Difference between revisions of "Milan Dobeš"

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Born 1929 in Přerov. Pioneer of constructivist and kinetic art in the-then Czechoslovakia, and his contribution to that type of art is recognized within a wider context. Studied at the Vysoká škola výtvarných umení in [[Bratislava]]. He has exhibited at all the major exhibitions of constructivist and kinetic art in Europe and internationally, including “New Tendencies 5” (1973) and “Constructivism and Kinetic Art” (1995) exhibitions.
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'''Milan Dobeš''' (1929, Přerov) is a Slovak artist and pioneer of [[kinetic art]] in the former Czechoslovakia. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in [[Bratislava]]. He turned away from the imposed call for art to fit into the conventions of socio-realism and began exploring expressionism instead, then cubism, which ultimately led him to constructivism and experimentation with optical illusions. He created paintings, as well as sculptures and optical-kinetic objects. Some of his works were made to improve the public spaces of cities like Bratislava or Osaka. In 1971, he also spent a year touring across the United States with the American Wind Symphony Orchestra, putting together an optical-kinetic arrangement to their compositions. He is among the most well-known names in Czechoslovakian art. [http://transatlantic.artmuseum.pl/en/artist/milan-dobes (Source)]
  
Created dynamic constructivist works, in parallel with the international movement of this tendency by exponents such as Le Parc, Morellet and Soto; took part in formative international exhibitions such as Kunst-Licht-Kunst (Eindhoven 1968) and Konstruktive Tendenzen (Nueremberg 1968), as well as the Documenta 4 exhibition in Kassel; and which did not go unnoticed by the leading critics and theorists of the day (those writing on Dobeš's work include F. Popper, U. Kultermann and O. Bihalji-Merin).  
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Dobeš took part in international exhibitions such as ''[[Kunst-Licht-Kunst]]'' (Eindhoven, 1966), ''Konstruktive Tendenzen'' (Nürnberg, 1968) and ''[[New Tendencies#Tendencije_5_-_Tendencies_5.2C_1973|New Tendencies 5]]'' (1973), as well as the ''Documenta 4'' exhibition in Kassel; and which did not go unnoticed by the leading critics and theorists of the day (those writing on Dobeš's work include F. Popper, U. Kultermann and O. Bihalji-Merin).  
  
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==Publications==
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* [[Media:Dobes_Milan_1973_1994_Svetlo_ako_vytvarny_material.pdf|"Svetlo ako výtvarný materiál"]], 1973; repr. in ''Milan Dobeš'', ed. Jozef Ruttkay, Bratislava, 1994, pp 183-187. {{sk}}
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* [[Media:Dobes_Milan_1988_1994_Dynamicky_konstruktivizmus.pdf|"Dynamický konštruktivizmus"]], Bratislava, 1988; repr. in ''Milan Dobeš'', ed. Jozef Ruttkay, Bratislava, 1994, pp 193-194. {{sk}}
  
; Works
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==Literature==
* '''The Pulsating Rhythm''', 1963. Sound manipulated on the basis of the synchronization of impulses.
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* Miroslava Maurery, ''[https://is.muni.cz/th/wtfe3/ Milan Dobeš: medzi pohybom a svetlom]'', Brno: Masarykova univerzita, 2016, 96 pp. Master's thesis. {{sk}}
* 1971. Dobeš wrote a special light-kinetic program for the American Wind Symphony Orchestra to accompany symphonic compositions by T. Mayazumi and Krzysztof Penderecki (a series of concerts in the United States).
 
  
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==See also==
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* [[Slovakia#Geometric abstraction, Neo-constructivism, Op art, Kinetic art]]
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* [[Slovakia#Sound art (1960s-2000s)]]
  
http://www.milandobes.sk/
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==Links==
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* [http://www.milandobes.sk/ Milan Dobeš Museum]
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* [http://cead.space/index.php/Detail/people/id:30 Dobeš in CEAD database]
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* [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan_Dobe%C5%A1 Wikipedia-DE]
  
 
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[[Category:Kinetic art|Dobes, Milan]]
See also: [[Sound art in Slovakia (1960s-2000s)]].
 

Latest revision as of 17:59, 2 March 2022

Milan Dobeš (1929, Přerov) is a Slovak artist and pioneer of kinetic art in the former Czechoslovakia. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bratislava. He turned away from the imposed call for art to fit into the conventions of socio-realism and began exploring expressionism instead, then cubism, which ultimately led him to constructivism and experimentation with optical illusions. He created paintings, as well as sculptures and optical-kinetic objects. Some of his works were made to improve the public spaces of cities like Bratislava or Osaka. In 1971, he also spent a year touring across the United States with the American Wind Symphony Orchestra, putting together an optical-kinetic arrangement to their compositions. He is among the most well-known names in Czechoslovakian art. (Source)

Dobeš took part in international exhibitions such as Kunst-Licht-Kunst (Eindhoven, 1966), Konstruktive Tendenzen (Nürnberg, 1968) and New Tendencies 5 (1973), as well as the Documenta 4 exhibition in Kassel; and which did not go unnoticed by the leading critics and theorists of the day (those writing on Dobeš's work include F. Popper, U. Kultermann and O. Bihalji-Merin).

Publications[edit]

Literature[edit]

See also[edit]

Links[edit]