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Perspective Dhuizon

PIOTR KOWALSKI

Perspective Dhuizon

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In Perspective Dhuizon, Piotr Kowalski inscribes a word of light into a silent landscape bathed in a twilight blue. The neon "Perspective," placed at the heart of nature, acts as both a landmark and a question. The work confronts the rigor of language and technology with the immensity of the landscape, revealing how our gaze constructs the world. True to his approach, Kowalski uses light as an instrument of thought, transforming space into a sensory experience where perception, distance, and knowledge converge.

Details

1973-1997

Photography printed on canvas, neon

Edition of 5

145 x 195 cm - 57 1/10 x 76 4/5 in

Signed, titled and dated on the back of the work

Certificate of authenticity signed by the estate

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PIOTR KOWALSKI

Artist, architect, engineer and theorist, Piotr Kowalski occupies a unique place in the history of post-war art. Born in Poland in 1927, he left Europe after the Second World War to study mathematics and architecture at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States. This dual scientific and architectural education would become the foundation of his entire artistic practice.

After working alongside leading figures of modern architecture such as I. M. Pei, Marcel Breuer and Jean Prouvé, Kowalski settled in France in the late 1950s and gradually abandoned architectural practice to devote himself entirely to art. His ambition was to bring together art, science and technology in order to make the invisible forces governing our world perceptible.

A pioneer of technological art, Kowalski began experimenting as early as the 1960s with materials and processes then unprecedented in artistic practice, including light, neon, lasers, magnetic fields, holograms, electronic systems and computer networks. Far from viewing technology as an end in itself, he employed it as a poetic tool to reveal the laws of physics and stimulate the viewer's imagination.

His work has been exhibited at some of the world's leading institutions, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Centre Pompidou, the Stedelijk Museum and the Venice Biennale. Alongside his gallery practice, he realised numerous monumental public commissions throughout France, the United States and Japan.

Through a body of work grounded in experimentation and the transmission of knowledge, Piotr Kowalski is now recognised as one of the great pioneers of the dialogue between art, science and technology, paving the way for many contemporary artistic practices.

Dialogue