Imagen del autor

Gaston Diehl (1912–1999)

Autor de Picasso

35 Obras 637 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Gaston Diehl

Picasso (1960) 89 copias
Max Ernst (1973) 53 copias
Miro (1974) 53 copias
Derain (1964) 36 copias
Van Dongen (1965) 29 copias
Pascin (Crown Art Library) (1968) 27 copias
Leger (Crown Art Library) (1985) 20 copias
Henri Matisse (1950) 17 copias
Gauguin (Crown Art Library) (1960) 12 copias
Pascin (1954) 10 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1912-08-10
Fecha de fallecimiento
1999-12-12
Género
male
Nacionalidad
France
Ocupaciones
Art Historian
art critic
journalist
Director

Miembros

Reseñas

EXPO.MONACO NOUVEAU MUSÉE NATIONAL JUIN 2008 / MONTRÉAL MUSÉE BEAUX-ARTS JANV.2009
 
Denunciada
petervanbeveren | May 24, 2021 |


This handsome coffee table book by Gaston Diehl on the art and life of Hungarian-French artist Victor Vasarely (1906-1997) is a real find. The quality of seventy Vasarely prints (nearly all displayed on a full page and in color) is excellent. Also, art historian Gaston Diehl provides an insightful twenty-page overview of Vasarely's artistic evolution from a successful graphic artist in his twenties, an artist who, to use Vasarely's own words, went down the wrong track by producing works in the styles of the day - cubism, expressionism, futurism, symbolism, surrealism - until age forty, the time when he found his true creative self and hit his visual stride in geometric abstract art, or, what has come to be known as Op Art. Victor Vasarely also became a pioneer in the field of Kinetic Art.

Diehl provides detail of how the artist developed a unique geometric style over many years of trial and error. We read: "To accomplish harmonious compositions and unique constructive solutions, he constantly attempts to situate forms and colors on the plane surface; to purify both in order to obtain an economy of means and a total simplification, which are not however an impoverishment, as he emphasizes in his reflections; and lastly, to organize a rhythmic, balanced concatenation which suggests both a different space and a movement in gestation."

From my own experience, this is what I see when looking at Vasarely's geometrical shapes: purity and rhythm and balance as the clear forms and vivid colors seem to play with one another; it is as if I am transported to a completely free, completely open, non-temporal visual realm. If this sounds mystical, there’s good reason, it is mystical. As Diehl explains, Valarely engaged in "transformation of the external vision into an internal vision".

Here is another quote from Diehl underscoring the transcendent quality of Vasarely's geometric art: "The subtle dislocations arranged, and the numerous sharp angles, give the composition an appearance that is intermediate between pure spirituality and nature; that is: they lead to a geometry made all the more vivid by the fact that the force of the contrasts emphasizes its radiating luminosity."

I recall viewing an exhibition of Vasarely art and sculpture at the Philadelphia Museum of Art some years back. I didn't want to leave. The combinations of colors and forms were so powerful and magnetic my eyes couldn't get enough Here are my brief comments on works from two prints in the book:

VEGA-WA-3
We have the geometry of circles, twenty-three circles on the vertical and twenty-two on the horizontal for a total of five-hundred-and-six circles, but these circles are not simply static, rather, the circles bulge out at the center, as if the vinyl canvas is a flexible rubber sheet and a ball is being pushed from the rear toward the viewer creating the illusion of three-dimensionality. The circles on the left are black on a burnt orange background and the circles on the right are light gray on a black background and as the shapes change via the pushed ball so the color of both the circles and background change into one another - a unique metamorphosis, the cross-transformation of both color and form.


TAYMIR
A study in black-and-white, the artist has rectangles, triangles, parallelograms and squares overlapping one another in dazzling combinations, the overlap changing the shapes from white to black and from black to white or enlarging or shrinking the black-and-white design. Many of the squares are actually diamonds, standing on one of their corners. How many overlaps and combinations? Dozens and dozens and dozens. If you enjoy art of this type, you will find something new and fascinating with every viewing.


