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Op art



 
 
Op art, also known as optical art, is a genre of visual art
Art

Art is the process or product of deliberately arranging elements in a way that appeals to the senses or emotions. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music and literature....
, especially painting
Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a surface . In art, the term describes both the act and the result, which is called a painting....
, that makes use of optical illusion
Optical illusion

An optical illusion is characterized by visual perception images that differ from objective reality. The information gathered by the eye is processed in the brain to give a percept that does not tally with a physical measurement of the stimulus source....
s.

"Optical Art is a method of painting concerning the interaction between illusion and picture plane, between understanding and seeing." Op art works are abstract, with many of the better known pieces made in only black and white.






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Riley, Movement in Squares
Op art, also known as optical art, is a genre of visual art
Art

Art is the process or product of deliberately arranging elements in a way that appeals to the senses or emotions. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music and literature....
, especially painting
Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a surface . In art, the term describes both the act and the result, which is called a painting....
, that makes use of optical illusion
Optical illusion

An optical illusion is characterized by visual perception images that differ from objective reality. The information gathered by the eye is processed in the brain to give a percept that does not tally with a physical measurement of the stimulus source....
s.

"Optical Art is a method of painting concerning the interaction between illusion and picture plane, between understanding and seeing." Op art works are abstract, with many of the better known pieces made in only black and white. When the viewer looks at them, the impression is given of movement, hidden images, flashing and vibration, patterns, or alternatively, of swelling or warping.

Historical context

Op Art is derived from the constructivist
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
 practices of the Bauhaus
Bauhaus

' is the common term for the ', a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught....
. This German school, founded by Walter Gropius
Walter Gropius

Walter Adolph Georg Gropius was a Germany architect and founder of Bauhaus who along with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, is widely regarded as one of the pioneering masters of modern architecture....
, stressed the relationship of form and function within a framework of analysis and rationality. Students were taught to focus on the overall design, or entire composition, in order to present unified works. When the Bauhaus was forced to close in 1933, many of its instructors fled to the United States where the movement took root in Chicago
Chicago

Chicago is the largest city in the U.S. state of Illinois and the Midwestern United States, as well as the List of United States cities by population city in the United States with more than 2.8 million residents....
 and eventually at the Black Mountain College
Black Mountain College

Black Mountain College was a university founded in 1933 near Asheville, North Carolina as a new kind of college in the United States in which the study of art was seen to be central to a liberal arts education, and in which John Dewey's principles of education played a major role....
 in Asheville, North Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina

Asheville is a city in and the county seat of Buncombe County, North Carolina, North Carolina, United States. The population was 68,889 at the United States Census, 2000....
, where Anni
Anni Albers

Annelise Albers was a Germany-United States textile artist and printmaking. She is perhaps the best known textile artist of the 20th century....
 and Josef Albers
Josef Albers

Josef Albers was a Germany-born United States artist and educator whose work, both in Europe and in the United States, formed the basis of some of the most influential and far-reaching art education programs of the 20th century....
 would come to teach.

Origin of "Op"

The term first appeared in print in Time magazine in October 1964, though works which might now be described as "op art" had been produced for several years previously. For instance, Victor Vasarely
Victor Vasarely

Victor Vasarely was a Hungarian people France artist whose work is generally seen aligned with Op-art.Zebra -- artwork, created by Vasarely in the 1930s, is considered by some to be one of the earliest examples of Op-art....
's painting, Zebras (1938), is made up entirely of curvilinear
Curvature

In mathematics, curvature refers to any of a number of loosely related concepts in different areas of geometry. Intuitively, curvature is the amount by which a geometric object deviates from being flat, or straight in the case of a line , but this is defined in different ways depending on the context....
 black and white stripes that are not contained by contour lines. Consequently, the stripes appear to both meld into and burst forth from the surrounding background of the composition. Also the early black and white Dazzle panels of John McHale
John McHale (artist)

John McHale was an artist and sociologist. He was a founder member of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and a founder of the Independent Group, which was a British movement that originated Pop Art which grew out of a fascination with American mass culture and post-WWII technologies....
 installed at the This Is Tomorrow
This is Tomorrow

