JOSE LUIS ALEXANCO Madrid (1942) / (2021) "Untitled".
Silk-screen poster It has …
Description

JOSE LUIS ALEXANCO Madrid (1942) / (2021) "Untitled". Silk-screen poster It has flaws and stains on the paper. It belongs to the exhibition "Movements 1964-1969 (Commotion among the silence of daily life)" held at the Drian Galleries in London. Measurements: 70.5 x 43.5 cm

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JOSE LUIS ALEXANCO Madrid (1942) / (2021) "Untitled". Silk-screen poster It has flaws and stains on the paper. It belongs to the exhibition "Movements 1964-1969 (Commotion among the silence of daily life)" held at the Drian Galleries in London. Measurements: 70.5 x 43.5 cm

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JOSÉ LUIS ALEXANCO (Madrid, 1942-2021). "Boscuman", 1991. Acrylic on cotton canvas. Signed and dated on the back. Titled and dated on the stretcher frame. Measurements: 150 x 150 cm; 154 x 154 cm (frame). Alexanco studied drawing and engraving with Manuel Castro Gil at the Casa de la Moneda, in Madrid, and in 1960 he enters the School of Fine Arts. Between 1968 and 1974 he collaborated with other artists at the University's Calculus Center, where he worked on sculptural generation programs, in collaboration with the American company IBM. During this period he met the mathematician José Barbera, and together they developed the software MOUVNT, designed to generate automatic forms that would later materialize in anthropomorphic sculptures. In 1970, together with Luis de Pablo, he created the acoustic plastic show "Soledad Interrumpida", trained in Buenos Aires. In the following years he would continue to work with the same author on various projects, including the organization of the Pamplona Encounters of 1972. In 1978 he designed the prince edition of the Spanish Constitution for the Editora Nacional, and in 1998 he presented an important retrospective exhibition at the Centre d'Art Santa Mònica in Barcelona (later at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid). A referent of late Francoist painting and a technological innovator, his work is part of collections such as those of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, The Chase Manhattan Bank in New York, MNCARS, Madrid; MACBA, Barcelona or the Juan March Foundation.