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Volf Roitman : ウィキペディア英語版
Volf Roitman

Volf Roitman (born 30 December 1930 in Montevideo, Uruguay; died 25 April 2010) was a painter, sculptor and architect, sometimes referred to as a Renaissance Man, the son of Russian/Romanian parents.
He grew up in Argentina where he received a degree in architecture whilst co-editing a cult poetry magazine. At age twenty, he moved to Paris where, with Carmelo Arden Quin, founder of the Latin American movement :fr:MADI (Art), instantly morphed into a painter while helping to relaunch MADI, first in France and eventually across four continents. Moving between countries and cultures – he has lived in Spain, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and finally outside of Tampa, Florida, in the United States– and although eventually distanced from the MADI movement’s official conservative views, he remained always faithful to its concepts of ludic invention and whimsical humor within the boundaries of colorful geometric abstraction.

"Roitman is considered one of the great MADI creators. His disposition for aesthetic playfulness illustrates the very essence of the movement. Forms, colors, invention and imagination blend in a superabundance that alerts us to the existence of exceptional creation… …His sculptures - lamps, torches of the imagination – serve to corroborate the sense of liberty that runs through all of MADI creation "... Most recently, Roitman started to produce large transformable wall hangings called MADI Banners on silk and metal, some of which are applied on transparent surfaces glowing as stained glass windows. He has also taken his work to new dimensions by covering ordinary buildings, such as the Wood Building in Marshall, Texas and the MADI Museum in Dallas, with his vividly colored, three-dimensional panels, thus creating giant MADI “sculpture” pieces . Of the latter building, LA Weekly critic Peter Frank wrote, “The building … marks a landmark in recent history of art … Not since the Museum of non-Objective Art in New York morphed into the Guggenheim Museum more than half a century ago has there been anything like this in North America.”

MADI has proved itself to be the longest-running, continuously active art movement in the world. The entity which Arden Quin and Roitman formed in 1951 eventually evolved into MADI International, that today comprises some sixty artists working on four continents.
==Early years==
In 1951, Roitman moved to Paris where he met the founder of the MADI movement, the Uruguayan master painter Carmelo Arden Quin. Following Roitman’s proposal, both artists created the MADI Research and Study Center (for experimental art), which functioned through the 50s in Arden Quin’s Montparnasse studio, an open workshop and research facility which significantly influenced the work of numerous European and North and South American artists then studying and working in the confines of the School of Paris. The Center promoted (1) non-figurative works with irregularly-shaped forms in flat, sharply defined colors; (2) the systemization of articulated, transformable and mechanized sculpture; and (3) an interdisciplinary approach to the arts first promoted by the Futurists but systemized, starting in the 40s, by MADI and by other groups such as Fluxus. In the field of MADI sculpture, massive structures are replaced by a dynamic relationship between the liness and planes of solid forms and the openings with which these forms are pierced. Space thus becomes an integral and equally important part of the work.〔Goodman, Shelley: ''Carmelo Arden Quin, When Art Jumped Out of Its Cage'' Madi Museum and Gallery, Dallas, Tx, 2004.〕
Roitman navigated through the Parisian avant-garde scene of cafes, studios and galleries where he drew his main inspiration during those years from the Belgian master George Vantongerloo. He was also inspired with a work from the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris: Malevich’s 1915 seminal work :fr:Carré blanc sur fond blanc. “Already plunged into the worlds of Celtic myths, alchemy, and Zen Buddhism, Roitman believed that somewhere in this pale world of absent color, he might discover the absolute. From the beginning, his personal style involved a predominant use of circles, a complete break with Piet Mondrian’s sacrosanct straight linear structures and his orthogonal rigidity, a heresy for which he, like Georges Vantongerloo would often be signaled out and, on occasion, rebucked. ”
Roger Neyrat, a French artist and a veteran of MADI in the 50’s, still remembers: “I held this work (a Roitman’s painting, called “The Lost Triangle” -1953) above myself, ready to make it circulate among the few dozens of people assisting at my reading at Claude Dorval Gallery (1995)…It’s the most beautiful MADI work, repeated Carmelo several times. We haven’t ever gone so far in our abstract works!” Roger Neyrat continues: “But beginning in 1956, Roitman initiated a series of more complex compositions where the design became more dynamic, the curves more playful and dancing. Two years later, in New York, this process led to his series of “Memories of Balanchine” (1958–1960), real MADI ballets…A pure joy and an example for new generations. There is so much of joyful emotion on these works, a rare gift even with the great abstract masters. Roitman has gone even further!”
During this period, Roitman’s paintings were exhibited at the following venues:
*Salon des Réalités Nouvelles, Paris: 1952 – 53 – 54 – 55 -56.
*Galerie Suzanne Michel, Paris, February 1953
*Cercle Paul Valéry, La Sorbonne, Paris, 15 June 1953.
*Galerie de l’Odéon, Paris February 1954.
*Galerie Cimaise, in the show "14 Abstract Artistes", Paris, January 1955 acquis les bases solides de l’évolution picturale qui se manifestait alors.
*In November, 1955, Volf Roitman’s exhibition at the Galérie de Beaune in Paris constituted the first solo show by a MADI artist in Europe.
*Galerie Denise René, Paris, a group show in April 1956 ().
From 1961 to 1982, Roitman consecrated himself mainly to literature and other creative activities.〔See further below (The Renaissance Man )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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