Victor Vasarely represented the world in the multiple colors and diverse shapes of “Souzon.” Initially an accountant and advertising poster designer, Vasarely (1908 – 1997) became the ingenious leader of the Op Art movement. He originated a brilliant geometric style that drew no distinctions between color and form. Seeking a universal artistic language, Vasarely reduced nature to geometric shapes influenced by several scientific fields. In the 1960s, Vasarely's remarkable works were widely reproduced, and they still grace the contemporary collections of almost every major art museum.
The respected leader of the Op Art movement, Victor Vasarely (1908 – 1997) is universally acknowledged as one of the 20th century’s artistic geniuses. Influenced by Constructivism, Cubism and Surrealism, the Hungarian-born Vasarely created an artistic language that transformed nature into geometric shapes and vibrating, adjacent colors. Filled with the optical illusion of movement, his works were inspired by numerous scientific fields. Vasarely’s art was widely reproduced in the 1960s, and is still featured in the contemporary collections of almost every major art museum worldwide.
Also known as silk screening, serigraphy is a process by which multiple layers of ink are manually pressed through fine screens, resulting in an art print that resembles a painting on paper.
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