In 1969 the Art Committee of the Callahan Eye Foundation trustees William H. Hulsey, Carl Jernigan, and Dr. Alston Callahan began a search for an artiest to do a major work for the facade of the building. Agam, a pioneer and creator of kinetic painting in contemporary art, was selected.
The idea of having the viewer involved actively rather than passively in the work of art is central to Agam’s philosophy. His sculptures, for example, can be changed and rearranged or set in motion by the viewer, who becomes a participant in the act of creation. According to Michael Ragon, one of many authors who have written about Agam, the artist has added time, the fourth dimension, to works of art.
With “Complex Vision” you don’t have to know anything about art to enjoy it; you don’t even have to know what you like. The painting is a visual pleasure that can be appreciated as an elaborate experience, as an exercise in optics, or as something pleasurable to view.
The money for “Complex Vision” was donated by individuals; none came from Callahan Eye Foundation funds or from money used for patient care. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Engel donated the construction cost in memory of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Saloman and Mr. and Mrs. William P. Engel (the late Mr. Engel was Chairman of the Building Committee of the original Eye Hospital constructed in 1963); Mr. Jernigan and Mr. Hulsey were also major donors. The sculpture was fabricated and set in place by the Brice Building Company.
UAB Callahan Eye Foundation Hospital