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OP ART MOVEMENT


INTRODUCTION

"There was a time when meanings were focused and reality could be fixed; when that sort of belief

disappeared, things became uncertain and open to interpretation."

Artists have been intrigued by the nature of

perception and by optical effects and illusions for

many centuries. They have often been a central

concern of art, just as much as themes drawn from

history or literature. Thus in 1960‟s there was the

birth of a yet intriguing style of art which was later

widely recognized as Optical Art or simply called OP

Art.

OP Art is a form of abstract art (specifically non-

objective art) which mainly relies on creation of

optical illusions in order to fool the eye of the viewer and give a tangible dimension to illusionary space. It is also called

optical art or retinal art as it questions the visual understanding of the eye. Op Art represents a great deal of math,

planning and technical skill, as none of it came freshly-inked out of a computer peripheral. While some ridiculed it for

its lack of beauty and bemusement, to many, it seemed the perfect style for an age defined by the onward march of

science, by advances in computing, aerospace, and television. Original, hand-created Op Art deserves respect, at the

very least.

BRIEF HISTORY OF OP ART

In 1950s stirred new interests in technology and

psychology, blossomed into a movement. The term

"Op art" may have been first used by artist and

writer Donald Judd, in a review of an exhibition of

"Optical Paintings" by Julian Stanczak. But it was

made popular by its use in a 1964 Time magazine

article, and its origins date back many years.

However, the style we now know as Op emerged from

the work of Victor Vasarely, who first explored

unusual perceptual effects in some designs from the

1930s. Vasarely's work soon attracted followers

across the world: Bridget Riley, who, like Vasarely, had

Zebra by Victor Vasarely, 1938


worked in advertising, took up the style and soon achieved even more prominence than Vasarely, and many South

American artists, mainly residing in Paris, also worked in an Op mode. But modern interest in the retinal art movement

stems from 1965 when a major Op Art exhibition in New York, entitled "The Responsive Eye," caught public attention.

MoMA's The Responsive Eye, 1965

In 1965, between February 23 and April 25 an

exhibition called The Responsive Eye, created by

William C. Seitz was held at the Museum of

Modern Art in New York City. The exhibition

focused on the perceptual aspects of art, which

result both from the illusion of movement and the

interaction of colour relationships. While some of

the viewer‟s found the paintings and installations

disturbing and inharmonious, most were amazed

with the new kind of art expression which was

defined with the laws of science and progression.

The Responsive Eye showcased 123 paintings and

sculptures by artists such as Victor Vasarely,

Bridget Riley, Frank Stella, Carlos Cruz-Diez,

Jesus-Rafael Soto, and Josef Albers. Because of

Actual pictures from ’The Responsive Eye’ gallery

the success of The Responsive Eye the public

became enraptured with the Op Art movement. As a result, one began to see Op Art showing up everywhere: in print

and television advertising, as LP album art and as a fashion motif in clothing and interior decoration. On the other side

of the story critics dismissed op art as portraying nothing more than tricks that fool the eye.

THE OP ART MOVEMENT

Despite critics‟ attempts to ridicule the Op art, it gained much popularity and mass acceptance, and was soon

advanced as the Op Art Movement. It started off in mid 1960s with Victor Vasarely, emerging as the leader of the Op Art

Movement, though many other artists contributed to the development of this art movement. This movement included

work of a growing group of abstract painters who specifically based their work on creating illusionary artworks which

tricked the viewer‟s eyes.

Influence on Op Art Movement

The antecedents of Op art, in terms of graphic and colour effects can be traced back to Neo-impressionism, Cubism,

Futurism, Constructivism and Dadaism where too geometry, proportion and dimension played an important role in

distortion of view or creation of illusionary balance in the space. Op art perhaps more closely derives from the

constructivist practices of the Bauhaus School which stressed the relationship of form and function within a

framework of analysis and rationality.


