The Father of Op Art does not want to be called “the Father of Op Art”.

The title of Julian Stanczak’s first solo show in New York was meant to stir up controversy. “Optical Paintings” managed to do just that, with the ensuing media uproar coining the iconic title of the Op Art movement. But Stanczak never fully accepted that title. In an interview he pointed out that it doesn’t fully encompass the depth of his work: “it diminishes the seriousness of the artist's search, the hard work and convictions - regardless of the visual form that it might take.”

One has only to look at the Stanczak’s early life, experiencing trial and tragedy, to understand what search the artist might be talking about. As a child lost in the chaos of WWII, Stanczak survived a Siberian labor camp, escaping at the age of only 13 with severe injuries that cost him the use of his right arm. He had to teach himself to paint with his left, but he also had to teach himself to forget the past and live a normal life. 

Art played an important part in the process of healing, but not by giving himself - as is understood and portrayed in pop culture - to the outpour of emotions onto the canvas; Stanczak took a different approach, through focus and restraint. “In the search for Art,” he says, “you have to separate what is emotional and what is logical. I did not want to be bombarded daily by the past,- I looked for anonymity of actions through non-referential, abstract art.”

It doesn’t take an expert to see in Stanczak’s work an ardent search for stability and order, a world that the artist could entirely control, but one that is simultaneously beautiful, free and vibrant. By creating order, one can feel a sense of empowerment and potency in a world that is full of chaos. A sense of taking charge of one’s own destiny becomes manifest in methodical physical actions; Stanczak’s process required precisely taped layers, often with fine details, strictly rendered and unmasked in sequential order. But all that precision does not stifle, on the contrary, it sets a perfect setting for vibrant color to take center stage unhindered, while the artist is fully immersed in the “investigation of human perception” - in the Stanczak’s own words - which probes into the very essence of human experience in the physical world.