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Mondrian Evolution (Paperback)
Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, Kathrin Bessen, Sam Keller, Ulf Kuster, Susanne Gaensheimer, …
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Piet Mondrian had a decisive influence on the development of
painting from figuration to abstraction. On the occasion of his
150th birthday, Mondrian Evolution is dedicated to his multifaceted
work and artistic development. Initially working in the tradition
of Dutch landscape painting of the late 19th century, Symbolism and
Cubism subsequently took on great significance for him. It was not
until the early 1920s that the artist focused on a wholly
non-representational pictorial vocabulary, limited to the
rectangular arrangement of black lines with surfaces in white and
the primary colors blue, red and yellow. In separate chapters, this
path is traced through motifs such as windmills, dunes, and the
sea, farms reflected in the water, and plants in various forms of
abstraction.
This exhibition celebrates the historic moment in the history of
modern art when Kazimir Malevich debuted his new non-objective
paintings under the banner of Suprematism and Vladimir Tatlin
introduced his revolutionary counter-relief sculptures. They were
bitter rivals and diametrically opposed in their creative thinking,
so when an exhibition in which their new works appeared, entitled
0,10: The Last Futurist Exhibition of Painting and organized by
fellow artist Ivan Puni in Petrograd in 1915, the other 12 artists
in the show chose sides. It was a stylistically diverse exhibition,
with cubist-inspired works and the first non-objective paintings
and reliefs. The Beyeler's presentation will include a large number
of the works from the original exhibition. The catalogue will
include essays by exhibition curator Matthew Drutt and other
leading scholars, as well as documents gathered together and
translated for the first time. (German edition ISBN
978-3-7757-4032-6) Ausstellung/Exhibition: Fondation Beyeler,
Riehen/Basel 4.10.2015-17.1.2016
Edward Hopper's world-famous paintings articulate an idiosyncratic
view of modern life. With his impressive subjects, independent
pictorial vocabulary, and virtuoso play of colors, Hopper continues
to influence to this day the image of the United States in the
first half of the twentieth century. He began his career as an
illustrator and became famous around the globe for his oil
paintings. They testify to his great interest in the effects of
color and his mastery in depicting light and shadow. The Fondation
Beyeler is devoting its large exhibition in the spring of 2020 to
Hopper's iconic images of the vast American landscape. The
catalogue gathers together all of the paintings, watercolors, and
drawings from the 1910s to the 1960s on display in the exhibition,
and supplements them with essays focused on the subject of
depicting landscape.
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