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In Paul Hartal's Lyco Art, the act of creation inexorably interweaves the logic of passion with the passion of logic through the voyage of consciousness. Paul Hartal, the originator of lyco art, or lyrical conceptualism, presents a stimulating and meaningful panorama of a new element on the periodic table of art. This book is a significant contribution to the development of contemporary art and the history of ideas. Similar to his approach to poetry, Paul Hartal's vision of paintings (views) identifies the heart of art as the art of the heart: Love is the most important journey of life and its…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In Paul Hartal's Lyco Art, the act of creation inexorably interweaves the logic of passion with the passion of logic through the voyage of consciousness. Paul Hartal, the originator of lyco art, or lyrical conceptualism, presents a stimulating and meaningful panorama of a new element on the periodic table of art. This book is a significant contribution to the development of contemporary art and the history of ideas. Similar to his approach to poetry, Paul Hartal's vision of paintings (views) identifies the heart of art as the art of the heart: Love is the most important journey of life and its final destination. We come to this world through love in order to love and to be loved.
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Autorenporträt
An award-winning artist and poet, Paul Hartal's painting, "Flowers for Cézanne," won the Prix de Paris in 1978 and was exhibited in the Luxembourg Museum in the French Capital. He displayed his oeuvre in museums and galleries in New York, Saint Petersburg (Russia), Montreal, Budapest, Seoul and many other venues. With the 1975 publication of A Manifesto on Lyrical Conceptualism, Hartal introduced a new element onto the periodic table of art. Lyrical Conceptualism, or Lyco Art, views the creative process as the interaction of emotion and intellect. In Lyco Art, the passion of logic and the logic of passion are inexorably interwoven through the voyage of consciousness. Lyco Art identi¿es the meaning of art with its life serving purpose. It also expands the boundaries of aesthetics through constructing a bridge between art and science. In 1986, Hartal founded in Montreal the Center for Art, Science and Technology endorsed by renowned scientists and artists, among them the Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman, the mathematician Paul Halmos and the artist Victor Vasarely. Hartal also had founded the Lyrical Conceptualist Society, which organized exhibitions, including the ¿rst International Concrete Poetry event in Montreal.