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Piet Mondrian 1872-1944 Dutch pioneer of art, who developed from early
pictures to geometric abstract works of a most rigorous kind. Born in Amersfoort, Utrecht. Studied at the Amsterdam 1892-4 and again, part-time, 1896-7. Friendship with the painter Simon Mans and painted landscapes in the
Hague School tradition. Began to work in a more vividly coloured and sometimes style in 1908, joined the Theosophic Organisation in 1909 and made some works of a character. First one-man exhibition with C.R.H. Spoor and Jan
Sluyters at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1909. Lived in Paris 1912-14; was influenced by , which he carried to the point of abstraction. Returned to Holland in 1914 and step by step evolved a more simplified abstract style which he called
, restricted to the three primary colours and to a grid of black vertical and horizontal lines on a white ground; associated with van Doesburg in the movement 1917-25. Lived 1919-38 in Paris where he joined the group
Abstraction-Cr-23ation in 1931. Moved to London 1938-40, living near Gabo and Ben Nicholson, then in 1940 to New York where he started to develop a more colourful style, with coloured lines and syncopated rhythms. Died in New York. Published
in: Ronald Alley, Catalogue of the Tate Gallery's Collection of Modern Art other than Works by British Artists, Tate Gallery and Sotheby Parke-Bernet, London 1981, pp.532-3
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