Skip to main content

Stay up to date

0 items
Cart
  • Reset your password
School of the Art Institute of Chicago Logo center-block
Home
School of the Art Institute of Chicago Logo

Primary Navigation

  • About VDB
  • Ordering Info
  • Educational Streaming
  • News & Events

Secondary Navigation

  • VDB TV
  • VDB Publications
  • Support VDB
  • Contact Us
School of the Art Institute of Chicago Logo

Watch VDB TV Now

The Collection

  • Browse by Artist/Title
  • New Releases
  • Compilations
    • Curated Compilations
    • Single Artist Compilations
    • Box Sets
  • Early Video Art
  • OAA Interviews & Portraits
  • Videofreex Archive
  • Kuchar Archive

Joan Logue

McKeesport, PA

Joan Logue (b. 1942) is a pioneer in the field of video portraiture. She first learned to use the medium soon after it became available to artists with Sony's introduction of the video Portapak in the late sixties. As a still portrait photographer, Logue immediately recognized the new medium's potential for expressing more fully the complexity of the sitter. Although Logue's background was not in film (she studied painting and photography), early on she discovered that video expanded painting and still photography, taking the ‘instant’ out of portraiture to give it a presence in real-time. For this reason, she is recognized as the "originator" of the first video portrait in 1971. There, by using real time and silence to expose the sitter’s presence, she allowed the viewer to observe a person in contemplation and silence.

Since 1971, Joan Logue has completed hundreds of video portraits for installations. In 1979, she developed another form of portraiture called 30 Second Portraits (Spots). Both styles of her portraiture include artists, families, lovers, fisherman, writers, poets, philosophers, composers, street people and auto portraits. Her works have been seen in America and abroad in installations that Logue calls video portrait galleries. They include portraits of Jasper Johns, Willem DeKooning, Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, Ellsworth Kelly, John Cage, Richard Diebenkorn, Joan Mitchell, Vija Celmins, Judy Chicago, Anna Halprin, Lucinda Childs, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida, Pierre Boulez, Rosa Parks, and Cesar Chavez to name only a few.

Joan Logue currently resides in New York, but originally lived and worked in Los Angeles until 1977. There, she became the first photographic portrait artist at the American Film Institute (1969), and pioneered the first video program at the American Film Institute. As a resident of California, she also taught at the California Institute of the Arts (1971-74), the University of California Los Angeles (1975), and the Otis Art Institute (1976).

After moving to New York in 1977, Logue expanded her scope, receiving a series of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts (1976, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1989) as well as grants from the French Ministry of Culture (1983, 1985, 1991, 1992) which enabled her to create two Paris series plus The Portrait of a Young Girl within a 3d frame and an Auto Portrait 1983-1993. She also received grants from the CAPP Street Project (1984), the Massachusetts Council on the Arts (1985,1988), the New York State Council on the Arts (1982,1989), the New York Cultural Assistance Program (CAP) grant (1978,1982), the Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD) Fellowship (1986), the Pew Charitable Trust grant (1999), and a Guggenheim Fellowship (1998). Simultaneously, she began to widen the breadth of her teaching career, holding a variety of international positions at the L'école nationale supérieure d'art de Nancy (1991), L’ecole supérieure des arts décoratifs de Strasbourg (1992), L'école des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux (1993) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1996). She also held portraiture artist in residence fellowships at the American Center in Paris (1982,1983), the Centres d’Art Contemporain de Montbeliard, Montbeliard (1982), the Centres d’Art Contemporain de Montpellier, Montpellier, France (1983), and Belo Horizonte, Brazil (1989).


Available Titles by Joan Logue

Title Year Runtime Collection
30-Second Spots 1982 00:15:50 Early Video Art, Single Titles

Related Content

Stay Connected to Video Data Bank

Contact Us

Phone: 312.345.3550
Fax: 312.541.8073

Our regular hours are:
Monday – Friday
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Mailing Address

Video Data Bank
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
36 S. Wabash Ave, 12th Floor
Chicago, IL 60603

Visit our Screening Room

Video Data Bank
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
36 S. Wabash Ave, 14th Floor
Chicago, IL 60603

Copyright 2025 Video Data Bank

vdb-tv

  • About
  • Titles
  • Curated Compilations
  • Collections