Farm Setting, Three Tall Trees in the Foreground, c. 1907

expand_more
Not on Viewexpand_more

Piet Mondrian is famous for his paintings of irregular black grids on white backgrounds interspersed with rectangles in bright primary colors. Less familiar are the landscapes from earlier in his career.

Mondrian began Farm Setting with a pencil, searching for pleasing rhythms and contours in the slender trees and the slant of the farmhouse roof. He varied his pastel application, seemingly working from background to foreground. Delicate strokes in the sky and the hazy tops of distant trees give way to broad middle- and foreground lines made with the sides of his dark pastel crayons. He then worked up details such as cows, fences, and buildings with firm precision. Caked-on colors impart solid mass to the buildings and the stumpy willow. Horizontal strokes of lighter colors animate the middle ground, while vertical and diagonal strokes give the foreground the appearance of long grasses dotted with wildflowers. His final touches to the outlines and branches of the tall trees fix the compositional grid in perfect balance and harmony.

Hindsight reveals the gridlike Farm Setting as a forerunner of the stark compositions of Mondrian’s maturity, but his road to such Platonic ideals still lay ahead.

Details
Title
Farm Setting, Three Tall Trees in the Foreground
Artist Life
1872 - 1944
Role
Artist
Accession Number
89.103
Provenance
Mrs. A.A. Holsher, Scheveningen, the Netherlands. [Nicholas Wilder Gallery (active 1965-1979), Los Angeles]. [Allan Frumkin Gallery, New York]. Robert Owen (until d.1987/88; his estate sale, to Stoller); [John C. Stoller & Co., Minneapolis, 1988; sold, April 19, for $45,000, to Daytons]; Ruth and Bruce B. Dayton, Wayzata (1988-89; gave to MIA)
Catalogue Raisonne
Welsh 1998, no. A520
Curator Approved

This record has been reviewed by our curatorial staff but may be incomplete. These records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@artsmia.org.

Does something look wrong with this image? Let us know

Zoom in on the left to the detail you'd like to save. Click 'Save detail' and wait until the image updates. Right click the image to 'save image as' or copy link, or click the image to open in a new tab.