This Is Tomorrow was a seminal art exhibition in August 1956 at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, facilitated by curator Bryan Robertson . The core of the exhibition was the ICA Independent Group....
 exhibit in 1956 and his Pandora series at the Institute of Contemporary Arts
Institute of Contemporary Arts

The Institute of Contemporary Arts is an modernism and cultural centre on The Mall in London, just off Trafalgar Square. It is located within Nash House, part of Carlton House Terrace, near the Duke of York Steps and Admiralty Arch....
 in 1962 demonstrate proto-op tendencies.
Hungary Pecs   Vasarely0

The Responsive Eye

In 1965, an exhibition called The Responsive Eye, created by William C. Seitz was held at the Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
 in New York City. The works shown were wide ranging, encompassing the minimalism of Frank Stella
Frank Stella

Frank Stella is an United States Painting and printmaker. He is a significant figure in minimalism and post-painterly abstraction.He was born in Malden, Massachusetts....
, the smooth plasticity of Alexander Liberman
Alexander Liberman

Alexander Semeonovitch Liberman was a Russian-American magazine editor, publisher, Painting, photographer, and sculptor. He held senior artistic positions during his 32 years at Cond? Nast Publications....
, the collaborative efforts of the Anonima group
Anonima group

The American artist collaborative, Anonima Group, was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1960 by Ernst Benkert, Francis Hewitt and Ed Mieczkowski....
, alongside the masters of the movement: Victor Vasarely
Victor Vasarely

Victor Vasarely was a Hungarian people France artist whose work is generally seen aligned with Op-art.Zebra -- artwork, created by Vasarely in the 1930s, is considered by some to be one of the earliest examples of Op-art....
, Bridget Riley
Bridget Riley

Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
 and the italian Getulio Alviani. The exhibition focused on the perceptual aspects of art, which result both from the illusion of movement and the interaction of color relationships. The exhibition was enormously popular with the general public, though less so with the critics.Critics dismissed Op art as portraying nothing more than trompe l'oeil
Trompe l'oeil

Trompe-l'?il, which can also be spelled without the hyphen in English, is an art technique involving extremely realistic imagery in order to create the optical illusion that the depicted objects appear in three-dimensions, instead of actually being a two-dimensional painting....
, or tricks that fool the eye. Regardless, Op art's popularity with the public increased, and Op art images were used in a number of commercial contexts. Bridget Riley
Bridget Riley

Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
 tried to sue an American company, without success, for using one of her paintings as the basis of a fabric design.

How Op-Art works


Black & white and the figure-ground relationship

Op art is a perceptual experience related to how vision functions. It is a dynamic visual art, stemming from a discordant figure-ground
Figure-ground

In visual perception, figure-ground is a type of perceptual organization in vision that involves assignment of edges to regions for purposes of shape determination, determination of depth across an edge, and the allocation of visual attention ....
 relationship that causes the two planes to be in a tense and contradictory juxtaposition. Op Art is created in two primary ways. The first, and best known method, is the creation of effects through the use of pattern and line. Often these paintings are black and white, or otherwise grisaille
Grisaille

Grisaille is a term for painting executed entirely in monochrome, usually in shades of grey or brown, particularly used in decoration to represent objects in relief....
. Such as in Bridget Riley's famous painting, Current (1964), on the cover of The Responsive Eye catalogue, black and white wavy lines are placed close to one another on the canvas surface, creating such a volatile figure-ground relationship that one's eyes begin to hurt. Getulio Alviani chose alumnium surfaces, treated in order to create patterns of light which change as the watcher moves (vibrating texture surfaces). Another reaction that occurs is that the lines create after- images of certain colors due to how the retina receives and processes light. As Goethe demonstrates in his treatise Theory of Colours
Theory of Colours

Theory of Colours is a book by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe published in 1810. The work comprises three sections: i) a didactic section in which Goethe presents his own observations, ii) a polemic section in which he makes his case against Newton, and iii) a historical section....
, at the edge where light and dark meet, color arises because lightness and darkness are the two central properties in the creation of color.

