Livinus van de Bundt


Livinus van de Bundt was a Dutch artist, who called himself Livinus. Initially a painter and graphic artist, he was the founder of an art academy and later became a pioneer of light art and video art.

Biography

Livinus Arie Cornelis Jan van de Bundt was born 5 March 1909 in Zeist. His father was Jan van de Bundt, his mother Sijgje Cornelia van der Vlies. Livinus had two sisters, Corry and Kiki.
Livinus started painting aged 14. From 1929 to 1931 he worked for Koninklijke Begeer. He enrolled at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten in The Hague in 1932, but left prematurely in 1934 after a number of conflicts. In 1937 he went to Paris to study with Stanley Hayter at Atelier 17 for a year.
A 1938 exhibition of his abstract work was not well received, provoking him to destroy his work. Aged 30 he gave up painting, unable to achieve the brilliance he envisaged. For several years he produced only graphic work in black and white.
During World War II Livinus van de Bundt applied his graphic skills to forge passports. In 1947 he founded the Vrije Academie voor Beeldende Kunsten in The Hague and remained its director until 1964.
He started working with light, using a variety of materials. His chronopeintures contained illuminated pieces of colored plastic. Livinus' secretive luminodynamical machine, built in the 1950s from lenses, bulbs and electronic components, enabled the operator to generate color effects using a keyboard. He built a drum kit which triggered light effects when hit.
Van de Bundt married Mieke van der Burgt, herself an artist working in graphics, ceramics and textiles. The pair had a daughter, Livina van de Bundt, and a son, Jeep van de Bundt, who became an artist, musician and later a classic car dealer.
In 1970, while on a visit to Intermedia in Vancouver, Livinus started experimenting with video. He produced several video art projects, together with his son.
Livinus van de Bundt died 11 October 1979 in The Hague.

Works

Incomplete list of extant and lost works:
The lights were switched off during the 1973 oil crisis to save electricity, and would never function again. Despite protests the installation was demolished in 1998.

Solo Exhibitions

19 December 1958 – 19 January 1959
Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Illustrated catalog with text in Dutch and English
13 August 1965 – 24 October 1965
Gemeentemuseum, Arnhem
15 January 2011 – 6 February 2011
GEMAK, The Hague

Group Exhibitions

25 September 1966 – 4 December 1966
Stedelijk van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven
21 October 2017 – 10 December 2017
Museum Hilversum

Awards

Van de Bundt was awarded the 1964 Sikkens Prize for his fotopeintures.