Annotated Mona Lisa, The - Strickland, Carol [111]
Mondrian, “Gray Tree,” 1912, Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague.
Mondrian, “Flowering Apple Tree,” 1912, Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague.
Mondrian, “Composition in Red, Blue, and Yellow,” 1920, MoMA, NY. One of the most important proponents of abstract act, Mondrian painted geometric designs in limited colors.
The major contribution of De Stijl to art was its drive toward absolute abstraction, without any reference whatsoever to objects in nature. “Art systematically eliminates,” Mondrian said, “the world of nature and man.” He wanted art to be as mathematical as possible, a blueprint for an organized life.
A control freak, Mondrian even transformed his own environment into one of his paintings. He covered his studio walls with rectangles in primary colors or gray, white, and black. Although the studio was as sparsely furnished as a monk’s cell, he kept an artificial tulip in a vase, its leaves painted white (since he had banned the color green). He painted all furniture white or black and his record player bright red.
Mondrian was important in the history of art for opposing the cult of subjective feeling. By the 1950s his easily identifiable style was so famous that for many it became a symbol of modern art.
MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE: GEOMETRY TO LIVE IN
Before the twentieth century, “prestige” architecture always meant rehashing the past. Victorian homes were bulky and complicated, with turrets and carved gingerbread. The new International Style of the 1920s, so called because it transcended national boundaries, changed all that. For these architects, science and industry were almost a religion. Their streamlined designs gave form to the Machine Age by rejecting all historical ornament. It was like shedding a Victorian bathing costume, complete with bloomers, parasol, and ruffled cap, for a string bikini.
GROPIUS: BAUHAUS DESIGN. Walter Gropius (pronounced GROW pee us; 1883-1969), director of Germany’s influential Bauhaus school of design, probably had more indirect influence on the look of modern cities than any single man. He was mentor to generations of architects who radically changed the look of metropolises everywhere. Gropius conceived buildings totally in terms of twentieth-century technology, with no reference to the past. The Bauhaus buildings he constructed are simple glass boxes, which became a worldwide cliché.
“Architecture is a collective art,” Gropius believed, urging his Bauhaus colleagues to collaborate like medieval cathedral-builders. The architecture he envisioned obliterated individual personality in favor of designs that could be mass-produced. In a debased form, Gropius knock-offs became the anonymous, high-rise buildings in every city from Topeka to Tokyo.
Rietveld, Schroeder House, 1924, Utrecht. Rietveld used only primary colors with black, white, and gray to design this International Style house of flat planes and straight lines like a Mondrian painting.
THE INTERNATIONAL STYLE
GOAL: High-tech, clean design
ENEMIES: Ornament, historical reference
HOUSE: Machine for living
STYLE: Glass and steel boxes
FAVORITE SUBJECT: Geometry
CULMINATION: Seagram Building
QUOTE: Mies van der Rohe, while strolling the
Chicago lakeshore surveying his work: “Well, they will know we were here.”
MIES: LESS IS MORE. Gropius’s most famous colleague was German architect Mies (rhymes with “please”) van der Rohe (1886-1969). Son of a stonemason, Mies designed bare towers with glass curtain walls. His materials like steel frame and plate glass determined the form of his structures. New