Rubint Ávrahám Péter
Games Series (1.)

Description
No description available yet.
Curators

Ács Érmes Károly
curator
ermesprojekt@gmail.com
Detailed description
Péter Ávrahám Rubint's Art
Péter Ávrahám Rubint is one of the most exciting personalities in contemporary Hungarian visual art. He was born in 1975 in Budapest, where he discovered the freedom of visual expression at a young age. He studied at the Hungarian University of Fine Arts, where he was influenced by the fusion of abstract and expressionist traditions.
In his early works, he applied the technique of layering: he applies layers of paint to his canvases, and by partially scraping them off and enriching them with additional pigments, he creates dynamic, deeply textured surfaces. These experiments evoke the changing face of urban environments where the collision of old buildings and modern glass surfaces creates the dynamics of the image.
In the 2005 series titled “Transitions,” Rubint interpreted the social and cultural waves following the regime change in Hungary. The colors and forms that appear in the paintings carry personal memories and collective experiences at the same time. Another significant milestone is the “Light Stream” installation (2012), where he created a spatial experience from a combination of LED strips, rounded mirror lenses, and colored plexiglass.
In his later works, he emphasized the intersection of digital and analog techniques. The multimedia project “City Pulse” (2018) processed live data: it transformed real-time traffic, noise, and air quality data into projected light games, raising questions about the relationship between technology and humanity.
Péter Ávrahám regularly exhibits both at home and abroad, including cities like Berlin, Paris, and New York. His works have been recognized with the Derkovits scholarship and the Mihály Munkácsy Prize. In addition, he actively supports community art initiatives and mentors young creators.
Overall, Péter Ávrahám Rubint's art operates on the border between tradition and innovation. His greatest merit is that he has been able to renew himself continuously while powerfully representing contemporary social issues and personal experiences in a vivid visual language.