
Martial Raysse
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Martial Raysse is a prominent French Nouveau Realist artist. Working with found-object assemblages, advertising imagery, and the elevation of kitsch to fine art, Raysse is often viewed as a predecessor of the Pop Art movement. His later works consisted of elaborate paintings fit with working neon lights, often featuring bright colors and Arcadian settings akin to the work of Nicholas Poussin. Born on February 12, 1936 in Golfe-Juan, France to a family of ceramicists, he started writing poetry and painting at an early age. By 1960, Raysse was a founding member of the Nouveau Realism movement, alongside artists such as Yves Klein and Jean Tinguely. The group sought to utilize and transform the industrial scale of consumer society in their own work, and exploit readymade materials for the purposes of conceptual and formal concerns. Today, Raysse’s work is held in the collections of the Tate Gallery in London, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., among others. He lives and works in Issigeac, France.
Known for
Credits

The Big Departure (1972)
Director

Homero Presto (1968)
Director

Portrait Electro Machin Chose (1967)
Director

Camembert Martial Extra-doux (1969)
Director
Mon petit coeur (1995)
Director

Intra muros (1977)
Director
La petite danse (1980)
Director

Jesus-Cola (1967)
Director

Pig Music (1971)
Director
Sous un arbre perché (1981)
Director

Ex-voto (2005)
Director
Re-Fatma (2008)
Director
Lotel des folles Fatmas (1976)
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