Photo de l'auteur

Hans L. C. Jaffe (1915–1984)

Auteur de 20,000 years of world painting

45+ oeuvres 664 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Hans L. C. Jaffe

20,000 years of world painting (1967) 137 exemplaires
Picasso (1974) 91 exemplaires
Piet Mondrian (1970) 67 exemplaires
De stijl (1956) 51 exemplaires
The World of the Impressionists (1969) 43 exemplaires
Pablo Picasso (1964) 39 exemplaires
19th & 20th Century Painting (1967) 30 exemplaires
Willink (1980) 30 exemplaires
Pablo Picasso (1964) 26 exemplaires
Klee (1971) 24 exemplaires
La Peinture du XXe Siecle (1963) 20 exemplaires
Picasso (20th Century Masters) (1970) 17 exemplaires
Picasso (1979) 11 exemplaires
Pablo Picasso (1983) 7 exemplaires
Piet Mondriaan (1970) 5 exemplaires
Theo van Doesburg (1983) 4 exemplaires
The 'De Stijl' group 2 exemplaires
Franz Marc 2 exemplaires
Willy Belinfante (1982) 1 exemplaire
Vincent van Gogh 1 exemplaire
Pablo Picasso 1 exemplaire
Mondrian (1975) 1 exemplaire
Paul Klee 1 exemplaire
Domela 1 exemplaire
El arte del siglo XX 1 exemplaire
Kees Verwey (1964) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Jaffé, Hans Ludwig Cohn
Date de naissance
1915-05-14
Date de décès
1984-07-24
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Germany (birth)
Netherlands
Lieu de naissance
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Lieu du décès
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Professions
writer
author
art historian

Membres

Critiques

couldn't focus on the write ups. but a lot of Picassos I'd never seen.
 
Signalé
mahallett | Apr 19, 2020 |


This coffee table book authored by 20th century art expert Hans Ludwig Cohn Jaffé provides readers with a complete survey and overview of the life and times and artistic development of Dutch artist Piet Mondrian (1872-1944). Included also is Jaffé's detailed commentary on nearly forty individual Mondrian paintings, beginning with a self-portrait, landscapes, trees, windmills and ending with the artist’s signature abstracts, each painting reproduced in color and on its own page.

For a sampling of the tone of the author’s presentation, below are several direct quotes along with my brief comments. I’ve also included 4 pics as a visual taste of how Jaffee charts Piet Mondrian’s painterly evolution.



“Mondrian never deviated or compromised, not even for his bread and butter, for he regarded his work, his quest for harmony, as a task he had to fulfill.” ---------- When I read of the artist’s rather austere life, I envision his day-to-day living as an extension of his austere abstract art.

"Searching for a “true vision of reality” and finally finding it, filled Mondrian’s whole life. And the search was always conducted by means of painting." ---------- Mondrian was not compelled to write artistic manifestos or poetry, essays or fiction, nor was he inspired to try his hand in the other arts, things like music or theater. For Mondrian, his artistic vision was his life and painting was the exclusive means of expressing his vision.



“The vision that Mondrian formulates in his writing, and that he embodies magnificently in his paintings, is in fact related to Plato’s doctrine of ideas. His entire evolution as a painter aimed at visually interpreting general laws that underlie every phenomenon and that are to the wealth of natural forms as a theme is to its variations.” ---------- Even as a youngster, before I read anything relating to Mondrian or abstract art, I sensed this boiling down of the natural world into something purer and more mathematical whenever I happen to see one of his paintings. And during my college years, I recall hearing someone say Mondrian was attempting to paint the square root of a rainbow.

"Contemplation of the universal, and hence penetration into the core of reality, is the meaning that Mondrian gives his art. As Mondrian himself stated, “If it is one’s intention to manifest what things have in common and not what makes them differ, this is not a drawback, but a necessity. For the particular, which leads us away from the principle, is abolished by this procedure; the common factor remains.” ---------- Said like a true Platonist.



"Mondrian showed painting a new function, and in his own painting he made a new function of art, the new world view, visible to the beholder." ---------- I don’t know about you but I will never walk the streets of a city again without thinking of a number of his abstracts, especially Broadway Boogie-Woogie.



And speaking of Plato, I will conclude with a quote from the Greek philosopher's dialogue ‘Philebus’: “I will try to speak of the beauty of shapes, and I do not mean, as most people would think, the shapes of living figures, or their imitations in paintings; I mean straight lines and curves and the shapes made from them, flat or solid by the lathe, ruler and square, if you see what I mean.”
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Glenn_Russell | 1 autre critique | Nov 13, 2018 |

This coffee table book authored by 20th century art expert Hans Ludwig Cohn Jaffé provides readers with a complete survey and overview of the life and times and artistic development of Dutch artist Piet Mondrian (1872-1944). Included also is Jaffé's detailed commentary on nearly 40 individual Mondrian paintings, beginning with a self-portrait, landscapes, trees, windmills and ending with the artist’s signature abstracts, each painting reproduced in color and on its own page.

For a sampling of the tone of the author’s presentation, below are several direct quotes along with my brief comments. I’ve also included 4 pics as a visual taste of how Jaffee charts Piet Mondrian’s painterly evolution.

“Mondrian never deviated or compromised, not even for his bread and butter, for he regarded his work, his quest for harmony, as a task he had to fulfill.” ---------- When I read of the artist’s rather austere life, I envision his day-to-day living as an extension of his austere abstract art.

"Searching for a “true vision of reality” and finally finding it, filled Mondrian’s whole life. And the search was always conducted by means of painting." ---------- Mondrian was not compelled to write artistic manifestos or poetry, essays or fiction, nor was he inspired to try his hand in the other arts, things like music or theater. For Mondrian, his artistic vision was his life and painting was the exclusive means of expressing his vision.

“The vision that Mondrian formulates in his writing, and that he embodies magnificently in his paintings, is in fact related to Plato’s doctrine of ideas. His entire evolution as a painter aimed at visually interpreting general laws that underlie every phenomenon and that are to the wealth of natural forms as a theme is to its variations.” ---------- Even as a youngster, before I read anything relating to Mondrian or abstract art, I sensed this boiling down of the natural world into something purer and more mathematical whenever I happen to see one of his paintings. And during my college years, I recall hearing someone say Mondrian was attempting to paint the square root of a rainbow.

"Contemplation of the universal, and hence penetration into the core of reality, is the meaning that Mondrian gives his art. As Mondrian himself stated, “If it is one’s intention to manifest what things have in common and not what makes them differ, this is not a drawback, but a necessity. For the particular, which leads us away from the principle, is abolished by this procedure; the common factor remains.” ---------- Said like a true Platonist.

"Mondrian showed painting a new function, and in his own painting he made a new function of art, the new world view, visible to the beholder." ---------- I don’t know about you but I will never walk the streets of a city again without thinking of a number of his abstracts, especially ‘Broadway Boogie-Woogie.’

And speaking of Plato, I will conclude with a quote from the Greek philosopher's dialogue ‘Philebus’: “I will try to speak of the beauty of shapes, and I do not mean, as most people would think, the shapes of living figures, or their imitations in paintings; I mean straight lines and curves and the shapes made from them, flat or solid by the lathe, ruler and square, if you see what I mean.”
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
GlennRussell | 1 autre critique | Feb 16, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
45
Aussi par
8
Membres
664
Popularité
#37,985
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
5
ISBN
60
Langues
7

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