
Colour solution by Theo van Doesburg
This colour study by Theo van Doesburg presents a dense, interlocking grid of rectangles in black, white, and a restrained range of primaries — an exercise in chromatic and compositional balance characteristic of his Elementarist approach. Unlike Mondrian's open, asymmetric arrangements, Van Doesburg here packs the picture plane tightly, creating a rhythmic, almost architectural surface. The work reflects his theoretical preoccupation with the relationship between colour, form, and spatial perception within a strictly geometric framework.
Printed as an archival fine art print in our Berlin studio, the geometric precision and subtle colour transitions between fields are rendered with the fine line clarity this analytical, grid-based composition requires.
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Colour solution by Theo van Doesburg
This colour study by Theo van Doesburg presents a dense, interlocking grid of rectangles in black, white, and a restrained range of primaries — an exercise in chromatic and compositional balance characteristic of his Elementarist approach. Unlike Mondrian's open, asymmetric arrangements, Van Doesburg here packs the picture plane tightly, creating a rhythmic, almost architectural surface. The work reflects his theoretical preoccupation with the relationship between colour, form, and spatial perception within a strictly geometric framework.
Printed as an archival fine art print in our Berlin studio, the geometric precision and subtle colour transitions between fields are rendered with the fine line clarity this analytical, grid-based composition requires.
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This colour study by Theo van Doesburg presents a dense, interlocking grid of rectangles in black, white, and a restrained range of primaries — an exercise in chromatic and compositional balance characteristic of his Elementarist approach. Unlike Mondrian's open, asymmetric arrangements, Van Doesburg here packs the picture plane tightly, creating a rhythmic, almost architectural surface. The work reflects his theoretical preoccupation with the relationship between colour, form, and spatial perception within a strictly geometric framework.
Printed as an archival fine art print in our Berlin studio, the geometric precision and subtle colour transitions between fields are rendered with the fine line clarity this analytical, grid-based composition requires.