Key Features of Op Art

Op Art can be defined as a type of abstract or concrete art consisting of non-representational geometric shapes which

create various types of optical illusion. Op Art exploits the functional relationship between the eye‟s retina (the organ

that „sees‟ patterns) and the brain (the organ that interprets patterns). Certain visual stimuli can cause confusion

between these two organs, resulting in the perception of irrational optical phenomena, something the Op Artists used

to full effect.

Op compositions create a sort of visual tension, in the

viewer's mind, that gives works the illusion of motions

within a 2D surface. Op Art pictures may cause the eye

to detect a sense of movement which may be of swelling,

warping, flashing, vibration etc. on the surface of the

painting.

The critical techniques used in Op Art are perspective

and careful juxtaposition of colour (whether chromatic

[identifiable hues] or achromatic [black, white or gray]).

The elements employed (colour, line and shape) are

The carefully patterns, chosen shapes to achieve and colours maximum used effect.

in these pictures

are typically selected for their illusional qualities, rather

than for their substantive or emotional content. The use of repetition of pattern and line, often in high contrast black

and white was one way Op Artists used to create this illusion of movement. The overall optical effect of the technique

leads the viewer to see flashing and vibration, or

alternatively swelling or warping.

With Op Art came an acute awareness of the work done on

the science of colour and colour theory. Colours appear to

change depending on their proximity to other colours. Those

colours in the cool range – blues, purples & greens – are

recessive and seem to sink back on the surface whilst the

warm colours – red, orange and yellow particularly – are

‟emergent‟. The manipulation of colours to achieve apparent

movement is endless and the colour relationships in play

are known as simultaneous contrast, successive contrast,

and reverse contrast (or assimilation).

Op artists use both positive and negative spaces in a

composition with equal importance to create the desired

illusions. Because of its geometrically-based nature, Op

Art is, almost without exception, non-representational.

Despite this non-representational nature, the Op Artists

made extensive use of the traditional perspective

Enigma - 1981 Isia Leviant

An optical illusion by Victor Vasarely in Pecs

techniques originally developed to allow for the accurate representation of the natural world in art, in order to

create the feeling of depth and space within their paintings.


DEVELOPMENTS IN OP-ART

Key artists and works

Many artists have worked with optical illusions, including M.C. Escher, Bridget Riley, Salvador Dalí, Giuseppe

Arcimboldo, Marcel Duchamp, Victor Vasarely, Oscar Reutersvärd, and Charles Allan Gilbert. In painting, Victor

Vasarely and Bridget Riley were producing large amounts of art and the same can be said for many digital artists, such

as Akiyoshi Kitaoka.

VICTOR VASARELY

It wasn‟t considered “op-art” when painter, sculptor, and

innovator Victor Vasarely began creating in the 1930s when he

belonged to the highly acclaimed art institute Bauhaus. Working

as a graphic designer, used organic shapes and chromatic

patterns that contained the rudimentary elements of the optical

and structured geometric themes that would eventually follow.

The artist became infatuated with graphic studies, and

experimented with textural effects, perspective, shadow, and

light. By creating multi-dimensional works of art via

superimposing patterned layers of cellophane atop one another,

Vasarely combined painting with sculpture to create the illusion

Yvaral, 1956

of depth. In 1947, Vasarely began to understand his role as an

artist, concluding that “internal geometry” was the pinnacle of his

inspiration. The artist combined the frames into a single pane by

transposing photographs in strictly black and white, resulting in a

culmination of a few different approaches.

Alphabet VR, 1960

Between 1960 and 1980, the artist pioneered his version of the

Alphabet Plastique, frequently revered as Vasarely‟s greatest

contribution to 20th century art. Vasarely‟s alphabet provided

infinite possibilities for creative works, with the ability to remix

and rework “letters” to speak to different subjects. His works

shortly gained special notices after his participation in the MoMA‟s

“The Responsive Eye” exhibition in which many of his works were

exhibited.

MAURITS CORNELIS ESCHER

MC Escher was a Dutch graphic artist known for his works featuring

impossible constructions, explorations of infinity, architecture, and

Drawing Hands, 1948


tessellations. Around 1924, Escher lost interest in "regular

division" of planes, and turned to sketching landscapes in Italy

with irregular perspectives that are impossible in natural form.

