Provenance: Christie’s Amsterdam, Twentieth Century Art, June 2000, Lot 339 • Private collection, The Netherlands
Exhibitions: In bruikleen aan het Dordrechts Museum, oktober 2000 – september 2002
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Carel Nicolaas Visser (1928–2015) is regarded as one of the most important Dutch sculptors of the twentieth century. Visser studied at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague and began his career as a painter.
In the 1950s, Carel Visser started experimenting with sculpture and made the transition to three-dimensional work. His early sculptures were primarily abstract and made from materials such as iron, steel, and wood. He later expanded his use of materials to include rubber, glass, and plastic.
Visser’s sculptures are characterized by a combination of geometric forms and organic elements. He was interested in the relationship between form and space and in how sculptures relate to their surroundings. His works are often abstract and minimalist, reflecting his pursuit of simplicity and essence.
Carel Visser received several awards and distinctions for his work, including the David Röell Prize for Visual Arts (1961) and the Lifetime Achievement Award for Visual Arts from the Fund for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture (2005). His sculptures can be found in many public and private collections in the Netherlands and abroad.






