Sol - 1910


Size (cm): 55x85
Price:
Sale price€241,95 EUR

Description

The work "Sol" of 1910, known in English as "Sun", by Piet Mondrian, is a fascinating example of the artist's evolution towards a visual language that, although anchored in his first influences of figurative art, already begins to destining the principles of neoplasticism that will consecrate it as one of the masters of abstract art. This painting, which is currently in the Museum of Art of Philadelphia, shows Mondrian's transition of the most direct representations of nature towards an essential and pure content search through shapes and colors.

The composition of "Sol" is a coloristic exploration that flows in a bright and almost spiritual universe. Here, the sun, with its intense yellow circle, becomes the undisputed and at the same time symbolic protagonist of the work. Its central location and the prominence of yellow color not only capture the viewer's attention, but also evoke associations with vital energy and heat, elements that Mondrian considered fundamental in its aesthetics. This circle, surrounded by an empty space marked by a background in softer and subtle tones, highlights the importance of the sun not only as a visual object, but as an element that radiates life and emotion.

A remarkable aspect of the work is the use of color and shape. Although the Circle of the Sun can be seen as a figurative feature, the strokes in darker tones that flow around the circumference seem to play with the idea of ​​movement and transformation, suggesting that the sun is not a static representation, but a dynamic phenomenon that It affects your environment. Mondrian uses a palette that moves away from the most saturated tones of his later work, making "sun" a work where the color not only serves as a delimitation, but also suggests an emotional connection between the viewer and the theme represented.

As for characters or other elements within the painting, Mondrian does not include human figures or recognizable objects that distract from the purity of the solar circle. This choice resonates with the ideas that it would develop later in its work: the elimination of the superfluous and the focus on the essence of painting as an act of contemplation and meditation. The formal simplification, which would ultimately lead to the creation of its famous grid, begins to insinuate in this work, where an ethos of reducing complexity to its minimum expression is reflected.

"Sol" is also a manifestation of the echoes of the spiritual contemplation that Mondrian experienced throughout his career. The interaction between light and color in this painting is not merely aesthetic, but suggests a search for the transcendental, a desire to connect the visual experience with a deeper and more significant experience. Thus, the sun is not only a natural object, but becomes a symbol of spirituality and the search for balance.

Thus, "Sol" is located at a crucial point in the development of Mondrian's artistic language, a precursor of his most mature years that would celebrate radical abstraction. The work offers us a clear look at its deepest concerns about form, color and the strength of nature, a testimony of its ability to make the apparently simple into a mechanism of extraordinary reflection and meditation. It is, therefore, not only an example of his early work, but also a piece that prefigures the concepts that will define modern art in the twentieth century, making "sun" an essential milestone in the artistic journey of Piet Mondrian.

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