Since 1986


Claude Viallat (1936)

French

Claude Viallat co-founded the Supports/Surfaces movement in the 1970s, devoting his practice to expanding painting beyond the context of traditional stretched canvases.

A rounded rectangle, sometimes described as resembling a bone, became his signature shape. Viallat repeated this form across various surfaces such as industrial tarps, stitched-together fabric samples, and loose hanging sheets. His vibrant paintings are awash in squiggly geometric forms and kaleidoscopic patterns, enhanced by his use of nontraditional materials.

His work has sold for six figures at auction and belongs in the collections of the Centre Pompidou, the Fondation Cartier, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Kunstmuseum Basel, among other institutions.

Source: Artsy.com

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