The Signals Channel

Watch a special selection of video works from the exhibition Signals, drawn primarily from MoMA’s collection and presented below in nine programs.

This channel is presented in conjunction with the exhibition Signals: How Video Transformed the World, now on view at MoMA.

Through Jul 8

Online

Martha Rosler. If It’s Too Bad to Be True, It Could Be DISINFORMATION. 1985. Gift of the artist and Galerie Nagel, Berlin

About the exhibition

Video is everywhere today—on our phones and screens, defining new spaces and experiences, spreading memes, lies, fervor, and power. Shared, sent, and networked, it shapes public opinion and creates new publics. In other words, video has transformed the world. Bringing together a diverse range of work from the past six decades, Signals reveals the ways in which artists have posed video as an agent of global change—from televised revolution to electronic democracy.

The exhibition highlights over 70 media works, drawn primarily from MoMA’s collection, with many never before seen at the Museum. Read more...

Please note that some videos contain graphic content. Viewers should use discretion.

Viral Video

In these videos from the 1960s to the 1980s, the conventions of corporate broadcast television were turned into critical tools. Exploiting video technology’s ability to record and reshape, artists inserted their works into communication networks, disrupting television’s relentless flow of information in order to probe the medium’s seeming neutrality.

  • Nam June Paik, Jud Yalkut

    Video Tape Study No. 3

    1967-69/1992

  • Richard Serra with Carlota Schoolman

    Television Delivers People

    1973

  • General Idea

    Test Tube

    1979

  • Martha Rosler

    If It's Too Bad to Be True, It Could Be DISINFORMATION

    1985

Body Politics

Training the camera on the human figure, these video works explore the increasingly entangled links between private actions, personal identity, and the public sphere.

  • VALIE EXPORT

    Body Politics

    1974

  • Anna Bella Geiger

    Passagens 1

    1974

  • Letícia Parente

    Preparação I (Preparation I)

    1975

  • Sanja Iveković

    Personal Cuts

    1982

  • Carlos Leppe

    Acción de la Estrella (Star Action)

    1979

  • Marlon Riggs

    Anthem

    1991

Direct Address

The artists in this program confront the power dynamics between audience and performer. Co-opting the face-to-face format of television interviews and news reports, they speak directly to the camera, assume alternate personalities, or invite audience feedback, revealing the screen to be a threshold between often conflicting realities.

  • Dan Graham

    Performer/ Audience/ Mirror

    1975

  • Howardena Pindell

    Free, White and 21

    1980

  • Jaime Davidovich

    The Live! Show Promo

    1982

  • Lynn Hershman Leeson

    Seduction of a Cyborg

    1994

  • Wu Tsang

    The Shape of a Right Statement

    2008

  • Jaime Davidovich

    The Live! Show (April 29, 1983)

    1983

Everyday Life

These artists experiment with video formats and networks to reflect on personal history and experience—grappling with the intimate consequences of displacement, occupation, war, and labor.

  • Mako Idemitsu

    Another Day of a Housewife

    1977-78

  • Mona Hatoum

    Measures of Distance

    1988

  • Regina José Galindo

    America's Family Prison

    2008

  • Yau Ching

    Flow

    1993

  • Xu Zhen

    Shouting

    1998

Frontlines

Using methods of documentation, appropriation, fiction, and performance, the artists featured here confront the experience of war—and challenge its depiction in mass media.

  • David Cort

    Mayday Realtime

    1971

  • Wolf Vostell

    Vietnam

    1968-71/1972

  • Rea Tajiri

    History and Memory

    1991

  • Walid Raad, Souheil Bachar

    Hostage: The Bachar Tapes (English version)

    2001

  • Rabih Mroué

    The Pixelated Revolution, Part I of the series The Fall of a Hair

    2012

Public Access

These works used—or even invented—video and telecommunications networks to create new modes of connection, collective experience, and assembly.

  • Liza Béar, Keith Sonnier

    Send/Receive I and Send/Receive II

    1977

  • Kit Galloway, Sherrie Rabinowitz

    Hole In Space: A Public Communication Sculpture (single-channel documentation)

    1980

  • Kit Galloway, Sherrie Rabinowitz

    Satellite Arts Project

    1977

  • Kit Galloway, Sherrie Rabinowitz

    Electronic Cafe Network

    1984

  • Jaime Davidovich

    QUBE Project

    1980

Territory

In these works, artists actively rethink cultural identity in the age of electronic communication. Their strategies include challenging the tropes of traditional ethnographic documentary, questioning the presumption of a seamlessly networked world, and using video technology to reconsider historical signs and emblems.

  • Juan Downey

    The Laughing Alligator

    1979

  • Peter Callas

    NEO-GEO: An American Purchase

    1989

Counter Media

Artists have used and misused video technology since it first emerged, countering the visual norms of commercial television and mass media with humor, anger, and subversion.

  • Videofreex

    Fred Hampton: Black Panthers in Chicago

    1969

  • Videofreex

    Women’s Lib Demonstration NYC

    1970

  • Videofreex

    Money

    1970

  • TVTV

    Four More Years

    1972

  • Ant Farm

    Media Burn

    1975-2003

  • Ulysses Jenkins

    Mass of Images

    1978

  • Eder Santos

    This Nervous Thing

    1991

  • Marcelo Tas, Fernando Meirelles

    Varela In Serra Pelada

    1984

  • Muntadas, Marshall Reese

    Political Advertisement X: 1952–2020

    2020

Video Revolutions

These works bear witness to histories of conflict, invasion, and insurrection. In preserving the memories of those “who dared to record,” as Harun Farocki put it, they invite viewers to consider the ways in which historic change is witnessed, relayed through media, and shaped by media itself.

  • Black Audio Film Collective, John Akomfrah

    Handsworth Songs (five-minute excerpt)

    1986

  • Tony Cokes

    Black Celebration

    1988

  • Harun Farocki, Andrei Ujică

    Videograms of a Revolution

    1992

  • Dana Kavelina

    Letter to a Turtledove

    2020

The exhibition is made possible by Hyundai Card.

Leadership support is provided by the Jill and Peter Kraus Endowed Fund for Contemporary Exhibitions.

Major funding is provided by The International Council of The Museum of Modern Art, the Wallis Annenberg Director's Fund for Innovation in Contemporary Art, and the Thomas H. Lee and Ann Tenenbaum Endowed Fund.

Additional support is provided by the Annual Exhibition Fund. Leadership contributions to the Annual Exhibition Fund, in support of the Museum’s collection and collection exhibitions, are generously provided by the Sandra and Tony Tamer Exhibition Fund, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, Jerry I. Speyer and Katherine G. Farley, Eva and Glenn Dubin, the Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Anne Dias, Kenneth C. Griffin, Alice and Tom Tisch, the Marella and Giovanni Agnelli Fund for Exhibitions, Mimi Haas, The David Rockefeller Council, The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art, Kathy and Richard S. Fuld, Jr., The International Council of The Museum of Modern Art, Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis, and Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder. Major contributions to the Annual Exhibition Fund are provided by Emily Rauh Pulitzer, The Sundheim Family Foundation, and Karen and Gary Winnick.