text entitled Pense1965, which in its aphoristic and apparently paradoxical form, and consciously in its title, was a kindof continuation of the Penses of Pascal. He quotes (in English) a reply he made to Allen Ginsberg:

    "Perhaps my minority complex as an Asian or a Korean drives me to compose the very complicated

    cybernetic arts".17He sees the future as a time of less egocentricity, less nationalism and toil, withmore leisure; a cultured leisure, like that of the slave owners in ancient Greece -but this time the slaves

    will be robots. He describes his own work, in contrast to the pop art he labelled 'rich', as poor art, likethat of Cage, Stockhausen and Cunningham. This seems to have been one of the first references to theconcept of poor art, for in 1965 Italian arte povera did not yet exist as a name, indeed the works wereonly just being created at about this time. He predicts the replacement of heavy industry by the

    electronics industry, which22would be paralleled by the gradual freeing of the idea, the pure thought, from the material. Theseformulations precisely anticipate later developments. They apply not only to arte povera, to the

    poeticisation of material and to conceptual art, but also specifically to video art, which cannot beestablished as a unit in the art market, but which, as an idea, transmitted by television, exercises asupra-national and non-material fascination. From the elitist video art tape to the popular promo for arock band, from the studio of an artist to reception by millions, from the Serious artist, who makes

    serious art for the few, to the Entertainment artist, who fills millions with enthusiasm.18 Theseaphoristic hints in the text Pense can be seen, like Pascal's text, to mark a conversion, the basis for a

    new attitude.Later, at the invitation of Ren Block (Sixth Soire, 14.6.65) the robot visited the Brandenburg Gate inBerlin, and travelled to an Art and Technology Festival in Stockholm. It crossed the Atlantic two orthree further times, the last time to appear at Jasia Reichardt's epoch making exhibition, Cybernetic

    Serendipity at the London ICA in 1968 for which Paik published his text Expanded Education forthe Paperless Society. All this travel was too much for the robot, who had to crawl off into a crate,which was how it was exhibited in the retrospective at the Cologne Kunstverein, like a mummy from apast age. Visitors looked with reverence into this wooden box filled with strange metal parts, wires,

    loudspeakers etc. Had this mess really once been a robot, which had made the front page of the DailyMirror as recently as 1968? What had changed? Robots by this time were working in almost all

    branches of industry, making many jobs superfluous, but they could also be used where stupid orhazardous work would have been pointless or dangerous for human beings. Major operations in

    manufacture or storage are inconceivable now without robots and the discussion about geneticengineering, the possibility of manipulating human genes, has begun to become a hotly debatedsubject in the 1980s.

    Family of Robot, 1986Seen in these terms the subject of robots has lost none of its topicality. There are two different strains

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    of robot life: on the one hand the mechanical man, the automaton, who, driven by human power,

    produces music or draws19; on the other hand, there is the tradition in England of horror stories with

    artificially created men. The twenty year old Mary Shelley's Frankensteinor the Modern Prometheusbecame the prototype for a whole genre; it appeared in 1818 and became an enormous success

    immediately20.

    24Paik combined both these strains of robot prehistory in hisRobot K-456: the automaton who producesmusic, sounds and speeches, who playfully carries out Paik's critique of social development in suchactions as the bean throwing and the artificial man filled with longing, seeking out his own kind,

    who then gets knocked down by a car on Madison Avenue and has to be carried back to the WhitneyMuseum on a stretcher. This, which Paik likes to describe as the 'first 21st century accident' happened under the gaze of the media during Paik's Whitney retrospective in 1982. The longing of therecovered robot to find his own kind remains unsatisfied but perhaps that was what made Paik

    conceive his Family of Robot.Paik has realised his most comprehensive artistic concept: in 1986 the Family of Robot consisted ofgrandparents, aunt and uncle, parents and25

    three children; in the meantime five more children have arrived almost all of them found their wayvery quickly into prominent public or private collections. The last and youngest child was donated by

    Paik to the New York non-profit making foundation 'Artist to End Hunger', Inc.

    21

    Since the early seventies Paik has used the wooden cabinets of 'antique' TV sets from the forties andfifties, removing their insides and filling them instead with aquaria with live fishes, or drawings, orvideo cameras, or even a single candle (page 29 [not shown]), thus turning them into media-critical,

    ironic, many-layered sculptures. The design of TV sets, the objects of the future, rapidly comes to lookdated and nostalgic, making it possible to see the rapid transformations in technology: the early modelstake over forms from architecture, in particular from theatre design, but also Gothic elements,

    associated with religion.22On these old sets, some of which are in fact only radios, we now see notthe poor quality black and white pictures we might expect, but fast moving, new colour sequences,which Paik creates specially for each new family member, to be presented on the brand new,technically up to date screen.

