Difference between revisions of "Jozef Jankovič"

From Monoskop
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Born 1937 in Bratislava. Artist. After becoming "unwanted" by communist regime in [[Slovakia]] he quit creating sculptures and in 1972 started to cooperate with SAV's computer scientist [[Imrich Bertók]] and produced lithographies and serigraphies based on computer drawings. Their first computer works were manually digitized and transformed, multiplied and morphed by the computer program, which controlled HP and Calcomp plotters. There were only two computers in SAV and upon order from an institution, it was given the access for 1-2 hours a week. Bertók was basically algorithmizating Jankovič's rationalizations (process later named as "controlled serendipity"). Solo exhibition, [[Jankovič_-_Graphics]] in [[Liberec]], 1984. In 1985 exhibited at SIGGRAPH. In 1987 returned to sculpture.
 
Born 1937 in Bratislava. Artist. After becoming "unwanted" by communist regime in [[Slovakia]] he quit creating sculptures and in 1972 started to cooperate with SAV's computer scientist [[Imrich Bertók]] and produced lithographies and serigraphies based on computer drawings. Their first computer works were manually digitized and transformed, multiplied and morphed by the computer program, which controlled HP and Calcomp plotters. There were only two computers in SAV and upon order from an institution, it was given the access for 1-2 hours a week. Bertók was basically algorithmizating Jankovič's rationalizations (process later named as "controlled serendipity"). Solo exhibition, [[Jankovič_-_Graphics]] in [[Liberec]], 1984. In 1985 exhibited at SIGGRAPH. In 1987 returned to sculpture.
 +
 +
; Selected exhibitions
 +
* [[Jankovič - Graphics]], solo exhibition, [[Liberec]], 1984
  
 
; Publications
 
; Publications

Revision as of 12:56, 21 April 2012

Born 1937 in Bratislava. Artist. After becoming "unwanted" by communist regime in Slovakia he quit creating sculptures and in 1972 started to cooperate with SAV's computer scientist Imrich Bertók and produced lithographies and serigraphies based on computer drawings. Their first computer works were manually digitized and transformed, multiplied and morphed by the computer program, which controlled HP and Calcomp plotters. There were only two computers in SAV and upon order from an institution, it was given the access for 1-2 hours a week. Bertók was basically algorithmizating Jankovič's rationalizations (process later named as "controlled serendipity"). Solo exhibition, Jankovič_-_Graphics in Liberec, 1984. In 1985 exhibited at SIGGRAPH. In 1987 returned to sculpture.

Selected exhibitions
Publications
See also

Slovakia#Computer_art_.281970s-80s.29.

External links