I don't know if I will ever have the opportunity to go to one of the Victor Vasarely museums in France or Hungary, but meanwhile there are a number of excellent books, including this one published by Crown Art Library.

Just for the fun of it, more art from this spectacular artist:








… (más)
 
Denunciada
Glenn_Russell | otra reseña | Nov 13, 2018 |

This handsome coffee table book by Gaston Diehl on the art and life of Hungarian-French artist Victor Vasarely (1906-1997) is a real find. The quality of the 70 prints is excellent, most full page and in color. Also, in 20 pages Diehl provides an insightful overview of Vasarely's artistic evolution from a successful graphic artist in his 20s, who, to use the words of the artist himself, then went down the wrong track by producing works in the styles of the day - cubism, expressionism, futurism, symbolism, surrealism - until age 40, the time when he found his true artistic self and hit his visual stride in geometric abstract art, or, what has come to be known as Op Art. He also became a pioneer in the field of Kinetic Art.

Diehl provides detail of how the artist developed a unique geometric style over many years of trial and error. We read: "To accomplish harmonious compositions and unique constructive solutions, he constantly attempts to situate forms and colors on the plane surface; to purify both in order to obtain an economy of means and a total simplification, which are not however an impoverishment, as he emphasizes in his reflections; and lastly, to organize a rhythmic, balanced concatenation which suggests both a different space and a movement in gestation." From my own experience, this is what I see when looking at Vasarely's geometrical shapes: a kind of purity and rhythm and balance as the clear forms and vivid colors seem to play with one another; it is as if I am transported to a completely free, completely open, non-temporal visual realm. If this sounds mystical, there’s good reason, it is mystical. As Diehl explains, Valarely engaged in "transformation of the external vision into an internal vision".

Here is another quote from Diehl underscoring the transcendent quality of Vasarely's geometric art: "The subtle dislocations arranged, and the numerous sharp angles, give the composition an appearance that is intermediate between pure spirituality and nature; that is: they lead to a geometry made all the more vivid by the fact that the force of the contrasts emphasizes its radiating luminosity." I recall going to an exhibition of art and sculpture of Vasarely at the Philadelphia Museum of Art years ago. I didn't want to leave. The combinations of colors and forms so powerful and magnetic my eyes couldn't get enough Here are my brief comments on works from two prints in the book:

VEGA-WA-3
We have the geometry of circles, 23 circles on the vertical and 22 on the horizontal for a total of 506 circles, but these circles are not simply static, rather, the circles bulge out at the center, as if the vinyl canvas is a flexible rubber sheet and a ball is being pushed from the rear toward the viewer creating the illusion of three-dimensionality. The circles on the left are black on a burnt orange background and the circles on the right are light gray on a black background and as the shapes change via the pushed ball so the color of both the circles and background change into one another - a unique metamorphosis, the cross-transformation of both color and form.


TAYMIR
A study in black-and-white, the artist has rectangles, triangles, parallelograms and squares overlapping one another in dazzling combinations, the overlap changing the shapes from white to black and from black to white or enlarging or shrinking the black-and-white design. Many of the squares are actually diamonds, standing on one of their corners. How many overlaps and combinations? Dozens and dozens and dozens. If you enjoy art of this type, you will find something new and fascinating with every viewing.


I don't know if I will ever have the opportunity to go to one of the Victor Vasarely museums in France or Hungary, but meanwhile there are a number of excellent books, including this one published by Crown Art Library.

… (más)
 
Denunciada
GlennRussell | otra reseña | Feb 16, 2017 |
Volume 5 of Dessins des Maîtres: Drawings of the Masters
 
Denunciada
Footsteps | Nov 15, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
35
Miembros
637
Popularidad
#39,575
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
65
Idiomas
8

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