DOI: 10.3390/heritage9060245 ISSN: 2571-9408

The Black Lines in Piet Mondrian’s Paintings (1921–1938)

Inez Dorothé van der Werf, Wietse Coppes, Markus Gross, Friederike Steckling, Klaas Jan van den Berg, Suzan de Groot, Cathja Hürlimann, Rika Pause, Saskia Smulders

This research provides new insights into the materials, methods of application and modification of the black lines used by Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) in his Neoplastic works. Interesting information was gained from letters and studio photographs, the making of mock-ups and reconstructions, and the in-depth study of four paintings, dated between 1921 and 1938, in the collection of Fondation Beyeler (Riehen/Basel, Switzerland)—Tableau I (1921–1925), Composition with yellow and blue (1932), Composition with double line and blue (1935) and Picture no. III (1938)—as well as the examination of an unfinished painting, Composition with red (1934, private collection). The four paintings were investigated with high-magnification stereomicroscopy, technical photography in transmitted light and raking light, X-rays and infrared reflectography. Detailed information about the buildup and composition of the layers was gathered with the study of cross sections and microsamples, using optical microscopy and chemical analyses. It was shown that Mondrian frequently moved the lines and changed their width up to the very last working phase and, probably, did not use a ruler in the traditional sense to achieve straight lines. In one of the works, Mondrian even employed a pencil, tracing a groove in the wet paint to accentuate straight edges. The black lines consist of multiple paint layers of diluted bone black oil paint, added with small amounts of coloured paint, alternated with thin oil-resin layers, sometimes containing lead white particles. Finally, a thin (pigmented) oil-resin finish was applied on top of the black line.

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