Color

Bridget Riley
Bridget Riley

Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
 later produced works in full color (though she does not herself execute the works that she conceives of, and other Op artists have worked in color as well, although these works tend to be less well known. Josef Albers
Josef Albers

Josef Albers was a Germany-born United States artist and educator whose work, both in Europe and in the United States, formed the basis of some of the most influential and far-reaching art education programs of the 20th century....
 taught the two primary practitioners of the "Color Function" school at Yale
YALE

RapidMiner is an environment for machine learning and data mining experiments. It allows experiments to be made up of a large number of arbitrarily nestable operators, described in XML files which can easily be created with RapidMiner's graphical user interface....
 in the 1950s: Richard Anuszkiewicz
Richard Anuszkiewicz

Richard Anuszkiewicz is an American artist. ...
 and Julian Stanczak
Julian Stanczak

Julian Stanczak is an United States Painting and printmaker. The artist lives and works in Seven Hills, Ohio with his wife, the sculptor, Barbara Stanczak....
. Often, colorist work is dominated by the same concerns of figure-ground movement, but they have the added element of contrasting colors which have different effects on the eye. Anuszkiewicz is a good example of this type of painting. In his "temple" paintings, for instance, the juxtaposition of two highly contrasting colors provokes a sense of depth in illusionistic three-dimensional space so that it appears as if the architectural shape is invading the viewer's space.

Stanczak's compositions tend to be the most complex of all of the color function practitioners. Taking his cue from Albers and his influential book Interaction of Color, Stanczak deeply investigates how color relationships work. "Stanczak created various spatial experiences with color and geometry; the latter is far easier to discuss. Color has no simple systematized equivalent. Indeed, there may be no way to describe it that is both meaningful and accurate. Descriptions of it (the color wheel or color solids, for example) are all necessary distortions. While color derives from the electromagnetic scale that corresponds to the magnitudes of energy expressed by musical pitch, in fact, the neurological occidentals by which we experience color make it seem multidimensional, while musical pitch (not timbre, volume, or duration) is experienced as a linear relationship...Stanczak's 'gift is for layering. He arranges transparent patterns upon patterns so that you see through them as gauziest screens, each one seeming to fold as if it moves.'"

Color interaction
There are three major classes of the interaction of color: simultaneous contrast, successive contrast, and reverse contrast (or assimilation). (i) Simultaneous contrast may take place when one area of color is surrounded by another area of a different color. In general, contrast enhances the difference in brightness and/or color between the interacting areas...Such contrast effects are mutual, but if the surround area is larger and more intense than the area it encloses, then the contrast is correspondingly out of balance, any may appear to be exerted in one direction only. (ii) In successive contrast, first one color is viewed and then another. This may be achieved either by fixing the eye steadily on one color and then quickly replacing that color with another, or by shifting fixation from one color to another. (iii) In reverse contrast (sometimes called the assimilation of color or the spreading effect) the lightness of white or the darkness of black may seem to spread into neighboring regions. Similarly, colors may appear to spread into or become assimilated into neighboring areas. All such effects tend to make neighboring areas appear more alike, rather than to enhance their differences as in the more familiar simultaneous contrast, hence the term reverse contrast (Jameson and Hurvich, 1974). Note that in the interaction of color the constituent colors retain much of the own identity even though they may be altered somewhat by contrast.


Exhibitions

  • L'oeil Moteur, art optique et cinetique 1960-1975, Musee D'Art Moderne et Contemporain, Strasbourg, France, May 13, 2005 - September 25, 2005.
  • Op Art, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, Germany, February 17 - May 20, 2007
  • The Optical Edge, The Pratt Institute of Art, New York, March 8 - April 14, 2007.
  • Optic Nerve: Perceptual Art of the 1960s, Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, Ohio, February 16, 2007 - June 17, 2007


Additionally, Bridget Riley
Bridget Riley

Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
 has had several international exhibitions in recent years (e.g. Dia Center, New York, 2000; Tate Britain, London, 2003; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, 2004).

