Kinetic art has established itself as one of the most innovative movements in contemporary sculpture and installation, introducing real movement as a foundational principle of artistic creation.
Emerging in the 1950s and 1960s around groups such as GRAV in France and the Zero Group in Germany, it extended the research of Constructivist avant-gardes and the Bauhaus on the relationships between form, space, and perception, while adding an unprecedented temporal dimension that transformed the relationship between the artwork and the viewer.
Founding figures such as Alexander Calder, Jean Tinguely, and Victor Vasarely laid the foundations for an artistic territory in which motors, light effects, and mechanical structures generate works in a constant state of becoming, challenging the fixity traditionally associated with sculptural objects.
On Artsper, this selection brings together works that demonstrate the enduring vitality of this movement, exploring the many ways in which movement, real or suggested, becomes the central language of an artistic practice in constant evolution.