Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian
HomeStore

Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian

Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian

Painted in the early 1940s, Place de la Concorde marks a turning point in Mondrian's late work. The familiar black grid has been broken into shorter, interrupted segments that pulse across the white surface like a city street plan seen from above. Traces of primary colour appear not as solid blocks but as small accents and crossings, suggesting movement and urban energy rather than static balance. It is a bridge between his classical Neoplasticism and the kinetic rhythm of his final New York paintings.

As an archival fine art print from our Berlin studio, the fine interrupted lines and subtle colour accents are reproduced with full precision and edge clarity.

Select Size
Select Material
From $16.26

Original: $46.47

-65%
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian

$46.47

$16.26

More Images

Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 2
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 3
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 4
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 5
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 6
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 7
Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian - Image 8

Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian

Painted in the early 1940s, Place de la Concorde marks a turning point in Mondrian's late work. The familiar black grid has been broken into shorter, interrupted segments that pulse across the white surface like a city street plan seen from above. Traces of primary colour appear not as solid blocks but as small accents and crossings, suggesting movement and urban energy rather than static balance. It is a bridge between his classical Neoplasticism and the kinetic rhythm of his final New York paintings.

As an archival fine art print from our Berlin studio, the fine interrupted lines and subtle colour accents are reproduced with full precision and edge clarity.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Painted in the early 1940s, Place de la Concorde marks a turning point in Mondrian's late work. The familiar black grid has been broken into shorter, interrupted segments that pulse across the white surface like a city street plan seen from above. Traces of primary colour appear not as solid blocks but as small accents and crossings, suggesting movement and urban energy rather than static balance. It is a bridge between his classical Neoplasticism and the kinetic rhythm of his final New York paintings.

As an archival fine art print from our Berlin studio, the fine interrupted lines and subtle colour accents are reproduced with full precision and edge clarity.

Place de la Concorde by Piet Mondrian | Kuriosis