Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Julio Le Parc, Argentine Master Of Kinetic Art, Dies At 97


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) ARGENTINA · ART

Key Facts

- The death: Argentine artist Julio Le Parc, a leading figure of kinetic and optical art, died on Saturday, May 30, 2026, in Paris, at the age of 97.

- The confirmation: His family and Argentine officials confirmed the death after a progressive decline in his health; his son Yamil said he had been unable to eat for a month.

- The origins: Born in 1928 in Palmira, Mendoza province, he settled in Paris in 1958 and co-founded the Visual Art Research Group.

- The legacy: His work is held by museums including New York's Museum of Modern Art, the Pompidou Centre in Paris and Tate Modern in London.

- The timing: Tate Modern was due to open a major retrospective of his work on June 11, with a preview on June 8.

Julio Le Parc, one of the most internationally recognized Argentine artists and a defining figure of kinetic and optical art, has died in Paris at 97. Across more than seven decades he turned light, colour and movement into immersive experiences that sought to make the viewer an active participant, and he remained creatively engaged to the end, awaiting a major retrospective at Tate Modern.

How Julio Le Parc's death was confirmed

Le Parc died on Saturday in Paris, the city where he had lived and worked since the late 1950s, his family and official sources confirmed. His son Yamil told the newspaper La Nación that the artist died of old age, having been unable to eat for the previous month.

Argentina's culture secretary, Leonardo Cifelli, paid tribute on social media, calling Le Parc one of the most significant Argentine artists in the country's history and a symbol of Argentine creativity projected to the world.

What defined Julio Le Parc's art

Le Parc built a body of work based on experimentation with light, colour and movement. Through mobile structures, reflections, lights, shadows and optical effects, he developed immersive experiences that continually altered the viewer's perception of space.

He sought to replace the passive spectator with an active, playful participant, treating art as a kind of social laboratory capable of producing unpredictable situations. That pursuit, pursued with what observers described as a utopian spirit, redefined the relationship between the public and the work.

From Mendoza to Paris

Born on September 23, 1928, in Palmira, in the western province of Mendoza, Le Parc studied at the National School of Fine Arts and developed his first artistic experiences in Buenos Aires before a scholarship took him to Paris in 1958.

There, he co-founded the Visual Art Research Group, a collective that pioneered kinetic and participatory experiences and challenged traditional forms of producing and exhibiting art. From France, his work crossed borders and made him one of the most internationally recognized Argentine artists.

An artist who mixed art and activism

Le Parc's career was marked by political conviction as well as aesthetic innovation. He was expelled from France in 1968 for taking part in a popular workshop during the May protests, boycotted the São Paulo Biennial in 1969 in opposition to Brazil's dictatorship, and protested in Puerto Rico over political prisoners in 1970.

He was also known for questioning the art market's logic, once remarking on the absurdity of judging a work's artistic value by the price paid for it. The principal cultural centre in his home province, the Espacio Cultural Julio Le Parc, has carried his name since 2012.

A retrospective he did not live to see open

Le Parc remained active to the end, working on a major retrospective due to open at Tate Modern in London on June 11, with a preview for invited guests on June 8. His son said the artist had fought to the last and was eager to attend.

His works form part of the permanent collections of some of the world's most important museums, ensuring that the experiments in perception he began decades ago will continue to engage audiences well beyond his lifetime.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Julio Le Parc?

An Argentine artist born in 1928, a leading figure of kinetic and optical art who worked with light, colour and movement and lived in Paris from 1958.

When and where did he die?

In Paris on Saturday, May 30, 2026, at the age of 97, after a progressive decline in his health.

Where can his work be seen?

In permanent collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Pompidou Centre in Paris and Tate Modern in London.

What was the Tate Modern retrospective?

A major retrospective of his work due to open on June 11, 2026, with a preview on June 8, which he had hoped to attend.

Connected Coverage

For more on the region's art scene, see our coverage of the São Paulo Biennial's first Northeastern stop.

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