Livinus van de BundtLivinus van de Bundt was a Dutch artist,[1] who called himself Livinus.[2] Initially a painter and graphic artist, he was the founder of an art academy and later became a pioneer of light art and video art. BiographyLivinus Arie Cornelis Jan van de Bundt was born 5 March 1909 in Zeist.[1] His father was Jan van de Bundt (1887–1970), his mother Sijgje Cornelia van der Vlies (1885–1961). Livinus had two sisters, Corry and Kiki.[3] Livinus started painting aged 14.[4] From 1929 to 1931 he worked for Koninklijke Begeer.[5] He enrolled at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten in The Hague in 1932, but left prematurely in 1934 after a number of conflicts.[5] In 1937 he went to Paris to study with Stanley Hayter at Atelier 17 for a year.[1][4] A 1938 exhibition of his abstract work was not well received, provoking him to destroy his work.[6][4] At age 30 he gave up painting, unable to achieve the brilliance he envisaged.[6][4] For several years he produced only graphic work in black and white.[6] During World War II Livinus van de Bundt applied his graphic skills to forge passports.[7] In 1947 he founded the Vrije Academie voor Beeldende Kunsten in The Hague and remained its director until 1964.[8][2] His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1948 Summer Olympics.[9] He started working with light, using a variety of materials. His chronopeintures contained illuminated pieces of colored plastic.[4] Livinus' secretive luminodynamical machine, built in the 1950s from lenses, bulbs and electronic components, enabled the operator to generate color effects using a keyboard.[6][4] He built a drum kit which triggered light effects when hit.[6] Van de Bundt married Mieke van der Burgt (18 April 1917–9 June 1979), herself an artist working in graphics, ceramics and textiles.[10] The pair had a daughter, Livina van de Bundt,[11] and a son, Jeep van de Bundt, who became an artist, musician and later a classic car dealer.[12][13] In 1970, while on a visit to Intermedia[14] in Vancouver, Livinus started experimenting with video. He produced several video art projects, together with his son.[4] Livinus van de Bundt died 11 October 1979 in The Hague.[1] WorksIncomplete list of extant and lost works:
ExhibitionsSolo exhibitions
Group exhibitions
AwardsVan de Bundt was awarded the 1964 Sikkens Prize for his fotopeintures.[26] In 1965 he received the Soclair prize for his Optochrome constructie variabel 40 b 3.[27] Bibliography
See also
Notes and references
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