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Mondrian's Friends Paris 1911 - 1914
On December 20th 1911 Mondrian went to
Paris on the advice of Conrad Kikkert. Settled at 26 Rue de Départ,
where Kikkert and Lod. Schelfhout also lived. He admired the cubist work of
Picasso and Léger and rapidly developed further
interest in that direction.
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Ad Kikkert |

A day at the beach, Kamperduin
oil on canvas
source
artnet |
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Lodewijk
Schelfhout 1881 - 1944 |

A view of Les Angles, 1910
oil on canvas

De brug, 1920
watercolour and ink
source
artnet |
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Picasso needs no introduction |
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Fernand
Leger
1881 - 1955
Leger, a French Cubist painter, started out working for architects. He
served briefly in the military and studied only as an independent at the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts as he was refused full admission. In 1913, Leger
developed his own Cubist style by including modeled forms suggestive of
mechanical movement. From 1919-20, he was associated with the purist
movement of the architect Le Corbusier. During that period he sharply
clarified his volumes and color and used human and machine forms as
coordinated elements within the same canvas - "The Mechanic" (1920) and
"Three Women" (1921). "The City", which Leger painted in 1919, depicts a
controlled landscape that reflects the clean geometric shapes of modern
machinery and represents a mechanized utopia. In 1923 he made one of the
early experimental art films "Ballet Mechanique" whose content centered on
simple, mechanical objects moving rhythmically through space. He visited New
York City in 1931 and decorated Nelson Rockefeller's apartment. He moved to
New York from 1940-46 where he painted canvases with acrobats and cyclists
as his subjects. His style incorporated flat patterns of brilliant color
upon which he chiefly used strong linear definitions. Leger was a major
contributor to the Cubist movement in which he developed a strong personal
expression. The clarity of his modeling and his use of bright color, often
depicting machine subjects or rhythms, are a distinctive phenomenon in
modern art. Leger saw that Cubism had a special affinity with the geometric
precision of engineering that made it uniquely attuned to the dynamism of
modern life.
source |


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