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Theo Van Doesburg: Painting into Architecture, Theory into Practice

This is a comprehensive study of a major figure of the Modernist aesthetic, Theo Van Doesburg.

Allan Doig (Author)

9780521129817, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 4 February 2010

280 pages
24.4 x 17 x 1.5 cm, 0.45 kg

This is a comprehensive study of a major figure of the modern movement, in whose work philosophy, architecture and painting are inextricably entwined. From the founding of the periodical De Stijl in 1917, van Doesburg occupied a central position in the development of a Modernist aesthetic. His early career was concentrated on poetry and painting, but from the inception of De Stijl and his association with painters and architects such as Piet Mondrian and J. J. P. Oud, he turned increasingly to architecture as the locus for the accomplishment of the 'total work of art'. Van Doesburg became an architectural theorist of international renown, but encountered disappointment at every turn in his architectural practice. Projects and buildings became object-lessons in the fundamental principles of architecture; theory was shown to be a necessary concomitant to practice. Van Doesburg's extreme polemic guaranteed controversy and conflict so intense that it is still fresh in the minds of his surviving collaborators and correspondents. As the flint to the steel of architects like Gropius and Le Corbusier, as a painter and architect, and as the editor of De Stijl, he was a key figure in the growth of Modernism.

Introduction
Part I: 1. The early years of De Stijl: national and international contexts
2. Elementary means and the development of the painterly conception of architecture
3. Work with De Boer: colour, mathematics and music
4. Berlage and the new humanism
Part II. 5. Towards an elementary architecture
6. The Aubette and related work
7. The full compass of architecture: from the private house to the new image of the city
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Architecture [AM]

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