Category Archives: Victor Vasarely

Victor Vasarely: 20th Century Visionary

“My art transposes nature thus one more time, this moment right now, the one of physics that renders the world physically comprehensible.” —VICTOR VASARELY (1906-1997)

Dyevat, Victor Vasarely, Park West Gallery“Dyevat” by Victor Vasarely | Park West Gallery Collection

As an artist, Victor Vasarely turned quite late to his destiny. He began to paint at the age of 37. By that time he was already deeply steeped in the fundamental ideals of the Constructivists, the influential group of artists of the early 20th Century, who created a new pictorial vision of art that sought a pure, supreme and spiritual manifestation of aesthetic beauty. Among this group, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Josef Albers‘ works would all have a profound effect on Vasarely’s future direction.

A short 2 ½-year enrollment in Budapest’s School of Medicine implanted the seed of scientific method and objectivity in Vasarely’s consciousness. He devoured popular scientific writings on astrophysics, relativity, quantum mechanics, and cultivated a passion for the theories of Heisenberg, Einstein, Neils Bohr and others. Physics became to Vasarely a new “poetic source” for his creative stirrings.

Zebra, Victor Vasarely, Park West Gallery“Zebra” by Victor Vasarely | Park West Gallery Collection

Vasarely ventured into symbolist, surrealist, expressionist, semi-figurative and pure abstract styles of painting before he defined his own original conception, which relied on elaborate compositions and meticulously tuned color harmonics to leave the effect of movement solely within the perceptions of the spectator. In Vasarely’s work, the simple “artist-painter” became a “plastician” and “conceptualizer.”

Eventually, Vasarely became known as the creator of the “Op Art” movement, and his work skyrocketed to prominence in the 1960s and 70s. He held more than 150 solo exhibitions around the world and won numerous international prizes. Today, major museums throughout the world include his works. Museums entirely devoted to Vasarely’s works are located in Aix-en-Provence, France and Pecs, Hungary and a wing of the Zichy Palace, Hungary is also dedicated exclusively to his creations.

Kettes, Victor Vasarely, Park West Gallery“Kettes” by Victor Vasarely | Park West Gallery Collection

Vasarely’s concepts inevitably needed to be interpreted into three-dimensions. The illusionist effects created in his two-dimensional imagery suggested a relief quality and viewers often resisted the temptation to touch Vasarely’s paintings and graphic works to verify that they were indeed, flat. Consequently, the evolution into sculpture for Vasarely was a very natural one.

Vasarely engaged in variety of materials to bring his imagery into the three-dimensional realm. Lucite and glass in combination with black and white and color imagery, introduced a transparent multiplicity that Vasarely used to great effect in his sculpture. In addition, he created “totem-like” figures that incorporated his complex designs and merged them onto multi-faceted surfaces, in essence fusing his painting and sculpture simultaneously. These compelling works were done in a variety of sizes and were enthusiastically received by collectors for years.
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> The artwork of Victor Vasarely is available at Park West Gallery cruise art auctions throughout the world or may be purchased through our gallery in Southfield, MI. Visit the Park West Gallery – Vasarely Fine Art Collection → 

> Learn more about Victor Vasarely at Park West Gallery Artist Biographies →

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Happy Birthday Victor Vasarely!

“The art of tomorrow will be a collective treasure or it will not be ART at all.” – Victor Vasarely (April 9, 1906 – March 15, 1997)

Today is an important day in art history; on this day in 1906 the father of Op Art was born in Pecs, Hungary. Victor Vasarely is internationally recognized as one of the most important artists of the 20th century. He is the acknowledged leader of the Op Art movement, and his innovations in color and optical illusion have had a strong influence on many modern artists.

A superb graphic artist, Vasarely studiously developed his techniques before he even began painting. His prints have revealed the quality of his artistry since his first published print in 1949. He has been widely exhibited throughout the world and has had more than one hundred one-person shows. There have been over one hundred commissioned monumental architectural works created by Vasarely.

During the 1950s, Vasarely wrote a series of manifestos on the use of optical phenomena for artistic purposes. According to the artist, “In the last analysis, the picture-object in pure composition appears to me as the last link in the family paintings, still possessing by its shining beauty, an end in itself. But it is already more than a painting, the forms and colors which compose it are still situated on the plane, but the plastic event which they trigger fuses in front of and in the plane. It is thereby an end, but also a beginning, a kind of launching pad for future achievements.”

To view more Vasarely graphic works, visit the Park West Gallery website, which is currently showcasing a portion of the Park West Gallery Vasarely Collection.

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