De Stijl (The Style)
(1916-1931)
The De Stijl (literally,
"the style") art movement was founded by the painter and architect
Theo van Doesburg in Leiden in 1917. It encompassed a new type of style in
modern art and architecture. This movement used the artistic talent of the
artists by designing homes, buildings, and furniture.
Founder members of the group
included the painter Mondrian, the sculptor Vantongerloo, the architect J.J.P.
Oud and the designer and architect Rietveld. They were eager to develop a new
aesthetic consciousness and an objective art based on clear principles. Their
work and research extended to the fine arts, city and town planning, the
applied arts and philosophy.
A magazine called De Stijl,
published between 1917 and 1932, presented the movement's works and theoretical
foundations to an international readership. In the magazine Mondrian wrote,
"The pure plastic vision should build a new society, in the same way that
in art it has built a new plasticism." Hiss article, "The New Plastic
in Painting", best expresses their ideas for reduction of form and
simplistic abstraction: "The new plastic art...can only be based on the
abstraction of all form and color, i.e. the straight line and the clearly
defined primary color" (Lemoine, 1987, p.29).
Art was seen as a collective
approach, with a language that went beyond cultural, geographical and political
divisions. The depersonalization of the artwork was carried through into the
execution which was anonymous and impersonal. The artist's personality took a
back seat to a conscious and calculated working process. The key ideas
underpinning the movement could not be separated from Mondrian's aesthetic
theory of Neo-Plasticism. This theory was aimed at scaling down the formal
components of art - only primary colors and straight lines. A painting was
derived from the features of the surface, although many De Stijl paintings were
abstractions of natural phenomena, such as van Doesburg's "Rhythms of a
Russian Dance" (1918).
While Mondrian's work adhered
to the strict principles of Neo-Plasticism, Van Doesburg sought to broaden the
movement's research projects into architecture, reconceiving the entire living
environment. A De Stijl picture represented a fragment of a larger project
concerning space: the house as an interior space, and the city as an assembly
of houses. The austere forms of De Stijl were well suited to the geometric
structures favored by the International Modernist movement, while the primary
colors favored by the painters could be used as decorative elements to
articulate an otherwise plain facade.
The principles of De Stijl art
and design exerted tremendous influence on the Bauhaus Style in Germany in the
1920s, and after Mondrian's immigration to New York in 1940, the U.S.A.
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