May 5, 2023

Mondrian’s Abstractions 

Composition with Blue, Red, Yellow, and Black (1922)

Dutch painter and pictorial abstraction visionary, Piet Mondrian, was responsible for one of the most important art movements in the 20th century. Mondrian single-handedly founded Neoplasticism, concocting a way to represent form that was completely divorced from reality. Modern art, as we know it, would arguably not exist without Mondrian’s contribution.

Piet Mondrian, 1943 © Fritz Glarner, courtesy Collection RKD - Netherlands Institute for Art History

Mondrian has experimented with his name almost as much as his artistic style. Like his forms, Mondrian reduced his name from Pieter Cornelius Mondriaan to Mondrian, distancing himself from his Dutch roots. Although still occasionally referred to as “Mondriaan,” the artist officially dropped the second “a” from his name in 1911, rendering it a very appropriate anagram; “I Paint Modern.”

Composition with Grid 1 (1918)

A member of the Dutch Theosophical Society, Mondrian’s artistic technique was defined by Theosophical doctrine. Mondrian believed that spirituality could be accessed through creation and art, especially if forms were reduced to their most basic elements. Basic compositions and shapes, in their purest form, reveal the fundamental and opposing forces of the universe: masculine and feminine, positive and negative and dynamic and static.

Composition with Blue, Red, Yellow, and Black (1922)

"As a pure representation of the human mind, art will express itself in an aesthetically purified, that is to say, abstract form…this new plastic idea will ignore the particulars of appearance, that is to say, natural form and colour.”
Alongside Theo Van Doesburg, Mondrian founded the De Stijl magazine. Translating to “The Style,” De Stijl was synonymous with Neoplasticism, a movement that also referred to architects who utilised primary colours, basic forms, shape and composition to test the boundaries of abstract art. The movement sought to reject practices of the past, through the distillation of shapes into their purest forms.

Composition (1916)

Despite the simplistic nature of his works, they would take several months to complete. The straight line was one of Mondrian’s most important pictorial devices, as he claimed it facilitates the human ability to understand complicated experiences. Straight lines bring a sense of order and expression to humanity, where the sharpness of the line’s edge has a more profound impact on the overall work.

Still Life with Gingerpot II (1912)

Mondrian’s studio was also his home, a fusion of half-finished artworks and domestic furniture, and he often hosted fellow creatives and intellectuals in his workplace domicile. His apartments in Paris and London were wholly dedicated to his art, where he painted his walls white with sporadic red plains, rendering his home a fully-immersive, three-dimensional De Stijl artwork.

Piet Mondrian in his studio-home, 1930 © Charles Karsten via Het Nieuwe Institut
Yves Saint Laurent's The Mondrian Collection, 1965
Study for a Composition (1940-1941)

Source: artsper.com

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