Attila Kovacs
Born amidst the austere backdrop of Budapest in 1938, the late Attila Kovács operated not merely as a painter, but as an architect of the ethereal. His intellectual lineage traces back to the radical geometries of János Bolyai—a conceptual rebellion that severed the umbilical cord between mathematics and the physical world. Much like the High Renaissance titans, Piero della Francesca or Alberti, who harnessed Euclidean rigors to carve perfection into plaster, Kovács transmuted abstract calculations into autonomous visual realms. Between the pivotal years of 1964 and 1970, he forged a lexicon of structural ingenuity. He dubbed this “Frame of Reference,” or perhaps more evocatively, “Transmuting Plasticity.” Within this framework, canvases ceased to be static surfaces; they transformed into vessels for non-Euclidean … Read more