Oscar Reutersvärd

1915-2002

the father of the impossible figure

Watercolor and ink

57 x 39 cm

Watercolor and ink

56 x 38 cm

Oscar Reutersvärd

1915-2002

the father of the impossible figure

Exhibition: 

November 29 - December 1

 

Location:

Mollbrinks Gallery, Köpmanstorget 2

KUNGSHAMN

Reutersvärd was the first to create impossible figures, i.e. drawings and paintings of objects that at first glance look normal, but which cannot be reproduced three-dimensionally, because the perspective is somehow distorted and they therefore contradict the basic principles of trigonometry.

 

Mollbrinks has been commissioned by Oscar Reutersvärd's family to present Reutersvärd's artistic creations through this exhibition. At the exhibition, of course, his many different figures are shown, all of which in one way or another do not follow the existing physical laws. In addition to paintings, drawings, sculptures and graphics, sketches for public commissions, his notebooks and sketchbooks, which were often models for various projects, are also shown.

 

Representatives from Oscar Reutersvärd's family are present during the Kulturnatten and they can tell you about the person behind the artworks. Reutersvärd was not only an artist but an art historian and frequently lectured diligently together with his good friend Teddy Brunius.

Oscar Reutersvärd (1915 – 2002) was a Swedish graphic artist, who in 1934 pioneered the art of 3D drawings that may initially appear feasible yet cannot be physically constructed. He is sometimes described as "the father of the impossible figure"

 

This link takes you to the Swedish page where pictures of Oscar Reutersvärd's paintings can be found

 

Biography

Born on 29 November 1915 in Stockholm, Sweden, he reportedly suffered from dyslexia and had difficulty estimating the distance and size of objects. But his family was artistic, and encouraged his painting and sculpture efforts at home.

 

Reutersvärd's originality appeared early in his career—at the age of 18. In 1934, the school student created a figure, the “impossible triangle”, composed of a series of cubes in perspective. "The triangle at first seems like the simple geometrical shape with which all schoolchildren are familiar. However, as the eye tries to follow its outlines, the triangle abruptly becomes a dizzying experience as its bottom link plays havoc with the brain's intuitive knowledge of physical laws." according to World of Mathematics, 2006, published by Thomson Gale. This very triangle was chosen in 1982 by the government of Sweden as the subject of a 25 öre postage stamp. In 1937, he created his first impossible stairs, and the concept that would lead to the impossible fork. Subsequently, he focused on academics. In 1958, he read the now classic article by Lionel and Roger Penrose on impossible objects, which included the triangle and staircase that the British father and son team had developed independently. One artist inspired by the Penrose article was M.C. Escher—who produced two prints of impossible buildings in 1961 and 1962. The application of the concepts he originated over 20 years prior, by serious mathematicians and artists, rekindled Reutersvärd's interest. By 1963, he had created several new and original impossible figures and was featured by a gallery in Stockholm.

 

He would create his figures with India ink on Japanese rice paper, drawing freehand, without a ruler or any mechanical device. He generally used  Japense perspective", where all parallel lines remain parallel and do not meet at points of visual convergence." The shaky lines, often exacerbated by working on the ten hour train ride between Stockholm and Lund, is obvious in some of his pictures. Figures were frequently colored with Japanese colored chalk. In comparing his work to that of the much more famous artist of the impossible, M.C. Escher, it can be observed that Escher builds inhabited worlds around impossible objects, whereas Reutersvärd's designs generally consist of pure geometric forms.

 

Reutersvärd produced more than 2,500 figures. In the late 1960s, several books were published featuring his work, and he attracted a following, with many international gallery exhibitions. Through the 1980s and 1990s, he continued to develop impossible figures, filling many notebooks. Finally, in the mid 1990s, his work was prominently commissioned for several public buildings in Sweden, and the National Museum of Stockholm and Museum of Modern Art of Stockholm both displayed his work.

 

Today both mathematicians and psychologists use his drawings as templates for studying visual perception.

 

In addition to his development of impossible figures, he was a designer of many public works in Sweden, including large sculptures, mazes and architectural features.