Lee Mullican (1919-1998) was a modernist painter best known for his linear palette knife technique. In the mid-1980s at the age of 67, Mullican began working with UCLA’s Program for Technology in the Arts to explore how this signature painting style might translate to the emerging digital imaging technology of the day. Mullican started working with the IBM 5170, equipped with the Truevision Advanced Raster Graphics Adapter (TARGA), and a Summagraphics Summasketch stylus to experiment with painting and drawing on a computer. Replacing his brush and signature palette knife striations with a clickable mouse and pen-like stylus, Mullican was able to merge the late Surrealist method of automatism with the computer’s instant and precise replication of marks. He stated, “I found that beyond what one thought, the computer as being hard-lined, analytical, and predictable, it was indeed a medium fueled with the automatic, enabled by chance, and accident to discover new ways of making imagery.” Continuing Mullican’s pioneering spirit, the Estate of Lee Mullican is pleased to make available a selection of Mullican’s digital works as NFTs.
Verisart Certified: https://verisart.com/works/f1babf12-690b-43eb-9d6b-0f6d47c3ba37
In the mid-1980s, Lee Mullican, an American painter, brought art and technology one step closer together through his visionary digital works. Presented by Verisart, Estate of Lee Mullican and Marc Selwyn Fine Art, these pioneering works are being sold in their native digital format for the first time. Editorial: https://opensea.io/blog/guest-post/computer-joy-lee-mullican-a-digital-art-pioneer/
LMT-33-4 Constellation
- PreisPreis in USDMengeAblaufdatumVon
- PreisPreis in USDMengeDifferenz zum MindestpreisAblaufdatumVon
LMT-33-4 Constellation
- PreisPreis in USDMengeAblaufdatumVon
- PreisPreis in USDMengeDifferenz zum MindestpreisAblaufdatumVon
Lee Mullican (1919-1998) was a modernist painter best known for his linear palette knife technique. In the mid-1980s at the age of 67, Mullican began working with UCLA’s Program for Technology in the Arts to explore how this signature painting style might translate to the emerging digital imaging technology of the day. Mullican started working with the IBM 5170, equipped with the Truevision Advanced Raster Graphics Adapter (TARGA), and a Summagraphics Summasketch stylus to experiment with painting and drawing on a computer. Replacing his brush and signature palette knife striations with a clickable mouse and pen-like stylus, Mullican was able to merge the late Surrealist method of automatism with the computer’s instant and precise replication of marks. He stated, “I found that beyond what one thought, the computer as being hard-lined, analytical, and predictable, it was indeed a medium fueled with the automatic, enabled by chance, and accident to discover new ways of making imagery.” Continuing Mullican’s pioneering spirit, the Estate of Lee Mullican is pleased to make available a selection of Mullican’s digital works as NFTs.
Verisart Certified: https://verisart.com/works/f1babf12-690b-43eb-9d6b-0f6d47c3ba37
In the mid-1980s, Lee Mullican, an American painter, brought art and technology one step closer together through his visionary digital works. Presented by Verisart, Estate of Lee Mullican and Marc Selwyn Fine Art, these pioneering works are being sold in their native digital format for the first time. Editorial: https://opensea.io/blog/guest-post/computer-joy-lee-mullican-a-digital-art-pioneer/