Thursday, 25 September 2014

MONDRIAN AND HIS STUDIOS @ TATE LIVERPOOL





“To study Mondrian is to shine a light on the relationship between popular culture and the canonisation of art”

Certain works of art embed themselves in the public’s consciousness, in such a way that surpasses their creators -the artist’s life, and the circumstances in which they were produced. In  Mondrian’s case, it isn’t so much a single  painting that acts as the pièce de résistance to eclipse the artist himself or outshine his other works, but rather the  ‘look’ of his iconic neoplastic oeuvre.  
Tate’s blockbuster summer exhibition- Mondrian and his Studios – marks the 70th anniversary of the artist’s death and offers a window into his life; through an insight into his itinerant studios, mapping his journey from his homeland in the Netherlands, as a figurative painter, to   his rise to international significance, moving towards geometric abstraction as a proponent for the ‘De Stijl’ movement. Offering a new insight into his restless pursuit to reduce, refine and re-assert the essence of line and space, colour and form.
The weight of this exhibition is devoted to his signature panelled pieces – the ‘Neoplastic’ – an examination of primary colour, geometric space and line, void of any attempt at natural form. But Mondrian, not content with the confines of canvas, evolved ‘The Style’ to include three dimensional maquettes, furniture and most notably this manifests itself in the ‘atelier as artwork’ of his studios.






 Taking visitors through the artist’s ateliers in Paris, London and New York, the exhibition trails Mondrian’s personal and aesthetic journey, and exposes links between the two: a key highlight of this retrospective is the immersive full-scale reconstruction of his Parisian studio, at 26 Rue du Depart, which allows viewers to momentarily occupy not only Mondrian’s creative domain but also step inside what appears to be a three-dimensional version of one of his paintings.
The retrospective begins with a display of earlier works such as trees and seascapes; the latitude and freedom of these paintings of organic forms is refreshing to see in contrast with the rigorous geometry characteristic of his later compositions. The exhibition path quickly navigates us towards the artist’s move to Paris, which sees Mondrian’s iconic compositional bravura really take off.
On first exposure to the main exhibition space (comprising the ‘neoplastic’ collection), Mondrian’s primary coloured pieces appear, perhaps, lost in a giant lattice of tedious homogeneousness. But when forced to scrutinise each painting individually, the more discerning viewer notices the composure, the balance and a sense of equilibrium in these impeccably calibrated and nuanced compositions.
His artwork has been paid homage to repeatedly, perhaps more than any other modern artist, Piet Mondrian has turned into a global brand, with his trademark yellow, blue, and red geometric compositions appropriated by pop culture. However this scholarly and judiciously curated retrospective is due much credit for its success in casting a new light on the old lines.
Mondrian and his Studios is juxtaposed with a comparative exhibition of Nasreen Mohamedi. A relatively unknown pioneering Indian artist, whose work comprises collage, paint and pen to create stark graphic compositions. This perfect pairing between Mondrian and Mohamedi, allows for a better insight into both artists’ journeys toward abstraction. Though working in different times and in different places, Mohamedi and Mondrian had similar motivations in their practices and in what they aimed to discover and achieve through art; both were able to extract the maximum out of the minimum.


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