TEKERS-MC

  • ID: VASARELY2
  • Autor: Victor Vasarely
běžná cena 2.950,00 Kč
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Graphic print 35x50 cm in a limited edition. Print no. 311/500. Embossed stamp S.P.A.D.E.M. Loose sheet. Certificate, handmade paper Arches France Infinity. License: Victor Vasarely Museum. Editor: S.P.A.D.E.M.

About the author:

Victor Vasarely (1906–1997) was a Hungarian-French painter, graphic artist and sculptor. He grew up in Slovakia, but spent most of his life in France. He followed the geometric abstraction of František Kupka and Kazimir Malevich and transformed it into a new movement: Op Art, or optical art.

Using geometric shapes and colorful graphics, he created impressive illusions of spatial depth. Vasarely's painting technique also drew on a variety of influences, including the design principles of Bauhaus and Constructivism. 

In 1930, Victor Vasarely moved to Paris, where he started as a commercial graphic designer and created, for example, the logo for the car manufacturer Renault. His favorite technique was screen printing and mass production of works. 

Already at the beginning of his artistic career, Vasarely experimented with light and shadow, and his favorite color was black. The results of this early graphic period were works such as Zebras (1937), Chessboard (1935) and Girl-power (1934).

He chose colors with mathematical precision – his goal was to create optical illusions and deceive the human eye. Victor Vasarely's work influenced not only architecture and promotional art, but also decorative art and fashion. 

In fine art, he is considered one of the representatives of kinetic art and Op Art, a movement utilizing knowledge from geometry and optics. He died at the age of 90 on March 15, 1997, in Paris, France.

Artwork reservation

It is possible to reserve the artwork by prior arrangement on telephone number +420 724 212 691 or at info@goma.cz