
Peter Struycken, born in The Hague in 1939, was one of the first artists in the Netherlands to incorporate computers into his artistic process around 1969. He was also among the first to create artwork on a large scale for public spaces and buildings.
Struycken’s work takes on various forms – paintings, drawings, installations, and moving images – characterized by abstract patterns and figures. These, along with color and light, play a significant role in his installations. In 1981, Struycken designed the well-known postage stamp featuring former Queen Beatrix, made up of countless tiny dots varying in size. This stands as a unique piece in Struycken’s body of work as figurative elements typically do not feature in his pieces.
Since 1987, Struycken has also designed lighting plans and theatrical sets. This is evident in his piece “Untitled” from 1993, which is a part of the colonnade beneath the archive building of Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam. “Untitled” illuminates the publicly accessible colonnade – the columns – after sunset.
Every ten minutes, the colors of the columns change, controlled by a computer program that ensures the red, green, and blue lamps display a different combination of primary and mixed colors each time. This theatrical passage becomes almost like a stage, an ambiguous space neither indoors nor fully outdoors.
Struycken studied at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague (1957-1961). From 1964 to 1976, he led a department specializing in environmental art at the art academy in Arnhem. (Group) exhibitions of Struycken’s work have taken place at institutions such as Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (Rotterdam), the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Galerie De Expeditie (Amsterdam), and the Stedelijk Museum Schiedam.
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