    These robots can still be moved on rollers, but not by remote control. They don't throw beans or makepolitical speeches, but offer permanent, synthetic colour TV images, composed by Paik for theparticular individual, but without sound; on all monitors is the same tape, often turned sideways orreversed. These are not robots that induce fear. Instead like the Robot K-456, they have a lovable,

    rather antiquated charm. Paik has gone so far as to characterise each of the generations. Thegrandparents have as heads a radio set that was more than ten years out of date, in order to show howthe old people lived in the past; father and mother in contrast have been given large, fairly new TVtubes as heads, so that they look confidently into the future, like the uncle and aunt (page 28). The

    children are made mainly of new metal sets and small TV tubes. The identical nature of the setsproduces a critical impression of uniformity although the eldest child is made up of bakelite sets

    from the 50s, but with a very modern TV as a head.Since the beginning of the 80s Paik has often built large structures out of individual TV sets, most

    impressively perhaps with the sculpture V-Yramid of 1982, which is now in the Whitney Museum ofAmerican Art in New York. But the outer lines are always large geometric or stereometric forms; thevisual, the artistic element lies in the arrangement of the often angled video screens, some of which are

    often turned sideways, and the video compositions the arrangement produces. Forms of objects,figurative outlines, had never figured in Paik's work before, just as he had always used single sets27until now. Now it is the assemblage of several sets that creates the main visual impression and the

    video images become simply one element in the overall appearance of the work. One can see in this a

    closer connection with the history of sculpture, less concern with the development of video tapes. TVpictures no longer fulfil a need for information, but are degraded more to the status of a decorativeaddition as in breakfast television and the increasing emphasis on 'entertainment value' in TV in

    general.The notion of Assemblage points to a tradition in sculpture of the last 100 years. Paik excludes fromhis work the surreal combination of apparently unrelated things. It is clear to every viewer that all theparts of these sculptures come from the same field of radio and television electronics: radios and TVs,

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    antennae, picture tubes, loudspeakers and similar things. The combination alone makes the objectsseem strange, turning a former28

    Emerson radio of 1938, with the manufacturer's name 'Mae West' into a rather high bosom.That the sculptures are actually more like reliefs is a product of the materials' use and function as TVequipment, whereby they are seen only from the front, so that a side view is uninteresting, while aback view, more ironically, is a banal unveiling of the front view which transmits the image.

    These rather quirky, droll members of the Family of Robot have lost the terrors of Frankenstein'smonster, not only because they have found their own kind and become a loving extended family, andbecause they have become more like people than the invented monsters of the 19th and 20th centuries

    ever could. For are not our experiences, our images and memories today determined increasingly byelectronic representations? Are not the events we remember often events shown on TV? In the last fewyears this has become even more pronounced, as many millions of people record their family andholiday pictures with their own home video equipment. Seen in this way the members of the robotfamily are very familiar to us. They are not so much images of the threat posed by the machine robots

    who take our jobs, but relatives. They seem to have freed themselves from the human basis of personalcommunication and developed into an assemblage of29prefabricated memory, life which has sprung ready formed, in colour, from the electronic test tube.

    They are the nice relatives whose flesh and blood equals we are increasingly becoming, or perhaps

    have already become. Seen in this light, these images of people are more malicious and revealing forthey are images not of robots, but of us, of people of the electronic age at the transition to the 21stcentury. With these friendly, harmless, nostalgic, playful forms, Paik has created an image of man,

    which, with its collaged surrogates and predetermined pictorial pattern, is frightening and subversive.He uses electronic means in order to expose those means ironically here too we can see a trace ofthe anarchist influenced by Zen, who finds seduction so natural. 'One must', Paik once said, 'knowtechnology very well in order to be able to overcome it'. And it is the joy of the thing, and only the joy,

    not the moralistic pointed finger, that can bring this victory, pervading and transforming the world; aneffective humanisation of technology.30

    Notes1. The first chapter is a revised version of my introduction to the exhibition catalogue Paik, CologneKunstverein, 1976, pp. 7-11.2. I have referred in what follows to the most important literature on Paik. On the subject of time, cf.

