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Imre Bak, Composition, 1967
Imre Bak, Composition, 1967

Imre Bak Hungarian, 1939-2022

Composition, 1967
Acrylic on canvas
120 x 120 cm
47 1/4 x 47 1/4 inches
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Thumbnail of additional image

Certificate available

Certificate available

Provenance

The artist

Private collection, Hungary

acb Galéria, Hungary

Exhibitions

London, The Mayor Gallery, Imre Bak: Works 1967 - 1981, ill. in cat. p. 21

Literature

Imre Bak was involved in the creation and development of two leading Hungarian neo-avant-garde groups of the second half of the Twentieth century; Iparterv and Budapesti műhely. Part of the group of young ‘self-educated’ Hungarian contemporary artists from the 1960s, Bak departed from the drab browns and greys of Hungarian realism and was strongly inspired by the vivid palette of Impressionism and the forms of Cubism.

In 1962 Bak travelled to Moscow and St Petersburg, where he saw for the first time works by Matisse, Picasso, Léger and Kandinski. Bak became increasingly attracted to geometrical abstract and hard-edge painting (Ellsworth Kelly, Frank Stella). Inspired by the German Concretists, the Signal artists, Pop Art and American Minimalism, Bak focused on non-figurative painting, exploring both strong, pure colour and strictly structured, sharp forms and lines in his works. By fusing the universal symbolism of European and Central American cultures with some of the lessons he drew from conceptual art, Imre Bak fashioned a unique form of emblematic representation in his works from the 1970s.


Imre Bak has exhibited widely, in Germany, Poland, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary and the USA since 1966, and his works are in numerous public collections, including Tate Modern, London, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, MUMOK, Vienna, Musée d’Art Contemporain, Lyon, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest.

Tate Modern’s large acrylic painting Sun-Man-Face II (1976) is presently on display in their International Pop room facing the legendary Roy Lichtenstein Whaam! and 3-meter sculpture Machine n.6 (1967) by Shinkichi Tajiri, acquired from The Mayor Gallery in 2024.

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