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Artist Biography
Theo van Doesburg (1883-1931),
Dutch
Christian
Emil Marie Küpper, who adopted the pseudonym Theo van Doesburg, was born
in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on August 30, 1883. His first exhibition of paintings was held
in 1908 in the Hague.
In the early 1910s he wrote poetry and established himself as an art
critic. From 1914 to 1916 van Doesburg served in the Dutch army, after
which time he settled in Leiden and began his collaboration with the
architects J. J. P. Oud and Jan Wils. In 1917 they founded the group
De Stijl
and the periodical of the same name; other original members were Vilmos
Huszár,
Piet Mondrian, Bart van der Leck, and
Georges Vantongerloo.
Van Doesburg executed decorations for Oud's
De Vonk project in Noordwijkerhout in 1917.
In
1920 he resumed his writing, using the pen name I. K. Bonset and later
Aldo Camini. Van Doesburg visited Berlin and Weimar in 1921 and the
following year taught at the Weimar
Bauhaus,
where he associated with Raoul Hausmann, Le Corbusier, Ludwig Mies van der
Rohe, and Hans Richter. He was interested in
Dada
at this time and worked with
Kurt Schwitters as well as
Jean
Arp, Tristan Tzara, and others on the review Mécano in
1922. Exhibitions of the architectural designs of Gerrit Rietveld, van
Doesburg, and Cor van Eesteren were held in Paris
in 1923 at Léonce Rosenberg's Galerie l'Effort Moderne and in 1924 at the Ecole Spéciale d'Architecture.
The Landesmuseum of Weimar presented a solo show of van Doesburg's
work in 1924. That same year he lectured on modern literature in Prague,
Vienna, and Hannover, and the Bauhaus published his
Grundbegriffe der neuen gestaltenden Kunst (Principles of Neo-Plastic
Art).
A new phase of De Stijl was declared by van Doesburg in his manifesto of Elementarism,
published in 1926. During that year he collaborated with Arp and Sophie
Taeuber-Arp on the decoration of the restaurant-cabaret L'Aubette in
Strasbourg. Van Doesburg returned to Paris in 1929 and began working on a house at Meudon-Val-Fleury with van Eesteren. Also in that year
he published the first issue of Art concret, the organ of the
Paris-based group of the same name. Van Doesburg was the moving force
behind the formation of the group Abstraction-Création in Paris.
The artist died on March 7, 1931,
in Davos, Switzerland.
Theo van Doesburg Oil
Paintings Reproductions:
Arithmetic Composition
60cm x 60cm (24 x 24 inches) $166
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