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Mercuriale (9+4)

GRAZIA VARISCO

Mercuriale (9+4)

Price upon request

Mercuriale (9+4) illustrates one of Grazia Varisco's most iconic explorations of perception and the instability of the gaze. Behind a wavy transparent surface, thirteen reflective metallic elements appear to transform as the viewer moves. Shapes appear, distort, or disappear in a continuous play of reflections and optical variations. A pioneering figure in kinetic and programmed art, Varisco creates a work here where movement arises from the interaction between the object, light, and observer, making perception itself the true subject of the work.

Details

1969

Wood, industrial glass, steel

35 x 35 cm - 13 4/5 x 13 4/5 in

Signed, titled and dated on the back of the artwork

Certificate of authenticity signed by the artist

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GRAZIA VARISCO

Born in Milan in 1937, Grazia Varisco is one of the leading figures of Italian Kinetic and Programmed Art. She studied at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts between 1956 and 1960, where she developed an early interest in the phenomena of perception, movement and the transformation of space—concerns that would become the foundation of her entire artistic practice.

In 1960, she joined the renowned Gruppo T alongside Giovanni Anceschi, Davide Boriani, Gianni Colombo and Gabriele De Vecchi. Founded in Milan in 1959, the collective revolutionised European art by introducing time as a new dimension of the artwork and developing interactive experiences that actively engaged the viewer. Through landmark exhibitions such as Miriorama, Arte Programmata and Nouvelle Tendance, Varisco contributed to the emergence of an artistic language based on perception and change.

From the early 1960s onwards, she created pioneering works including the Schemi Luminosi, Tavole Magnetiche and Reticoli Frangibili, in which light, movement, chance and interaction continually transform the visual experience. Rather than representing movement, her work invites the viewer to experience it directly, making the spectator's presence essential to the activation of the artwork.

Widely regarded as one of the few women to have played a central role in the history of Op Art and Kinetic Art, alongside Bridget Riley and Vera Molnár, Grazia Varisco has participated in numerous major international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (1964, 1986 and 2022), the Rome Quadriennale, Force Fields in London and Barcelona, and Beyond Geometry at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. From 1981 to 2007, she also taught the theory of perception at the Brera Academy.

Today recognised as one of the great pioneers of European perceptual abstraction, Grazia Varisco has spent more than six decades pursuing a rigorous investigation into time, space and the viewer's participation. Her work remains a landmark in the history of international Kinetic Art.

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