He worked primarily in the media of lithographs and woodcuts,

though the few mezzotints he made are considered to be

masterpieces of the technique. In his graphic art, he portrayed

mathematical relationships among shapes, figures and space.

Additionally, he explored interlocking figures using black and

white to enhance different dimensions. Integrated into his prints

were mirror images of cones, spheres, cubes, rings and spirals.

His early love of Roman and Italian landscapes and of nature led

to his interest in the concept of regular division of a plane,

which he applied in over 150 coloured works.

Relativity, 1953

BRIDGET RILEY

Bridget Riley is one of Britain's best-known artists. Since

the mid-1960s she has been celebrated for her distinctive,

Op art paintings which actively engage the viewer's

sensations and perceptions, producing visual experiences

that are complex and challenging.

Thus she is acclaimed as one of the finest exponents of Op

Art, with her subtle variations in size, shape and position of

blocks within the overall pattern. Though carefully planned,

her patterns are intuitive and not strictly derived from

scientific or mathematical calculations, and their

Movement in Squares, 1961

geometrical structure is often disguised by the illusory

effects.

Riley‟s works seems to merge the physiological and

psychological responses of the eye. Her work is

characterized by its intensity and it's often disorientating

effect. Indeed the term 'Riley sensation' was coined to

describe this effect of looking at the paint ings, especially

her early black and white pictures.

Fall, 1963


Photographic Op Art

Although being relatively mainstream, photographers

have been slow to produce op art. Contemporary

artists like Akiyoshi Kitaoka (Professor of Psychology)

experimented successfully with bringing out the

optical illusion within the photograph as well. He

specialized in visual perception and visual illusions of

geometrical shape, brightness, colour, in motion

illusions and other visual phenomena like Gestalt

completion and perceptual transparency, based on a

modern conception of Gestalt psychology. y.

An optical illusion similar to

Rotating Snakes by Akiyoshi Kitaoka

Trompe-l'œil

It is an art technique involving extremely

realistic imagery in order to create the optical

illusion that the depicted objects really exist,

instead of being just two-dimensional

paintings. The name is derived from French for

"trick the eye", from tromper - to deceive and

l'œil - the eye. These trompe-l'oeil drawings

are created using a projection called

anamorphosis and appear to defy the laws of

perspective. An eminent artist in this genre is

Pool sidewalk chalk drawing by Julian Beever

English contemporary artist Julian Beever, who uses the op art techniques to create the illusion of three dimensions

when viewed from the right location.

Op Art Reliefs and Constructions

Along with a number of paintings showcased in MoMA's 1965 exhibition „The

Responsive Eye‟ there were a series of structures designed on the principal of Op

Art. The credit for the same goes to eminent Russian constructivists Tatlin, Gabo

and Pevsar who made Op installations as a

major direction in abstract art. Later many

artists experimented with the techniques and

created impressive versions of Op art Reliefs

and Constructions.

Sculpture of the small stellated

dodecahedron by M.C. Escher in

Campus of the University of Twente

Unstable Transformation

(Juxtaposition – Superposition)

1962 b Sobrino


Although the highly complex perceptual effects

created by Op artists were embraced by the

general public, many art critics considered the

phenomena to be a fleeting and somewhat

gimmicky trend. Commercial success may have led

to the decline of the movement, in particular after

some artists discovered that their work designs

were borrowed by American clothing

manufacturers. One of the great stories

surrounding MoMA's 1965 exhibition "The

Responsive Eye" is how collector/garmento Larry

Aldrich turned several Op paintings he owned into

fabrics, and then into dresses, which fed into the

Op Art Trend that was apparently swirling around

New York.

Op art elements were also translated into

posters, t-shirts and book illustrations. Audiences

who initially embraced the movement later

denounced it as nothing more than tricks of the

eye. Although the movement lost popularity by

1968, the systematic optical effects continue to be

explored in visual art and architecture.

IMPACT OF OP-ART MOVEMENT

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