Yorgo originated the unique Parisian Style in 1955 resulting in a coveted triumvirate of honor and recognition in the art circles of Paris. His moody reflections of the Parisian cafe districts, his somber images of bleak country sides gray with rain or snow, swept by cold aesthetic winds, yet evoking in brilliant flashes of color the human warmth that pierces through the chill of nature appeared
before the startled eyes of a thoroughly appreciative public in galleries stretching from Paris to Los Angeles. Although continuing to tour the world, Yorgo has decided to make the sunny, palm-lined West Coast of the United States his permanent base of operations. In 1967 Yorgo added prestige and prominence to American modern art with his innovation of Electronic Art combining for the first time the aural and stationary visual media Art in Sound and Music. Did you ever look at a painting of the seashore with the surf crashing across jumbled rocks and spewing wet foam across the sand-so realistic you could almost hear the sound of the waves? Yorgo has come up with a new artistic concept that takes a bold new step into the realm of realism in painting. Because, when you look at a Yorgo seascape you don't have to stretch your imagination, - you do hear the surf sounds. The rhythmic, throbbing, surging sounds of the sea come at you right out of the canvas. And when you look and listen long enough, the painted canvas isn't static anymore. You begin to see the pigment waves rolling into shore and the fine sea spray misting from the ocean wind. The effect then is realism, total involving realism-the ultimate in painted art. Electronic Art is a patented concept, which Yorgo incorporated to his Scientific and Suspended Space Art, both dealing with planetary motion and general astronomy. Suspended Art consists of paintings of scientific subject matter, chained horizontally from the ceiling. The suspended paintings take your view upwards, not just to the ceiling but to the wonders of Universe itself. Yorgo, truly one of the world's greatest masters of visual expression, will remain in the history of modern art as the unequaled innovator and esthetic genius of the 20th century.