Victor Vasarely was born in 1908 in Pecs, Hungary, and first studied to become a doctor in Budapest before devoting himself to painting in 1927. He studied art between 1928 and 1929 at the Mühely Academy under Alexander Bortnyk who had just returned from the Bauhaus in Germany where he had been much impregnated by the works of Josef Albers and Moholy-Nagy.
The Mühely Academy was thus nicknamed the Hungarian Bauhaus and Bortnyk gave his preference to the new advertising techniques which were applied in Europe at that time.
Vasarely first worked for some advertising groups in Budapest and went in 1930 to Paris where he worked for the Havas, Draeger and Devambez firms.
From 1935 until 1938 he produced several series dedicated to some themes relating to the Zebra chessboards, the tigers, the Harlequins or the Martians as he shown a keen interest in «axonometric distortions» applied to real forms, benefiting from the spectacular teachings at the Bauhaus. His aim was to create illusion in deforming lines, spheres waves and volumes and giving the impression of deepness by using cellophane sheets which were superposed in his works.
Vasarely was then much influenced by Mondrian, Malevitch, Sophie Taueber-Arp, Herbin, Léger and Delaunay and also by Cimabue, Uccello, Piero della Francesca, Georges de La Tour or Vermeer.
After the Second World War he went on to apply the principles of geometric abstraction giving to his works deep optical effects during the early 1960's.
His first one-man exhibition took place in 1946 but his works then were quite figurative with a symbolist touch. In 1947 he went on to produce abstract works under the influence of Mondrian and Magnelli with a major inclination for the use of white colour but illusion was not his concern yet.