Photographic Op art

Although being relatively mainstream, photographers have been slow to produce Op art. In painting, Victor Vasarely
Victor Vasarely

Victor Vasarely was a Hungarian people France artist whose work is generally seen aligned with Op-art.Zebra -- artwork, created by Vasarely in the 1930s, is considered by some to be one of the earliest examples of Op-art....
 and Bridget Riley
Bridget Riley

Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
 were producing large amounts of art and the same can be said for many digital artists, such as Kitaoka. One of the primary reasons for the lack of photographers doing Op art, is the difficulty in finding effective subject matter. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
László Moholy-Nagy

L?szl? Moholy-Nagy , July 20, 1895 – November 24, 1946) was a Hungary Painting and photographer as well as professor in the Bauhaus school....
, however, produced photographic Op art and taught the subject in the Bauhaus
Bauhaus

' is the common term for the ', a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught....
. One of his lessons consisted of making his students produce holes in cards and then photographing them. Noorali Hirani is currently producing Op art in this way.

Artists known for their op art

  • Anonima group
    Anonima group

    The American artist collaborative, Anonima Group, was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1960 by Ernst Benkert, Francis Hewitt and Ed Mieczkowski....
  • Getulio Alviani
    Getulio Alviani

    Getulio Alviani is an Italy painting born in Udine. He is considered to be an important International Optical - Kinetic artist....
  • Bridget Riley
    Bridget Riley

    Bridget Louise Riley Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire is an England Painting who is one of the foremost proponents of op art....
  • Carlos Cruz-Díez
    Carlos Cruz-Díez

    Carlos Cruz-D?ez is a Venezuelan kinetic art and op artist. He is a well-known international artist, currently based in Paris. He has spent his professional career working and teaching between both Paris and Caracas....
  • Günther Uecker
    Günther Uecker

    G?nther Uecker, also known as Guenther Uecker, is a German sculptor, op artist and installation artist. He was born in West Germany in 1930....
  • Jesús Rafael Soto
    Jesús Rafael Soto

    Jes?s Rafael Soto was a Venezuelan artist. He was a sculptor and painter and is most famous for his op art and kinetic art works.He was born in Ciudad Bol?var, Venezuela....
  • John McHale
    John McHale (artist)

    John McHale was an artist and sociologist. He was a founder member of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and a founder of the Independent Group, which was a British movement that originated Pop Art which grew out of a fascination with American mass culture and post-WWII technologies....
  • Julian Stanczak
    Julian Stanczak

    Julian Stanczak is an United States Painting and printmaker. The artist lives and works in Seven Hills, Ohio with his wife, the sculptor, Barbara Stanczak....
  • Julio Le Parc
    Julio Le Parc

    Julio le Parc is a modern Latin American Kinetic Art born in 1928 and active mainly in Argentina. He is also an Op artist.External links...
  • Richard Allen
    Richard Allen (abstract artist)

    Richard Allen was an American Minimalist, Abstract, systems art, Fundamental and Geometric painter. Allen worked prolifically from 1960 to 1999....
  • Richard Anuszkiewicz
    Richard Anuszkiewicz

    Richard Anuszkiewicz is an American artist. ...
  • Victor Vasarely
    Victor Vasarely

    Victor Vasarely was a Hungarian people France artist whose work is generally seen aligned with Op-art.Zebra -- artwork, created by Vasarely in the 1930s, is considered by some to be one of the earliest examples of Op-art....
  • Yaacov Agam
    Yaacov Agam

    Yaacov Agam is an Israeli sculpture and experimental artist best known for his contributions to optical art and kinetic art. Born in Rishon LeZion, Israel to a religious family, Agam trained at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem, before moving to Z?rich and then to Paris, where he settled....
  • Youri Messen-Jaschin
    Youri Messen-Jaschin

    Youri Messen-Jaschin is an artist of Latvians origin, born in Arosa, Switzerland, in 1941. He often combines oils and gouaches. His favourite colors are: strong reds, yellows, greens, and blue....
  • Josef Albers
    Josef Albers

    Josef Albers was a Germany-born United States artist and educator whose work, both in Europe and in the United States, formed the basis of some of the most influential and far-reaching art education programs of the 20th century....
  • Günter Fruhtrunk
    Günter Fruhtrunk

    G?nter Fruhtrunk was a German Painting and printmaker, who is classified as a geometric abstract artist. Fruhtrunk studied architecture at the 'Technische Hochschule' in Munich, which he gave up after two semesters to join the army as a volunteer in the fall of 1941....


