Abstract Art
• Abstract:– A term generally used to describe art that is not
representational or based on external reality or nature.
– Abstract art seeks to break away from traditional representation of physical objects. It explores the relationships of forms and colors
Piet Mondrian(1872-1944)
1892 - Born in Holland - Grew up in a strict Calvinist environment.
Early Years:Studied at the Academy of Amsterdam:
- Influenced by the Dutch artistic tradition e.g. Rembrandt
Piet Mondrian
Earliest works:- Mainly lyrical landscapes
• Sought to express a mood.• Used a taut and united composition. • Rejected romantic effects and attractive-looking details.
Piet Mondrian
Windmill1905/6Oil on canvas
Piet Mondrian
Dusk1890Oil on canvas
Trees on the Gein1902/5Oil on canvas
Piet Mondrian
• Evident in Mondrian’s early work:
- Preoccupation with geometric forms & linear patterns: ~ Made use of :
~ The play of horizontals and verticals~ Symmetrical arrangements~ Effects of light & gradations of colour.
Piet Mondrian
The Red Tree1908
Vincent van GoghCypresses1889
Piet Mondrian
One of the most important in Mondrian’s series on the tree -- an example of monumentality.
- Reduced a leafless tree to rhythms of colours and lines.
- Interpreted his impression of reality, transformed it into an idiom of his own: all the details of the tree’s appearance are straightened out on the pictorial surface, so that linear structure of the brush strokes produces an almost completely flat impression.
The Red Tree1908
Piet Mondrian
- Colours are reduced to contrasts of red and blue, which symbolically represents a balance between the tragic and the serene:
Blue suggested infinity (referenced from Van Gogh) and calm and is used to overcome the violence which is suggested by red.
- Influence of Van Gogh further found in the expressive brushwork.
- Ignored sense of distance but emphasized division of surface into colours united by movement.
The Red Tree1908
Piet Mondrian
The Red Mill1911
* Theme = The place of the individual in a larger unity
~ Expressed an inward-directed calm, the still-solitude of man in the midst of the universe. ~ The mill looks almost human, with a trunk and uplifted head.
• Through extreme simplification of colour and form, Mondrian achieved a monumental quality that makes of the mill a symbol of a world view.
Piet Mondrian
Still Life with Gingerpot I1911/12
Between 1911 and 1914:
- Lived in Paris- Greatly influenced by Analytical Cubism (the work of Picasso and Braque)
Georges BraqueViolin & Jug
1910
Piet Mondrian
Still Life with Gingerpot II1912
- Objects are organized and reduced to pictorial signs.
- Colour is subordinated to compositional unity
Piet Mondrian
The Gray Tree1912
• Constructed composition of curved lines, in light gray tints.
• Essential aspect = Structure, the methodology used to control the arbitrariness of nature.
• Used method of analytical cubism to reduce forms of objects to facets and reproduced their volume on the pictorial surface by means of superimposed planes.
Piet Mondrian
Composition No. II, Composition in line & colour
1913
Flowering Apple Tree1912
Piet Mondrian
Blue Façade
1914
Piet Mondrian
Composition 10 in Black and WhitePier & Ocean (1915)
Black horizontal & vertical dashes are painted on a gray ground. Sometimes touching or intersecting to form plus-minus signs
Contained reference to nature~ Broken, delicately dislocated grids echo the rippling of waves.
Piet Mondrian “Cubism did not accept the logical
consequences of its own discoveries; it was not developing abstraction towards its ultimate goal, the expression of pure
reality.”
~ Mondrian
Piet Mondrian
• 1917:
- Founded De Stijl (Dutch for The Style) art movement with other artists.
- Abandoned all reference to subject matter: ~ No longer began with an accidental fragment of nature. ~ Started from the principle that the absolute harmony he sought could be constructed only by means that were abstract.
• CHARACTERISTICS of DE STIJL art:
- Entirely abstract: ~ Total rejection of representation.
- Limited expressive elements to those which had universal validity & could convey order and harmony:
- Use of only:~ The straight line~ The right angle
~ 3 primary colours -- red, blue & yellow~ supplemented by white, black and gray.
Theo van Doesburg
Pure Painting
1920
Oil on canvas
Piet Mondrian
Composition with Large Blue Plane, Red, Black, Yellow, and Gray1921
Neo-Plasticism
Piet Mondrian
- Created work with compositions of horizontal and vertical lines and primary colours, models of complete harmony.
- A system of broad black lines ruled the canvas into rectangles filled with colours. No two rectangles are the same size or shape.
- Coloured areas are weighed such that they counterbalanced one another.
- Dynamic expression is achieved, together with serene harmony.
Piet Mondrian
Last works:
• In 1940: Moved to New York
- A new rhythm and excitement entered his last works, based on his experience there. - Black lines are replaced by coloured bands or by a rhythmic sequence of little blocks of colour.
New York City I1942
Piet Mondrian
Broadway Boogie-Woogie1942-3
Small blocks of red, blue, gray and yellow were added to give a new tempo, movement or rhythm. ~ Suggested flashing lights encountered in the city.
- Liveliness due to Mondrian’s encounter with : * Boogie-woogie music * Experience of the daily rhythm of New York