In Parallel. This exhibition tells the remarkable story of the creative relationship between Mondrian and Nicholson. The works selected have a particular historical significance: paintings and reliefs that were shown together or included in avant-garde publications during the 1930s. In addition, a selection of archival material, including photographs and a group of Mondrian's and Nicholson's letters, offers further insights into this fascinating relationship.
curated by Christopher Green, Barnaby Wright, Daniel Katz
This exhibition tells the remarkable story of the creative relationship between Piet Mondrian,
one of the most celebrated painters of the 20th century, and Ben Nicholson, one of this
country’s greatest modern artists. It has been conceived around The Courtauld’s important
Nicholson canvas, 1937 (painting), and will unite a group of major paintings and reliefs
to explore the parallel artistic paths charted by the two artists during the 1930s. Their
friendship culminated with Mondrian moving from Paris to London in 1938, at Nicholson’s
invitation, and the two working in neighbouring studios in Parkhill Road, Hampstead,
when for a short period London was an international centre of modernist art. The works
selected for the exhibition each have a particular historical significance. Paintings and reliefs
that were shown together in exhibitions or included in avant-garde publications during the
1930s will be reunited. Other works were originally bought by influential
members of their circle in London, or were produced whilst the artists occupied neighbouring
studios in Hampstead. In addition, a selection of archival material, including
photographs and a group of Mondrian’s and Nicholson’s letters, will offer further insights into
this fascinating relationship.
Nicholson first visited Mondrian in his Paris studio in the spring of 1934. Stepping into the
purity and calm of its white-painted interior, from the hustle and bustle of the street, was an
extraordinary experience. “His studio...was an astonishing room”, Nicholson later recalled,
“he’d stuck up on the walls different sized squares painted with primary red, blue and yellow...
I remember after this first visit sitting at a café table on the edge of a pavement...for a very
long time with an astonishing feeling of quiet and repose... The feeling in his studio must have
been very like the feeling in one of those hermits’ caves where lions used to go to have thorns
taken out of their paws”.
The visit marked the beginning of an enduring friendship and sparked an extraordinary
creative relationship, lasting until Mondrian’s death ten years later. When they met, Nicholson
was a rising star of modern British art and Mondrian, twenty years his senior, was already
recognised as a leading artist of his generation. Their friendship spanned a turbulent decade
of 20th century history as Europe headed towards the Second World War. In the art world
different movements vied for prominence on this fraught international stage with Surrealism
becoming a powerful force. Against this backdrop, Mondrian and Nicholson pursued a refined
form of abstraction with a restrained vocabulary of colours and geometric forms, offering an
alternative modern vision for art. They believed in the potential of abstraction to attain the
highest aesthetic and spiritual power, with the balance and harmony of their compositions
offering an antidote to the violent discord of the modern world.
Nicholson was already exploring abstraction before he met Mondrian but he found powerful
confirmation of his artistic convictions through the Dutchman’s example. Over the following
years Nicholson would produce some of his greatest works, including a major group of
coloured abstracts and his famous series of pure white reliefs. He hand-
carved these reliefs from solid wooden panels, making planes of different depths to create
shadow lines of varying thicknesses. At the same time, Mondrian was taking new directions in
his painting, making greater use of expanses of white space in combination with small but
intensive areas of vibrant colour. He also renewed the possibilities of his famous
horizontal and vertical black lines, sometimes bringing them together as double lines, to
enhance the dynamism of his compositions. The exhibition will be a unique opportunity
to explore in detail the nature of their creative relationship. Theirs was not a story of master
and follower. Mondrian opened up new aesthetic possibilities that Nicholson seized and made
his own in highly original and imaginative ways, which the Dutchman admired greatly.
Nicholson, in turn, offered Mondrian new artistic stimulation and considerable support, with a
deep affinity developing between them during the course of their friendship.
The two artists contributed to several groundbreaking exhibitions and avant-garde publications
in the 1930s, with their work often presented together. London was becoming an important
battleground for modern art and, together with his first wife Winifred, Nicholson was
instrumental in bringing Mondrian’s work to England. Winifred was Mondrian’s first English
buyer when she purchased Composition with Double Line and Yellow in 1935. They
were instrumental in finding other patrons for Mondrian among their circle of friends and
associates at a time when securing sales was increasingly difficult. Nicholson also helped
arrange for Mondrian’s work to be exhibited in England for the very first time, with three
paintings being included in the seminal Abstract and Concrete exhibition, organised by
Nicolete Gray in 1936. It toured a number of English cities, including London, where Mondrian
and Nicholson’s works were shown side by side.
