Victor Vasarely (1906-1997) - Tupa-2, 1972





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Victor Vasarely, Tupa-2, 1972, een gelimiteerde offsetdruk in uitstekende staat, 27 x 27 cm (270 x 270 mm), gemaakt in Zwitserland in de periode 1970–1980, © 1975 Editions du Griffon.
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Victor Vasarely. Tupa-2, 1972.
Victor Vasarely, widely regarded as the father of Op Art, was one of the most influential figures of 20th-century abstract art. His research into visual perception, color, and geometry transformed the relationship between viewer and image, creating compositions capable of producing movement, depth, and optical vibration through precise mathematical structures.
'Copyright 1975 Editions du Griffon, Neuchâtel/Suisse' on the back.
Dry stamp of the Vasarely Foundation.
Photolithography on gloss paper.
Total dimensions: 27 x 27 cm.
Fine condition.
Rather than depicting reality, Vasarely generates form through a programmed visual system based on repetition, symmetry, and mathematical order. Each element follows a precise structural logic, yet the overall result feels dynamic and alive, as if the geometric construction could expand beyond the limits of the sheet. This balance between strict control and visual movement defines the artist’s mature Op Art language.
The work belongs to the period in which Vasarely fully developed his concept of universal plastic language, based on modular systems that could be applied to painting, architecture, design, and urban environments. His research anticipated later developments in digital imagery, algorithmic art, and generative design, making his work remarkably contemporary.
The work belongs to the artist’s mature period, when his visual language reached a perfect synthesis between art and science. For Vasarely, painting had to be universal, based on reproducible systems capable of transcending individual gesture, anticipating ideas that today are associated with digital art and generative design.
Victor Vasarely. Tupa-2, 1972.
Victor Vasarely, widely regarded as the father of Op Art, was one of the most influential figures of 20th-century abstract art. His research into visual perception, color, and geometry transformed the relationship between viewer and image, creating compositions capable of producing movement, depth, and optical vibration through precise mathematical structures.
'Copyright 1975 Editions du Griffon, Neuchâtel/Suisse' on the back.
Dry stamp of the Vasarely Foundation.
Photolithography on gloss paper.
Total dimensions: 27 x 27 cm.
Fine condition.
Rather than depicting reality, Vasarely generates form through a programmed visual system based on repetition, symmetry, and mathematical order. Each element follows a precise structural logic, yet the overall result feels dynamic and alive, as if the geometric construction could expand beyond the limits of the sheet. This balance between strict control and visual movement defines the artist’s mature Op Art language.
The work belongs to the period in which Vasarely fully developed his concept of universal plastic language, based on modular systems that could be applied to painting, architecture, design, and urban environments. His research anticipated later developments in digital imagery, algorithmic art, and generative design, making his work remarkably contemporary.
The work belongs to the artist’s mature period, when his visual language reached a perfect synthesis between art and science. For Vasarely, painting had to be universal, based on reproducible systems capable of transcending individual gesture, anticipating ideas that today are associated with digital art and generative design.

