Abstract Composition

Tony Bechara Puerto Rican

Not on view

The atmospheric, changing nature of perception and its relationship to color lays at the core of Bechara’s artistic practice. Influenced by French Neo-Impressionist pointillism, in which small, distinct dots of color are applied in patterns to form an image, as well as the techniques of Byzantine mosaics, Bechara paints highly systematized geometric compositions based on sequences of squares. In the early 1970s, he devised a rigorous methodology of setting a grid on the canvas with masking tape, painstakingly painting one square after another according to a premeditated scale of colors, then changing the tape to paint another set of squares as the composition began to take its unforeseen final form. This repetitive mathematical sequencing establishes an overall pattern whose visual effect is unpredictable. Rigor and chance are thus intrinsically linked in the artist’s creative process.

Abstract Composition, Tony Bechara (Puerto Rican, 1939–2025), Acrylic on canvas

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©Tony Bechara, Courtesy Lisson Gallery