That year he invited Mondrian to
contribute to the avant-garde publication, Circle, which Nicholson co-edited. Circle, published
in 1937, aimed to unite an international modernist movement of artists, designers and
architects with an ambitious agenda to revitalise modern civilisation. The publication opened
with a sequence of Mondrian’s paintings paired with a group of Nicholson’s white reliefs.
In 1938, with war appearing imminent, Nicholson sent an invitation to Mondrian enabling him
to leave Paris for London. Winifred accompanied him, recalling that on the train journey to
Calais Mondrian became engrossed in the passing countryside. She initially took this to be a
softening of the devout city-dweller’s insistence on a geometric aesthetic. However, she soon
realised he was actually transfixed by the telegraph poles when he murmured: “look how they
pass, they pass, they pass, cutting the horizon here, and here, and here”. Once in London
Mondrian was welcomed into an international community of avant-garde artists and writers
living close by in Hampstead, including Henry Moore, Naum Gabo, Herbert Read, John Cecil
Stephenson and Nicholson’s future wife, Barbara Hepworth, who also became a close friend.
Nicholson found him a studio-cum-bed-sitting-room at 60 Parkhill Road, overlooking
Nicholson’s studio. Mondrian immediately set about transforming the room, having it
whitewashed before adding patches of colour, as he had in Paris: “his wonderful squares of
primary colours climbed up the walls”, Hepworth remembered. He installed his few
possessions, including his gramophone on which he played his beloved jazz records. Finally,
he arranged his unfinished canvases, which he had brought from Paris and set up a trestle
table that Nicholson had given him to paint on.
Initially, Mondrian was a little overwhelmed by the vast scale of London and the deep
escalators of the underground scared him at first. But he quickly settled into London life and
even became an avid reader of the Evening Standard. He professed to a friend that the size
and character of London was actually having a liberating effect: “I’ve noticed that the change
has had a good influence on my work... The artistic situation doesn’t differ greatly here from
that in Paris. But one is even more ‘free’ – London is big.” He ventured into the city’s nightlife
and, having asked Peggy Guggenheim for jazz club recommendations, they went dancing
together. Mondrian’s contentment with his new life is expressed in lighthearted postcards he
sent to his brother, Carel, in the Netherlands, several featuring one of Mondrian’s favourite
films, ‘Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs’. In them, Mondrian casts himself as ‘Sleepy’ and
his ‘best friends’, Nicholson, Hepworth and others, as the woodland creatures who came to his
rescue. Mondrian lived in London for almost exactly two years. He was included in two
further exhibitions during his time in the city and he worked on a number of major canvases.
One of these was a large-scale composition that was bought by Peggy Guggenheim and will
be included in this exhibition, alongside works that Nicholson was producing at this time in his
neighbouring studio. The outbreak of war finally separated Mondrian and Nicholson who
moved to New York and Cornwall respectively. Nicholson and Hepworth implored him to join
them but a rural life was unimaginable to Mondrian. After settling in America, and with war
underway in Europe, he wrote to Cecil Stephenson, “I do like New York but in London I was of
course more at home. I always believe in the victory of Britain.”
The two final works in the exhibition mark the culmination of Mondrian’s and Nicholson’s
creative relationship. Although completed on different continents the paintings
speak of the profound affinity that had developed between them as they worked, in parallel,
over the previous decade.
EXHIBITION Events
Mondrian || Nicholson Lates
Thursday 23 Feb, 29 March and 10 May 2012, until 9pm
Join us as we get into the '30s swing and recreate the decade in which Mondrian and Nicholson established a remarkable creative relationship. Enjoy live music, talks, drop-in workshops as well as delicious food and drink in the Gallery Café .
Normal admission fees apply.
Dress in '30s glamour for free admission from 6pm
Free admission with National Art Pass
TALKS AND TOURS
All talks are free with admission.
Wednesday 14 March, 11 April and 9 May 2012, 5-5.45pm
Curator's Talks
Join us for a curator's talk to find out about the exhibition and the creative relationship between Piet Mondrian and Ben Nicholson.
