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    Colorscapes: Marko Spalatin 1970-2001

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    Date
    2016-05-01
    Author
    Murphy, Jacqueline
    Department
    Art History
    Advisor(s)
    Katharine Wells
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Artist and printmaker Marko Spalatin (b. 1945) is known for his ability to capture the transitory optical effect of color and light through the interaction of geometric forms in space. His career developed from concepts of the 1960s Op art movement, which produced a heightened viewing experience of the work of art rather than focusing on content. This movement drew on modernism’s interests in breaking traditional academic definitions that viewed color as an extraneous addition, and shifted toward the depiction of color as having its own sense of form and dynamism. Spalatin established his style by creating highly colored surfaces that seem to reflect light off of dramatically telescoping shapes. Spalatin’s “colorscapes,” illusionistic color landscapes, are dynamic spatial environments created through entirely abstract means. His depiction of color-reflecting forms in space was unique from the larger Op art movement, and shares concerns with late modernist painters who investigated spatial illusion through non-traditional means. A chronological exploration of Spalatin’s screenprint series highlights the artist’s placement within the larger modernist traditions through his use of color, light, and space and demonstrates the magnetic play between abstraction and illusion evident in his work. Spalatin’s vibrant realms invite the viewer into the pictorial space to explore his exceptional skill in depicting his form of geometric abstraction.
    Subject
    Geometric Abstraction
    Marko Spalatin
    Op Art
    Optical Art
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90987
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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