    Wulf Herzogenrath, 'Zeit bei Dan Graham und Nam June Paik', in Zeit Die vierte Dimension, ed.Michel Baudson, Acta Humaniora der VCH, Weinheim, 1985, pp. 248-253.3. Edith Decker, Paik, Video, Cologne, 1988. This is a slightly revised version of her dissertation(University of Hamburg, 1985). It contains a comprehensive bibliography.

    4. Paik's relationship with the art and music scenes in Cologne is documented in theexhibition catalogue Die 60er Jahre- Klns Weg zur Kunstmetropole Vom Happening zumKunstmarkt, Cologne Kunstverein, 1986, pp. 142-169.

    5. Decker, op. cit. pp. 21-23.6. Treffpunkt Parnass Wuppertal 1949-1965, ed. Will Baltzer and Alfons W. Biermann,Cologne, 1980, pp. 192-197, 208-215.7. Charlotte Moorman deserves a whole study to herself, but this remains to be done. cf.Wulf Herzogenrath, Paik, Fluxus Video, Munich, 1983, pp. 58-65. The quotation is on p. 62.

    8. Some of the letters to Cage are reprinted in Nam June Paik: Videa 'n'Videology 1959-1973,Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, 1973.9. Jrgen Glaesemer produced an extensively impressive publication to accompany the exhibition ofthe same name at the Kunsthalle in Bern in 1987.

    10. This, like any other quotations for which no reference is given, is from a conversation between

    Paik and the author, Cologne, 1987.11. Nam June Paik, Exhibition Catalogue, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 1982, p.31.

    12. The score of Simple, 1962, is reprinted, together with other early Fluxus pieces in theexhibition catalogue Nam June Paik Werke 1946-1976, Musik, Fluxus, Video, CologneKunstverein, 1976, p.45.

    13. There is a summary in Brian Morris, Die Welt der Roboter, Frankfurt am Main, 1986.

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    14. Reprinted in the Whitney Museum exhibition catalogue (cf. note 11), p.95.15. Quoted in an undated letter (probably from 1967) in the Everson Museum of Art catalogue (cf.note 8).

    16. This is one of the most frequently quoted of Paik's remarks, along with 'I make technologyridiculous' (from an interview in 1975).17. Reprinted in a small collectors' edition documentation published by Hansen & Hansen, Itzehoe-Vosskate, 1965, and in the catalogue Treffpunkt Parnass Wuppertal (cf. note 6), pp. 287 and 289.

    18. Wulf Herzogenrath, 'Kunst zwischen E und U Die neuen Strategien der Knstler' in exhibitioncatalogue documenta 8, vol. 1, pp. 52-64, Kassel, 1987.19. cf. note 12, and the exhibition catalogue The Machine as Seen at the End of the Mechanical Age,

    Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1968, pp. 14-28.20. Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, oder der moderne Prometheus, Munich 1970. Mary Shelley,Frankenstein or, the Modern Prometheus, London, 1985.21. Exhibition catalogue, Nam June Paik, Family of Robert, Carl Solway Gallery, Cincinnati, 1986.Text by Solway, illustrations, and brand names of all equipment used in the sculptures.

    22. cf. Decker, op. cit, and Herzogenrath, loc. cit. (note 5).31

    ote: ** RH Aug 2010 although insightful, I'm unable to corrobate parts of this claim. K-456 , to me, is the same

    the so called 'nude model'. The 1965 exhibition indicated '3 Robots' in the program, but I've only ever seen

    mages showing just two (as shown in this post).

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    are this:

    obert Rental's Paralysis/ACC single, Company-Regular Records, 1978eaturing Nam June Paik's K-456 on the cover) from here.

    ags:1964, Art Robot, Charlotte Moorman, Fluxus, Humanoid, Japanese, K456, Korean, Nam June Paik, Robot

    -456, Shuya Abe

    his entry was posted on Wednesday, September 1st, 2010 at 10:21 pm and is filed under Robots in Art. You can follow any responses

    this entry through the RSS 2.0feed. You can leave a response, or trackbackfrom your own site.

    Responses to 1964 Robot K-456 Nam June Paik (Korean) & Shuya Abe

    Japanese)

    1. frontjangSays:

    January 11th, 2013 at 5 :22 pm

    thank you for your intensive research on his work. it is known that the newer one is made by paik himself in1996, the same year he had a stroke.

    2. cyberne1Says:January 11th, 2013 at 6 :20 pm

    Thanks frontjang, Ill update my post with that information.

    Cheers, Reuben (cyberneticzoo.com)

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