Grazia Varisco
Grazia Varisco is an Italian visual artist and designer.
Varisco attended the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan from 1956 to 1960, where she was a student of Achille Funi.
In 1960 she joined Giovanni Anceschi, Davide Boriani, Gianni Colombo and Gabriele De Vecchi's kinetic art and op art Gruppo T, with whom she participated in exhibitions such as 'Arte Programmata', 'Nouvelle tendance' and the 'Miriorama' series.
Between 1961 and 1967 she worked as a graphic designer for the multinational retailer La Rinascente, the architecture and design magazine Abitare, the design company Kartell, and the Milan City Council.
Varisco is considered one of the few female artists involved in the op art movement together with Edna Andrade, Bridget Riley and Vera Molnár. Her work has been featured in many international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale, the Rome Quadriennale, the Toyama Triennale ; 'Force Fields: Phases of the Kinetic’ ; 'Beyond Geometry' and 'Op Art'.
From 1981 to 2007 she was Professor of Theory of Perception at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts.
In 2007 the President of Italy Giorgio Napolitano awarded her the 'Presidente della Repubblica Prize for Sculpture' in Rome.Selected exhibitions
- 2017: Grazia Varisco: Allineamenti scorrevoli ricorrenti, Triennale Museum, Milan
- 2015: Grazia Varisco: Filo Rosso 1960–2015, Cortesi Gallery, Lugano, Switzerland
- 2014: If… Works 1959-2014, Volker Diehl Gallery, Berlin
- 2013: Grazia Varisco: With a Restless Gaze, Ritter Museum, Waldenbuch, Germany
- 2012: Ghosts in the Museum, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York
- 2007: Op Art, Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt
- 2005: L'oeil moteur: Art optique e cinétique 1950–1975, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Strasbourg
- 2005: Gli ambienti del Gruppo T: Le origini dell'arte interattiva, National Gallery of Modern Art, Rome
- 2000: Beyond Geometry: Experiments in forms 1940s to 1970s, Los Angeles County Museum and Miami Art Museum
- 2000: Force Fields: Phases of the Kinetic, Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art and Hayward Gallery, London