Agam is one of the pioneer
creators of the kinetic movement in art as well as its most outstanding
contemporary representative. Agam was born in 1928 a son of a Rabbi of
Rishon LeZion (Israel), who devoted his life to the study of Jewish
religious matters and wrote books. Agam considers himself somehow as a
visual continuation of his father's quest for spirituality. Agam studied
at the Bezalel Academy of Art in Jerusalem, and in Switzerland at the
Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule and the Zurich University. After
arriving to Paris in 1951, Agam held his first one man exhibition
with a great success in 1953 This exhibition consisted totally of kinetic,
movable and transformable paintings, which actually was the first one-man
show in art history exclusively devoted to kinetic art.
A passionate experimenter, Agam deals with such problems as the 4th
dimension, simultaneity and time in the visual, plastic arts, and has
extended his experiments to application in the fields of literature, music
and art theory.
His works express a concept that breaks away with the established
way of expressing reality in limited, static way. In his works, he strives
to demonstrate the principle of reality as a continuous
"becoming" rather than static "graven image." His
paintings "Double Metamorphosis 11" in the Museum of Modern Art
in New York and "Transparent Rhythms 11 "in the Hirshhorn Museum
and Sculpture Garden of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
give the best example of his polymorphic painting. His works are placed in
many public places including "Communication x 9" on the Michigan
Avenue in Chicago (1983), "Communication: Night and Day" at the
AT&T building in New York (1974), "Super Lines Volumes" at
the Pare Floral in Paris (1971), and his murals "Peace" and
"Life" arc installed at the Parliament of Europe in Strasbourg
(1977).
Agam has expressed the new concepts in monumental works as in his
"Jacob's Ladder" which forms the ceiling of the National
Convention House in Jerusalem He created a "floating museum",
including all the artworks for public areas and cabins, for the Carnival
Cruise Line's luxury cruise ship "Celebration" (1 987). His
fire-water fountain in Dizengoff Square in Tel Aviv (1986) streams water,
fire, and music -elements of flux and life which cannot be static - as its
colored elements rotate in this multidimensional monumental work.
For the Elysee Palace in Paris, with the request of President Georges
Pompidou Agam created in 1972 a whole environmental of the Salon with the
walls covered with polymorphic murals of changing images a kinetic
ceiling, moving transparent colored doors and a kinetic carpet on which he
placed a sculpture. It embraces viewers: they are no longer looking at a
framed, fixed scene, but rather arc moving within an artistic space which
changes constantly according to their shifting position and point of view.
Similar attempt was made for the concert hall, Forum Leverkusen in Germany
in 1970.
Agam created many environmental sculptures, including "Hundred
Gates" in the garden of the residence of the President of Israel in
Jerusalem, "3 x 3 Interplay" installed at the Julliard School of
Music at the Lincoln Center and "Wings of the Heart" at J. F.
Kennedy airport in New York. In 1984 he made a sculpture "Beating
Heart" for the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. In 1988 he created a
transparent torah ark for the Hebrew Union College in New York, and
monumental multidimensional sculpture at the Crystal Palace Hotel in
Nassau, Bahamas.
In 1987, he created a memorial at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem for the
victims of the holocaust. In 1991 he created a sculpture 'Tree of
Life" and a room for meditation at the Haidrah Yeshiva at the Wailing
Wall Plaza in Jerusalem. He also made 14 stained glass windows for the
Holocaust study center of Emunah Women of America building in Jerusalem.
In the new district of La Defense in Paris, Agam created a
monumental musical fountain (1977), with its pool made of polymorphic
mosaic surface. It is comprised of 66 vertical water jets shooting water
up to 14 meters; the fountain was further enhanced with the addition of
five new triple tulip jets in 1991. Another fire-water fountain was
inaugurated in 1991 at the Tampa Convention Center in Florida. Other
monumental works, include the painting of the entire building facade of
Mondrian Hotel in Los Angeles (1984) and 36-poor Villa Regina building in
Florida (1983) He made a large mural for Port Authority Bus Terminal in
New York, commission gained through an international competition, in 1984.
His kinetic sculpture "Star of Peace" was presented as the
Ben-Gurion Award for an Outstanding Contribution to Understanding Between
the Peoples of the Middle East to President Anwar Sadat, Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and President Jimmy Carter in 1979.
Agam has delivered lectures concerning his theories and experiments at
many art schools, conventions, universities and museums, and during the
year of 1968 he was a guest-lecturer at Harvard University, where he
conducted a seminar and course "Advanced Exploration in Visual
Communication", International recognition has been widespread: Prize
for Artistic Research at the Sao Paolo Biennale (1963), Chevalier de
l'Ordre des Arts et Lettres (1974), Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy, Tel
Aviv University (1975), Medal of the Council of Europe (1977), Commandeur
de l'Ordre des Arts et Lettres (1985), Sandberg Prize from the Israel
Museum, Jerusalem (1985), Palette d'Or at the International Festival at
Cagnes-surMer (1985), and most recently the Grand Prize at the First
International Biennale in Nagoya, Japan, ARTECH '89 (1989).
He has participated in shows all over the world and has had many
one-man exhibitions, including the retrospective exhibition held at the
Musee National d'art Modeme in Paris (1972), which was then shown at the
Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, Stadtische Kunsthalle in Dusseldorf, and
Tel Aviv Museum. Another large-scale retrospective exhibit was held at the
Guggenheim Museum in New York (1980). He had a large one-man exhibition at
the Museum ofPontoise (1975), the Palm Spring Desert Museum, California,
on an occasion of the inauguration of the museum (1976), the Museum of Art
Birmingham, Alabama (1976), the Museo de Arte Modemo, Mexico (1976), the
National Museum of Art, Cape Town, South Africa (1977). The retrospective
exhibition was held at the lsetan Museum in Tokyo, Daimaru Museum in Osaka
and Kawasaki City Museum in Japan (1989), and at the Museo Nacional de
Bellas Artes in Buenos Aires Argentina (1996). He also held an exhibition
"Selected Suites" at the Jewish Museum, New York (1975). Agam
has also had many one-man shows in art galleries since 1953, including
Denise Rene Gallery, Paris (1956), MarIborough-Gerson Gallery, New York
(1966), Gallery Denise Rene, New York (1971) and a series of one man
exhibits all over the United States at the Circle Fine Art Galleries.
His visual education method and non-verbal educational system, meant to
increase the creative and intellectual abilities of the children by the
usage of visual alphabet as a mother tongue, is implemented in pre-schools
and kindergartens in Israel. In 1996, Agam was awarded the Jan Amos
Comenius Medal 1996 from the UNESCO "for having devised a
particularly effective method of visual teaching for children." |




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