Video Artist Directory

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Video

Video artists began hitting the scene around the 1960's, but video art is still popular today. It now incorporates other technologies besides video tape, but it is still based on the same principles.

Video artists are sometimes confused with typical filmmakers, television production specialists, or creators of experimental cinema, even though video artists do not generally utilize or rely on the same elements as these others do.

Video art is captured on video tape or recorded using other electronic mediums such as DVD and CD. Computer generated images may replace live actors, and specialized movement may make narration or dialogue unnecessary in some cases. Video artists, while they do using moving pictures and images, may not use them to deliver a story, a plot, or any other item conventionally used in the film industry.

Video artists sometimes include photojournalists and photo documentary makers. Some video artists may produce entertaining works, but that is generally not the purpose behind video art. Video art is most often created as a way to provide thought provoking artistic images for pure enjoyment or to invoke thought or relate a touching message without the use of more typical features. Video artists make stand-alone works that present an idea, a challenge, or simply offer a glimpse of the world and all its beauty from a different viewpoint.

Sound may be included in video art, in the form of the spoken word or in background music, but neither one is a necessity for video artists. Their work tends to speak for itself.