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Jorrit Tornquist

Biography

Conoscere ed usare bene il colore è un tema centrale non solo per artisti, ma anche per architetti, urbanisti, designer. Dalla capacità di controllare la percezione cromatica dipendono il successo del progetto e la sua capacità di inserirsi nell’ambiente e nella vita quotidiana in modo positivo per gli utenti. Il colore è l’occasione di aumentare in misura essenziale il valore funzionale e culturale del progetto, ma anche di migliorarne la portata sociale. Jorrit Tornquist, nato in Austria, è uno dei massimi esperti del colore attivi oggi in Italia. La sua ricerca fin dal 1959, è un appassionato studio del colore, sia nel suo rapporto con la luce e con la superficie del dipinto, sia nelle sue potenzialità di azione sull’ambiente, soprattutto in ambito architettonico. Il suo approccio alla pittura è sempre di tipo scientifico: una ricerca che tende, soprattutto nelle ultime opere, alla materializzazione dell’oggetto attraverso la luce e che si rivolge non solo alla percezione del colore in quanto luce, ma anche alle sue funzioni in natura e agli effetti psicologici sull’uomo. Il suo conseguente lavoro di ricerca sulla percezione ed uso del colore ha portato a significative applicazioni in campo architettonico e del design. Tra i suoi progetti cromatici per l’architettura: Ponte Expo, Termoutilizzatore ASM di Brescia, Centrale Termoelettrica sul Mincio, il complesso “Violino”, per la cooperativa la Famiglia di Brescia, Depuratore Milano Sud, Ospedale di Circolo Fondazione Macchi a Varese( interni), Ospedale Niguarda interventi di riqualificazione (blocco sud), Asilo Nido per il CCR di Ispra, Cementificio Lafarge a Tavernola (BS). Le numerose pubblicazioni approfondiscono l’approccio al colore sia dal punto di vista teorico che tecnico-pratico.