Op art in fashion

See Mary Quant
Mary Quant

Mary Quant Order of the British Empire Chartered Society of Designers is a British fashion designer, one of the many designers who took credit for inventing the miniskirt and hot pants....
.

Trivia

One of the official posters of the 1968 Summer Olympics
1968 Summer Olympics

The 1968 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XIX Olympiad, were an international multi-sport event held in Mexico City in October 1968....
 using the design of the emblem of the event adopts an op art design. Also, The musical practice of Minimalism
Minimalism

Minimalism describes movements in various forms of art and design, especially visual art and Minimalist music, where the work is stripped down to its most fundamental features....
 is also considered applying OpArt techniques in music.

See also

  • Chubb illusion
    Chubb illusion

    The Chubb illusion is an optical illusion wherein the apparent contrast of an object varies dramatically, depending on the context of the presentation....
  • Cornsweet illusion
    Cornsweet illusion

    The Cornsweet illusion, also known as Craik-O'Brien-Cornsweet illusion or Craik-Cornsweet illusion, is an optical illusion that was described in detail by Tom Cornsweet in the late 1960s....
  • Impossible object
    Impossible object

    An impossible object is a type of optical illusion consisting of a two-dimensional figure which is instantly and subconsciously interpreted by the visual system as representing a graphical projection of a three-dimensional object although it is not actually possible for such an object to exist ....
  • Lilac chaser
    Lilac chaser

    Lilac chaser is a visual illusion, also known as the Pac-Man illusion. It consists of 12 lilac , blurred disks arranged in a circle , around a small black, central cross on a grey background....
  • M. C. Escher
    M. C. Escher

    Maurits Cornelis Escher , usually referred to as M.C. Escher , was a Netherlands Graphic arts. He is known for his often mathematically-inspired woodcuts, lithography, and mezzotints....
  • Mach bands
    Mach bands

    Mach bands are an optical illusion named after Ernst Mach consisting of an image of two wide bands, one light and one dark, separated by a narrow strip with a light-to-dark gradient....
  • Multistable Perception
    Multistable perception

    Multistable perceptual phenomena are a rare form of visual perception phenomena which is characterized by an unpredictable sequence of spontaneous subjective changes....
  • Optical illusion
    Optical illusion

    An optical illusion is characterized by visual perception images that differ from objective reality. The information gathered by the eye is processed in the brain to give a percept that does not tally with a physical measurement of the stimulus source....
  • Perception
    Perception

    In psychology and the cognitive sciences, perception is the process of attaining awareness or understanding of sense information. It is a task far more complex than was imagined in the 1950s and 1960s, when it was predicted that building perceiving machines would take about a decade, a goal which is still very far from fruition....
  • Same color illusion
    Same color illusion

    The same color illusion?also known as Adelson's checker shadow illusion, checker shadow illusion and checker shadow?is an optical illusion published by Edward H....
  • Trompe l'oeil
    Trompe l'oeil

    Trompe-l'?il, which can also be spelled without the hyphen in English, is an art technique involving extremely realistic imagery in order to create the optical illusion that the depicted objects appear in three-dimensions, instead of actually being a two-dimensional painting....


External links

  • Op art Optical Illusions


Bibliography

  • Frank Popper
    Frank Popper

    Frank Popper is a historian of art and technology and Professor Emeritus of Aesthetics and the Science of Art at the University of Paris VIII....
    , Origins and Development of Kinetic Art, New York Graphic Society/Studio Vista, 1968
  • Frank Popper
    Frank Popper

    Frank Popper is a historian of art and technology and Professor Emeritus of Aesthetics and the Science of Art at the University of Paris VIII....
    , From Technological to Virtual Art, Leonardo Books, MIT Press, 2007