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The first major international exhibition of op art was The Responsive Eye, held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1965. The exhibition was popular with the public, although less so with critics, and op art was regarded as an expression of the mood of the swinging sixties (op art designs appeared in women's fashion, for example).
Op art, which relied mainly on mathematics and colour theories to achieve its startling effects, can also be seen as part of the reaction against the subjective emotionalism of abstract expressionism, which had dominated US art in the 1950s. However, op art was not confined to the USA; the two most famous exponents were the British painter Bridget Riley and the Hungarian-born French artist Victor Vasarely.
Op art had passed its peak of popularity by the end of the 1960s, but Riley, Vasarely, and others continued to create work in this style long after then.
Red and white were the colours of the Inca Empire. Red represents the blood shed in the fight for independence. White stands for peace and justice. Effective date: 25 February 1825.
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