Theo Van Doesburg

Utrecht, 1883 — 1931
Theo van Doesburg (1883–1931) was a central figure in the European avant-garde and founder of De Stijl magazine. A multidisciplinary artist, he championed geometric abstraction and collaborated with Mondrian, though they later diverged over artistic views. His legacy deeply influenced modern art, design, and architecture.
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Theo van Doesburg was a multifaceted artist: painter, designer, architect, writer, and theorist. He co-founded the influential magazine De Stijl in 1917 alongside Piet Mondrian and became one of the main proponents of neoplasticism—a movement that sought the reduction of form to straight lines, right angles, and the exclusive use of primary colors with black, white, and gray. Van Doesburg aimed to unify the arts, advocating for a total integration of art into everyday life. His eventual divergence from Mondrian's strict orthogonality led him to develop elementarism, incorporating diagonal lines and dynamic composition. He played a crucial role in influencing the Bauhaus and broader European avant-garde. His legacy remains pivotal to modern architecture, graphic design, and 20th-century visual theory.

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Theo Van Doesburg

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