You have most likely seen the work of Piet Mondrian, the Dutch painter who lived from 1872 until 1944.
Like the painting shown here. Seems so simple. Mainly black lines creating squares and rectangles that are mainly white but periodically filled with bright primary colors. Critics claim it is too simple, that it is something a grade-schooler with a ruler and some paints could replicate easily.
Maybe. Maybe not. Who cares?
But putting that side aside, his work has always remained refresh and modern through most of the last century up to this very minute. Outside of time, like it represents a future moment that exists just beyond this very moment at all times. And that factor in itself makes his work appealing to me.
I will never list Mondrian as a true influence or even a real favorite of mine, there is much to be gained as an artist from studying his work. The elegance of his structures and the space created within, for example. Or how he transformed his work through the years from a style of impressionistic realism into cubism and then into the style of his that we know so well, stripping away all detail and content down to the bare essence of being.
The video below shows that evolution beautifully, with musical accompaniment from Phillip Glass. I hope you’ll find it interesting to see how the work makes that transformation. Take a look below.
Let us note that art – even on an abstract level – has never been confined to ‘idea’; art has always been the ‘realized’ expression of equilibrium.
-Piet Mondrian
That’s really an interesting video. I remember you posting about him some time ago, and what’s most interesting is how much more appealing his work seems to me today. I think it might be the movement from more “chaotic” paintings to the clarity and clean lines of his later work. Which of us doesn’t feel the need for a little extra clarity from time to time? His work is a nice antidote to our current muddle in other areas.
but was not always so
Amen to that, LInda!
i am at work. What is theGlass piece?
It is “Closing,” the 6th track on the album.
which is lovely
Thanks for putting that together…..~Margaret
Thanks, Margaret, but the video was not my doing. I just borrowed it from YouTube. But it is well done and shows what I was seeing in Mondrian’s work.