Friday 24 February, 9 March, 23 March, 30 March, 13 April, 27 April, 11 May 2012, 1.15-1.30pm
Lunchtime Talks
Researchers and students from The Courtauld pick a highlight from the exhibition.
Every Sunday from 19 February - 20 May 2012 (except 8 April), 3-3.45pm
Sunday Tours
Highlights from the exhibition and other works from The Courtauld are presented by post-graduate researchers from The Courtauld Institute of Art.
Thursday 23 February, 22 March, 26 April, 1.15-1.45
Talks on Paper
A unique opportunity to explore works on paper from The Courtauld's collection relating to the exhibition and the accompanying display: Lines Crossed - Grids and Rhythms on Paper.
Special events
Saturday 3 March
Conference: Mondrian, Nicholson and 20th Century Abstraction
Exploring the issues raised by the kind of non-figurative art for which Mondrian and Nicholson stood in the '30s. Contributors include Hans Janssen (Gemeentemuseum, The Hague), Michael White (University of York), and Lee Beard, editor of the forthcoming Nicholson catalogue raisonné.
Book conference tickets
Thursday 8 March 17.00 - 18.00
Music Performance: Extraordinary Voices
New York 1944. Piet Mondrian and John Cage are brought to surprising proximity through friendship with Peggy Guggenheim. In Cage's centenary year, experimental works by Cage and the world première of Christopher Fox's one/ two/ three/ four piece (delete as inapplicable) are brought into dialogue with Mondrian by singers from the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, directed by James Weeks.
This music performance will take place in the gallery and is free with admission.
Thursday 8 March, 6-730pm
Teachers Event
Join us for an exhibition talk and find out more about our education programme.
Includes a free resource pack. Booking is essential; email us at education@courtauld.ac.uk or call 020 7848 1058.
Saturday 21 April, 10.30-16.15
Study Day
This Study Day provides further context to the Gallery's celebration of the artistic relationship between two great modernist artists. Learn more about Mondrian's and Nicholson's individual artistic achievements, investigate the wider artistic culture in 1930s London and look closely at the influence each artist had on the other.
Lead sponsor: ING
Sponsors: Abellio, Friends of The Courtauld, Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Hester Diamond
Catalogue:The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, edited by Christopher Green and Barnaby Wright with further contributions by Sophie Bowness and Lee Beard. Published by Paul Holberton in association with The Courtauld Gallery, £25.00, ISBN 978 1 907372 247
Related display: Lines crossed – grids and rhythms on paper, from The Courtauld’s collection, will examine the role of grids in drawings, with works from the Renaissance to the present day. A highlight will be the striking large drawing by Linda Karshan (b.1947), a recent gift to the Gallery.
Access: The Gallery is wheelchair accessible with a lift to all floors.
Shop: The Courtauld Gallery Shop is open daily during Gallery hours
offering catalogues, art books and prints as well as gifts, such as
ceramics, textiles and jewellery, inspired by the permanent collection
and temporary exhibitions. Online shop: www.courtauldshop.com
Tel. +44 (0)20 7848 2579, info@courtauldshop.com
Café:The Courtauld Gallery Café is open daily from 10 am to 5.30 pm serving a selection of drinks, snacks and freshly prepared meals.
How to get there:The Courtauld Gallery is situated in the North Building of Somerset
House, which has entrances from the Strand and the Victoria
Embankment. Mainline trains to Charing Cross, Waterloo or
Blackfriars; Underground stations Temple (District and Circle lines),
Covent Garden (Piccadilly line) and Charing Cross (Northern,
Bakerloo and Jubilee lines); buses 6, 9, 11, 13, 15, 23, 77a, 91 and
176 to Strand
Sue Bond Public Relations
Tel. +44 (0)1359 271085, Fax. +44 (0)1359 271934
E-mail. info@suebond.co.uk, www.suebond.co.uk
Opening 16 february
The Courtauld Gallery
Somerset House, Strand, London
Opening hours: Daily 10 am to 6 pm, last admission 5.30 pm
Admission
Included in admission to permanent collection: adult: £6.00, concessions: £4.50
On-line booking www.courtauld.ac.uk/tickets
Free admission: Mondays 10 am to 2 pm except public holidays, at all times for under 18s, full-time UK students and unwaged.