Juraj Bartusz
Juraj Bartusz | |
---|---|
Born | Kamenín, Slovak Republic | 23 October 1933
Nationality | Slovakian |
Known for | Sculpture, Performance, Neoavantgarde Artist |
Movement | Abstract art Concrete art Computer art |
Spouse(s) | Mária Bartuszová |
Juraj Bartusz (born 23 October 1933) is a Slovak sculptor known for his time-space statues and for his non-conventional approach to statue and object from the mid-1960s until the present. "In 1972 he started to work with the computer, cooperating with the computer programmer Vladimír Haltenberger. Computer generated curves were used as a template for manufacturing rotational, human-like sculptures."[1] "The broad spectrum of author’s work includes constructivist sculpture, action and conceptual art, site-specific art, as well as installation. In the eighties he started working with the time factor and began to create time-limited paintings and drawings, and model his works by forceful hits, e. g. throwing bricks to solidifying plaster or slamming the material with planks or rubber straps, referring to the energy of the author’s gesture."[2]
Biography[]
During the 1960s, he was a part of the Club of Concretists[3] (Klub Konkretistov known as Concrete art), led by art historian Arsen Pohribny. Juraj Bartusz was the husband of woman sculptor Mária Bartuszová. His current wife is poet Jana Bodnárová. He was a professor of Arts at the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava (1990-1999); later he established and he is academically active at the Art and Intermedia Department of the Technical University in Košice (since 1999). In 1992 he was appointed to the professorship at the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague (Czech Republic).[4]
Public collections, selection[]
- Slovak National Gallery in Bratislava, Slovak Republic
- East Slovak Gallery, Košice, Slovak Republic
- Albertina, Vienna, Austria
- Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest), Hungary
- House of Arts Olomouc, Czech Republic
- Villa Merkel / Galerien der Stadt Esslingen am Neckar, Germany
- Nitra Gallery, Nitra, Slovak Republic
- L. Kassák Museum, Nové Zámky, Slovak Republic
- The Art Gallery of Považie, Žilina [5]
References[]
- ^ "Juraj Bartusz - Monoskop". monoskop.org. Retrieved 2020-08-23.
- ^ "Marschieren Marsch!, 1993 – The first museum of intermedia". Retrieved 2020-08-23.
- ^ Medosch, Armin (2016). New Tendencies: Art at the Threshold of the Information Revolution (1961 - 1978) (1st ed.). Cambridge Mass. London, England: MIT Press. p. 175. ISBN 9780262034166.
- ^ BÜNGEROVÁ, Vladimíra, Katarína BAJCUROVÁ, GREGOROVÁ-STACHOVÁ Lucia (ed.) (2010). Gestá, body, sekundy (1st ed.). Bratislava: Slovak National Gallery Bratislava. pp. 94–100. ISBN 9788080591519.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
- ^ POHRIBNÝ, Arsén (1997). Klub konkrétistů / Club of Concretists (1st ed.). Prague: Kant. pp. s. 22 – 23.
Bibliography[]
- BARTOšOVÁ, Zuzana. Juraj Bartusz. In. Výtvarný život 30, 1985, č. 8, s. 24 – 26
- POHRIBNÝ, Arsén. Under The Sign of Principles of Constructivism. Concretist´s Club after 20 Years I. In.: Výtvarný život 36, 1992, č. 2-3, s. 2-14
- Col. 60´s, Slovak National Gallery : Bratislava, 1995
- BAJCUROVÁ, Katarína. Geometric Tendencies In Slovak Sculpture. In.: Changing of Statue 1960 – 199. International Colloquium. Bratislava, 1994, s. 26- 33
- BÜNGEROVÁ, Vladimíra, Katarína BAJCUROVÁ and Lucia GREGOROVÁ-STACHOVÁ. Bartusz: Gesture, Points, Seconds. Bratislava: Slovak National Gallery, 2010. ISBN 9788080591519.
- RUSINOVÁ, Zora. "Juraj Bartusz", in Umenie akcie 1965-1989, ed. Zora Rusinová, Bratislava: Slovenská národná galéria, 2001, pp 131-138. (online Slovak)
- VRBANOVÁ, Alena: Slovak Alternative Graphics. Untraditional, Experimental and Author's Sides of Slovak Graphic During 2nd Half Of 20th Century. Bratislava : Roman Fecik Gallery, 2019
Further reading[]
- Maria Bartuszová. Provisional Forms ISBN 8364177265
- 20th-century artists
- Slovak artists
- Slovak sculptors
- 20th-century sculptors
- 1933 births
- Living people