Jorrit Tornquist - Programmed Art

Programmed or Kinetic Art is an international art movement that has left an indelible mark on 20th-century art. Umberto Eco uses the term "Programmed Art" to present the historic exhibition at the Olivetti in Milan in 1962, organized by Bruno Munari. The great critic Giulio Carlo Argan calls it "arte gestaltica", while Lea Vergine will definitively establish its importance in Italy by describing it as the Last Vanguard, in the eponymous retrospective at the Royal Palace in Milan in 1984. The Programmed or Kinetic Art but also optical art have a common genesis: they arise from the innovative study, by artists, of the mechanisms of vision, optical and bright phenomena, in line with scientific advances from the post-war period onwards. All over the world, both informal and abstraction in painting no longer satisfy the search for young artists. Looking at Marcel Duchamp, Futurism - or more recent experiences such as the research of Bruno Munari,who already in the 1930s made "Useless Machines", and published the Manifesto of mcchinism in 1952 - we want to be able to create works that really involve the viewer, visually but also psychologically, and definitively overcome the concept of art as representation and expression: finally art becomes experience, and then it will be even environment. No in secondary importance, it is also the push of new artists to work in groups, so aggregations of artists are born who try to overcome the individualism of the figure of the artist: in Italy the first will be the MAC – Concreta Art Movement (formed around Munari himself) and later Group T in Milan and Group N in Padua. Important for Italian artists will be the experience of Azimuth, gallery and magazine animated by Piero Manzoni and Enrico Castellani. Although they are not expressly part of the movement, the innovative, monochrome, anti-figurative works of the two artists – along with those of their neighbours such as Agostino Bonalumi and Dadamaino, will be very important to pave the way for the experimentation of the Programmed Art. The Kinetic or Programmed Art movement is established thanks to contemporary ferments all over the world: Group T in Milan, Group N in Padua, GRAV in Paris, Group Zero in Dusseldorf. In America the trend is called Optical Art or Op-Art (as opposed to Pop-art, which dominated the scene in the 1960s). In Zagreb the movement finds a supporter in the critic Marko Mestrovic, who organizes the international events "Nova Tendencije"(New Tendency),in which all young Italian artists participate. Not only Enzo Mari, Manzoni, Bonalumi and Castellani, but also Getulio Alviani will be among the most active Italians in "Nova Tendencije", which will also become an international movement. Alviani'sworks, using the treated aluminum sheet, look for continuous visual tensions between reflection, visual ambiguity, apparent movement, light and vibration, using as a "motor" the visual interaction of the metal with the viewer's gaze. Marina Apollonio also joined the movement in 1965, encouraged by the encounter with Alviani, and as the latter uses modern industrial materials, to create structured works that transform into dynamic surfaces (metallic reliefs to alternating chromatic sequences) or that seek the apparent movement with optical geometric effects (Circular Dynamics). In Milan, the Arte Programmata is well represented by Group T, founded by Davide Boriani and Gabriele De Vecchi, to which Gianni Colombo, Giovanni Anceschi and finally Grazia Varisco are added. The group's first exhibition , Miriorama 1 , was in 1960 at the Pater Gallery (Gallery where Paolo Scheggi and Vanna Nicolotti will also exhibit at that time, with their three-dimensional canvases of several overlapping floors). Group T presents works in motion, consisting of mechanisms that animate them, without any representative intent. Colombo uses motors to move its surfaces; in those of Anceschi is the colored liquid that flows in tubes that can be moved by the hands of the viewer; while Boriani's magnetic surfaces use magnets and iron dust to get the work moving. Grazia Varisco creates works moved by mechanical motors and internal luminescence (variable light schemes) and structures in mobile industrial materials animated by multifaceted glass that breaks down its shapes. From the idea of work in motion through visual effects we then move to works that actually move on their own, or sometimes - in open break with the past - the viewer is asked to operate them directly with their own hands. Frequent exchanges and co-operations in exhibitions are with the N Group of Padua, formed shortly after Group T, by young people from architectural and industrial design studios: Alberto Biasi,Ennio Chiggio, Toni Costa, Edoardo Landi, Manfredo Massironi. They too embrace the new concept of art and are particularly active in popularizing it (for example, bringing to Padua the exhibition "The new artistic conception", by the Azimuth Gallery, in 1960), and accentuate the importance of the conceptual approach: the exhibition "No one is invited to take part" is a striking example. From Group N, the personality of Alberto Biasi,the group's animator, emerges that addresses in his works the themes of kineticism and visual perception, among the first works the "Trame", in which he studies the interference of the movement of the gaze on layered surfaces, and the "Optical-dynamic reliefs", lamelular structures with contrasting chromaticisms that "activate" thanks to the interaction with the viewer, who moves makes active use of a work in consequent optical movement. Edoardo Landi instead seeks the involvement of the viewer with the optical stimulation given by geometric and elementary forms, excellent examples of Optical compositions for a research that will continue even in the 70s. The Italian painting is complemented by figures who also operate in other cities, such as Franco Costalonga who conducts an in-depth research on optical effects in the work, as in chromokinetic objects in which he will experiment with countless combinations with the use of spherical mirrors. Costalonga participated in the founding of the "Dialettica delle tendenze" and "Verifica 8+1" groups with other Venetian artists in line with the international trend of Programmed Art in the 1960s. The success for the Programmed Art is evidenced by the exhibition of the same name in 1962 at the Olivetti store in Milan, then repeated at the company's headquarters in New York and at the 4th Biennale of San Marino (titled Beyond the Informal) in 1963, and will be definitively sanctioned with the incredible success of the exhibition The Responsive Eye,organized in 1965 by the MoMa in New York (180,000 visitors), in which almost all Italian exponents were exhibited, from Enrico CasteIlani to Getulio Alviani,from Group T to Group N, along with the greatest international artists from Josef Albers to Victor Vasarely.

Tags: Programmed Art - Kinetic Art - Optical Art - Agostino Bonalumi - Getulio Alviani - Manfredo Massironi - Alberto Biasi - Franco Costalonga - Vanna Nicolotti - Kinetism - Chromokine Object - Victor Vasarely - The Responsive Eye - Concrete Art Movement - Grav - Group Zero - Bruno Munari

 

Jorrit Tornquist

Works for sale

Jorrit Tornquist - Studie zur hautfarbe

Studie zur hautfarbe

Year : 1971

Dimensions : cm 20x20

Technique : acrilico su cartoncino montato su tavola

Authentication : autentica di Jorrit Tornquist su foto

Jorrit Tornquist

Unavailable Works

Jorrit Tornquist - senza titolo

senza titolo

Year : 1974

Dimensions : cm 20x20

Technique : acrilico su tavola

Authentication : autentica di Jorrit Tornquist su foto

Jorrit Tornquist - Kazimir Malevič, l'origine del bianco

Kazimir Malevič, l'origine del bianco

Year : 2015

Dimensions : cm 80x80

Technique : pieghe e acrilico su tela

Authentication : autentica di Jorrit Tornquist su foto

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