Piet Mondriaan

Painter (1872–1944)

Dutch painter Piet Mondrian began his career firmly rooted in the representational form, favoring naturalistic and impressionistic landscapes. His style was influenced by Picasso and Braque as it morphed into his signature non-representational form which he termed Neo-Plasticism. It was through this form that he became an important contributor to the De Stijl art movement.
— from biography.com

References in culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

  • The National Museum of Serbia was the first museum to include one of Mondrian’s paintings in its permanent exhibition.[23]
  • Along with Klee and Kandinsky, Mondrian was one of the main inspirations to the early pointillist musical aesthetic of serialist composer Pierre Boulez,[24] although his interest in Mondrian was restricted to the works of 1914–15.[25] By May 1949 Boulez said he was “suspicious of Mondrian,” and by December 1951 expressed a dislike for his paintings (regarding them as “the most denuded of mystery that have ever been in the world”), and a strong preference for Klee.[26]
  • In the 1930s, the French fashion designer Lola Prusac, who worked at that time for Hermès in Paris, designed a range of luggage and bags inspired by the latest works of Mondrian: inlays of red, blue, and yellow leather squares.[27]
  • In 2001–2003 British artist Keith Milow made a series of paintings based on the so-called Transatlantic Paintings (1935–1940) by Mondrian.[28]
  • Fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent‘s Fall 1965 Mondrian collection featured shift dresses in blocks of primary color with black bordering, inspired by Mondrian.[29] The collection proved so popular that it inspired a range of imitations that encompassed garments from coats to boots.
  • In the 1970s the television show The Partridge Family painted a 1957 Chevrolet school bus in Mondrian style.
  • The La Vie Claire cycling team’s bicycles and clothing designs were inspired by Mondrian’s work throughout the 1980s. The French ski and bicycle equipment manufacturer LOOK, which also sponsored the team, used a Mondrian-inspired logo for a while. The style was revived in 2008 for a limited edition frame.[30]
  • 1980s R&B sensation Force MDs created a popular music video for their hit “Love is a House”, superimposing themselves performing inside of digitally drawn squares inspired by Composition II.[31]
  • Piet is an esoteric programming language named after Piet Mondrian.[32]
  • Mondrian (programming language) is a programming language named after him.[33]
  • The Mondrian is a 20-story high-rise in the Cityplace neighborhood of Oak Lawn, Dallas, Texas (US). Construction started on the structure in 2003 and the building was completed in 2005.
  • In 2008, Nike released a pair of Dunk Low SB shoes inspired by Mondrian’s iconic neo-plastic paintings.[34]
  • From 6 June to 5 October 2014, the Tate Liverpool will display the largest ever UK collection of Mondrian’s works, in a commemoration of the 70th anniversary of his death. “Mondrian and his Studios” includes a life-size reconstruction of his Paris Studio. Charles Darwent, writing in The Guardian, said: “With its black floor and white walls hung with moveable panels of red, yellow and blue, the studio at Rue du Départ was not just a place for making Mondrians. It was a Mondrian – and a generator of Mondrians.”[35]

Biography in Links:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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