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PSR 10013

LUDWIG WILDING

PSR 10013

Price upon request

PSR 10013 illustrates Ludwig Wilding's fascination with the mechanisms of vision and optical phenomena. Through a tight weave of vertical lines, the artist makes a succession of angular forms emerge, which seem to oscillate between advancing and receding in space. Depending on the viewer's movement, the patterns transform, generating an impression of continuous movement and unstable depth. A major figure in Op Art and the New Tendency, Wilding demonstrates here how the line can become a powerful instrument of visual vibration and perceptive illusion.

Details

1982

Folded striped cardboard, black lines stretched lengthwise, black frame

100 x 100 cm - 39 2/5 x 39 2/5 in

Signed, dated and titled on the back of the work

Certificate of authenticity signed by the gallery

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LUDWIG WILDING

Born in Grünstadt, Germany, in 1927, Ludwig Wilding is one of the leading figures of European Op Art and Kinetic Art. After studying at the Academy of Mainz, he continued his education at the Stuttgart Academy of Fine Arts, where he worked between 1952 and 1954 in the studio of painter Willi Baumeister. This formative period laid the foundation for his lifelong investigation into geometry, perception and the possibilities of an art based on objective visual phenomena.

In the early 1960s, Wilding joined the international New Tendencies movement, one of Europe's foremost centres for research into Optical and Programmed Art. It was during this period that he gradually abandoned traditional painting to devote himself entirely to the study of visual perception. Rejecting all figurative references, he developed a visual language based almost exclusively on line, black and white, and rigorously constructed geometric structures designed to challenge and disrupt the viewer's gaze.

His work is distinguished by the creation of stereoscopic images, optical reliefs and three-dimensional constructions that generate effects of depth, vibration and apparent movement. Through meticulously calculated networks of lines, Wilding transforms the viewer's perception, with every movement of the spectator continually activating the work. Vision itself thus becomes an essential component of the artistic experience.

International recognition came with his participation in several landmark exhibitions of Kinetic Art, most notably The Responsive Eye at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1965, widely regarded as the defining moment that established Op Art on the international stage. His work was subsequently exhibited at numerous major institutions, including the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, the Hayward Gallery in London, the Columbus Museum of Art and the Museum für Konkrete Kunst in Ingolstadt, which devoted a major retrospective to his work in 2007.

Today recognised as one of Germany's foremost exponents of Optical Art, Ludwig Wilding developed an exceptionally coherent body of work dedicated entirely to the exploration of perceptual illusion and the active engagement of the viewer. His practice remains an essential reference in the history of geometric abstraction, Op Art and international Kinetic Art.

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