de persoonDe StijlschilderkunstarchitectuurvormgevingDada
NL | ENhomeVan Doesburg exhibition activities visitor's information press releases sponsors + links

Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde: Constructing a New World

18-06-2009


In close cooperation with Tate Modern in London, Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden presents a major exhibition on Theo van Doesburg (1883-1931), and this artist’s influence on the international avant-garde. Energetically and enthusiastically, Van Doesburg broke new ground as the initiator, ambassador, promoter and organiser of the new art. The 300-plus works by some 80 artists – among whom El Lissitzky, László Moholy-Nagy, Gino Severini, Kurt Schwitters, Hans and Sophie Arp, Hans Richter, Piet Mondrian, Vilmos Huszár and Alexander Archipenko – are on loan from museums from around the world. Many of these works have never been on display before in the Netherlands.

Van Doesburg was a multi-disciplinary artist. He was a painter, architect, designer, typographer, art critic, poet, editor and publisher. He was in pursuit of changes in all these disciplines, and, above all, of a synthesis of art and life. He wanted to be a ‘constructer of the new life’. In 1917 he founded the periodical De Stijl, a platform for the art movement by the same name, in which artists and architects, such as Piet Mondrian, Bart van der Leck, Vilmos Huszár, J.J.P. Oud and Gerrit Rietveld, searched for a harmonic and universal style. As the editor of the periodical, Van Doesburg soon became the group‘s spokesman, and from 1920 onwards he travelled to Belgium, France and Germany to promote De Stijl. He lectured, wrote articles in international publications, gave De Stijl courses in Weimar to students of the Bauhaus, organised congresses and exhibitions, founded magazines and artists’ collectives, befriended foreign artists, such as the constructivist El Lissitzky and the Dadaist Kurt Schwitters. His forte was the ease with which he managed to connect with many artists. His varied activities soon made Van Doesburg one of the pivotal people within the European avant-garde.
Van Doesburg was a man of contrasts, of controversy; resistance, to him, was something to be conquered, not something to steer clear of. Some of his friendships ended in major arguments. His works also show contradictions, in that he was interested in both constructivism and Dadaism, which, being an anti-art movement, was the very opposite. Van Doesburg created alter egos, such as the Dadaistic poet I.K. Bonset and the Italian writer Aldo Camini. During the Dada performances, first in Germany and later in the Netherlands, together with his third wife Nelly and the artists Schwitters and Huszár, he enjoyed the commotion they caused.
The exhibition takes up the whole museum. It portrays Van Doesburg as a tireless, versatile, key person within the international avant-garde. Paintings, sculptures, scale-models, furniture, posters, films, typographical designs and magazines illustrate the lively international world of art in which various disciplines became increasingly more interwoven. Artists whose works are on view include El Lissitzky, László Moholy-Nagy, Gino Severini, Karl Peter Röhl, Werner Gräff, Walter Dexel, Kurt Schwitters, Hans and Sophie Arp, Raoul Hausmann, Hans Richter, Henryk Berlewi, Piet Mondrian, Vilmos Huszár, Bart van der Leck, Alexander Archipenko.
The richly illustrated catalogue Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde: Constructing a New World, in English only, edited by Gladys Fabre and Doris Wintgens Hötte (240 pages and 250 colour illustrations), is available at € 25.
Gladys Fabre, Vicente Todolí and Doris Wintgens Hötte have put the exhibition together.
From 4 February - 16 May 2010 the exhibition is on display in Tate Modern London.
The exhibition has been made possible through an indemnity grant provided by the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science and by the generous support of the main funders Turing Foundation and Mondriaan Foundation, which supports visual arts, design and cultural heritage projects; the sub-funders SNS Reaal Fonds, Straver Foundation (of the Prince Bernhard Cultural Foundation), Cultural Foundation Leiden and partners ‘Stichting VSBfonds’ and the city of Leiden.

Turing Foundation Mondriaan Stichting SNS Reaal Fonds VSB Fonds Leiden Cultuurfonds Leiden Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds    

Informatie
Afdeling Presentatie, Mia van Iterson/ Saskia Bekke-Proost

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Theo van Doesburg, Simultaneous Counter-Composition, 1929-30, oil on canvas, 50,1x49,8cm, Digital image © 2009, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/ Scala, Florence

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Theo van Doesburg, Counter Composition VI , 1925, oil on canvas, 50 x 50 cm, © Tate, London 2009

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Theo van Doesburg, Cornelis van Eesteren, Model Maison d'Artiste,1923, reconstruction 1982, Collection Gemeentemuseum Den Haag

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

El Lissitzky, 2. Announcer. Victory over the sun, 1923, litho on paper, 51,0 x 42,8 cm, © Tate Modern, London 2009

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Kurt Schwitters, Mz. 285 Pillenz (oorspr: Für Nelli), collage, gouache, fabric on paper, 18 x 14,1 cm, private collection

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Lajos Kassák, Kiosk, 1923/1977, Model iin plexiglass and wood, 36,2 x 27,2 x 41,2 cm, © Petofi Museum of Literature – Kassák Museum, Budapest

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Henryk Berlewi, Construction mecano-factural, 1924, gouache on paper, 98 x 81 cm, Muzeum Sztuki, Lodz, Polen

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

J.J.P. Oud, Café de Unie, 1925, gouache on papier, 73 x 84 cm, private collection

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Gerrit Rietveld, Red and blue arm chair 1918, beech wood, triplex, 88 x 60 x 66 cm, Collection Centraal Museum Utrecht, donation 1959, Image & copyright Centraal Museum Utrecht/ photo Axel Funke

 

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Theo van Doesburg, Compositie III, 1917, Glas-in-Lood, uitgevoerd door Vennoootschap Crabeth, Den Haag, 40 x 40 cm, Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal Leiden,
Bruikleen Instituut Collectie Nederland,(schenking Van Moorsel)

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Theo van Doesburg,Portret van Pétro (Nelly van Doesburg), ca. 1922, olieverf op karton op paneel,Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal Leiden,bruikleen Instituut Collectie Nederland (Schenking Van Moorsel)&a

Click the thumbnail for a high resolution version

Georges Vantongerloo, Construction in a sphere, 1918, hout, 18 x18 x 12 cm, private collectie