Your sub-dividing of space, particularly your full canvas pieces, brings Modrian to mind though your use of repeated pattern is not in the strictest sense neoplastic due to its non-rectilinear and mostly non-primary color basis, it nevertheless suggests the mysticism which was the underlying basis of "De Stijl." In a sense, it incorporates modern knowledge of the mathematical basis underlying chaos theory as typified in fractal geometry, a field of study unknown at the time by Mondrian and his contemporaries which would, one imagines, have been embraced by them.
2 comments:
Your sub-dividing of space, particularly your full canvas pieces, brings Modrian to mind though your use of repeated pattern is not in the strictest sense neoplastic due to its non-rectilinear and mostly non-primary color basis, it nevertheless suggests the mysticism which was the underlying basis of "De Stijl." In a sense, it incorporates modern knowledge of the mathematical basis underlying chaos theory as typified in fractal geometry, a field of study unknown at the time by Mondrian and his contemporaries which would, one imagines, have been embraced by them.
Very nice.
Those are all awesome!
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