francesco visalli inside mondriaan project B367 2 1E piet mondrian 1

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(February 2013)

What has driven me to carry out this study, to undertake this project? Frankly, I really don’t know. The only thing I do know is that I can’t stop myself, I can’t do without it; it’s like a fire consuming me day and night. I don’t know why I should be doing all this: there is no obvious purpose in it, or practical, rational, objective goal.

I am doing it just for myself, because it makes me feel good and more alive. And so, it is like everything I have done between beginning my new life and the present day.

What follows must in no way be considered a “re-evaluation” of Mondrian, but rather an “visitation”: a detailed study and voyage of discovery into his working method.

Hence the title of this project: VISIT MONDRIAAN.

It is no accident that I have made use of his real surname, with its typical Dutch double “a”, because in some way, during the course of this study, I have explored not just the artist but also the man: “Piet the Invisible”.

Before going on to describe the project, it would be useful to outline, even if only in a summarised form, some of the fundamental aspects of Mondrian’s abstract art.

It is based on one main principle: the use of horizontal or vertical black lines, intersecting to form a grid. Within the grid, certain planes are painted using only primary colours (red, blue and yellow), and these are contrasted with blank, white spaces.

There are some variations on the theme, such as the use of shades of grey or different thicknesses of line, or in other cases, the inclusion of black planes.

Another principle is that the lines are limitless, and that they are never placed at the edge of the painting (except on very rare occasions). It is as if the work can continue into infinity, far beyond the tenuous boundaries of the canvas. Sometimes these lines finish before the edge, and in other cases they continue beyond it, spilling down the width of the stretcher.

Nevertheless, apart from these specific details, the basic principle remains a grid of straight lines (never sloping or curved), and planes painted in the three primary colours.

It would seem to be quite simple and basic, almost childish, to be able to create works using so few ingredients.  However, this is not the case. The magic of Mondrian lies in the way he can make them so complex and profound, to the point of creating perfect harmony: a mathematical sense of balance, a spell-binding melody.

This becomes even more obvious when one looks at how from his early abstract paintings with larger planes of colour and a richer range of basic shades, he graduated to a disarming starkness in his later work. Here we see a totally white background, interrupted only by black lines and very small blocks of colour, sometimes even only one.

Surprisingly, even one tiny block of colour can become pivotal, and create a perfect balance in the overall composition.

The pattern of the lines forming the network seems to follow certain golden rules: a set of mathematical, almost scientific principles. But the end result is always harmonious, almost like a musical composition, because Mondrian’s inspiration incorporates those elements of instinctive dissonance which make the whole work so vibrant and brilliant.

Although they appear so simple and geometric, I personally detect a strong passion and sensuality in the works of Mondrian. The precept of contrasting the two opposing directions, vertical and horizontal, in perfect equilibrium (viewed as spirituality and materialism respectively), seems like an ideal balance of love between a man and woman. Opposite in nature just like the direction of the lines, the two become a single entity, blending together in perfect harmony.

At other times, however, this passion seems to explode into a sort of “cognitive dissonance”, as if to say: “I trust you, but I am jealous”.

The whole existence of humanity rests on this opposition of extremes: good and evil, black and white, and every other form of opposing and conflicting force. The one could not exist without its diametric opposite. Equilibrium and harmony are created by this confrontation. And perhaps it was in search of this state of opposition that Mondrian moved from realism to the purely abstract.

I do not wish to become involved in a critical study of Mondrian: I am simply expressing my feelings and trying to highlight those aspects which have impressed me and led me to this task.

What I have just described is one such aspect.

Another feature concerns the arrangement of the three primary colours, which is striking not only in terms of chromatic contrast, but also on a dimensional level. It is the combination of colour and dimension which creates the harmonious balance in the whole work. Thus it may happen that in a work containing a large red or blue plain, it is the small yellow segment that plays the pivotal role.    Each of these three colours, therefore, plays a different active part: the yellow has a tendency to dilate, the blue to shrink, and the red to remain static: two opposing activities and one neutral one. In short, although they make use of just a few basic elements, the combination of these ingredients is extremely complex and structured, offering the possibility of infinite different compositions. Nevertheless, it is no easy task to find what will create a perfect equilibrium.

In order to do this, I think one has to be in total harmony with life, nature and the cosmos. One needs to have a deep inner balance, a purity of soul like that of a new-born child, as yet uncorrupted by contact with the world.

I do not know whether Mondrian attained this existential state, but his aspiration was certainly comparable to that of the Suprematist, Kazimir Malevič: to achieve the “zero degree of painting”. He came very close to reaching it (even though, to my mind, it is rather like searching for the end of the infinite).

For Mondrian, the attempt to realise the zero degree of painting was obtained first of all in a distribution of space, by eliminating the three-dimensional element. This was followed by a radical breakdown of the planes, to attain the maximum expression of abstraction: “to arrive as near as possible to the truth, to reach the basis of things”. All this was not intended as a final goal, but rather as a destination from where “everything” can achieve a new beginning.

Mondrian expressed such a desire for the whole of humanity, for he believed that mankind needs art in order to experience, if only momentarily, a state of equilibrium.  But if Man achieved perfect harmony within himself, he would then no longer have any need for art, because equilibrium is art.

Intrigued and fascinated by all this, I started to wonder what could lie behind such a degree of harmony. How is it possible to achieve such a state of purity and concision in compositions which seem so simple but are actually extremely complex? What would happen to these works if I looked at them from a different angle, if I managed to penetrate them, or examined them from the rear, like the back of a coin?  And what if I disfigured them, if I altered the colours or changed them to neutral shades?

The results were amazing!

Starting with the original work, and meticulously respecting its basic form, I found that my application of every possible variation had no visible impact on the overall harmony.

Such a result might well appear predictable and trivial, but actually it is not as reductive as it seems. The entire route I have taken in this project, in fact conceals some deep, intimate and formative aspects, which I will attempt to describe in the following section.

For the moment, it is just at the draft stage, but I will soon begin to transform the images I have sketched into paintings. My pictorial technique will play an important role in this, as well as my own personal style.

I had intended to dedicate a whole chapter to a description of the techniques involved in preparing and applying the colours; the mixture and composition of these colours and the various textures I would like to achieve. However, I concluded that at this stage of the research project, such a chapter would be superfluous.

So that this does not appear like a type of art totally determined at the drawing-board, I should stress that when I confront the canvas I do have clear ideas of what I’m going to paint (and a basic well-defined design), but I always leave it to my instinct to decide how to prepare and apply my colours.

francesco visalli inside mondriaan project B367 3 1E piet mondrian

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(February 2013)

To continue from my previous remarks: all the possible variations I experimented with during my research did not, I believe, in any way alter the harmony of the original work.

This result might well appear trivial and predictable, but in fact it reveals something more profound.

I had not intended to prove anything in particular in carrying out this research. My sole aim was to try to reach a deeper understanding of Mondrian’s art, sustaining that unknown force which had driven me to enter this world and absorb its essential nature.

Mondrian went very far in his work, even too far (according to Fernand Léger), perhaps beyond the bounds of human perception; making himself almost unreachable. He achieved levels of abstraction so pure and unique that they lifted the abstract onto a plane which can well seem esoteric and intangible: a plane only comprehensible to minds and spirits in tune with his own.

In my own humble situation, and for the purposes of this study, I have found it necessary to bring his work down to more material and approachable levels to endow them with a form which is comprehensible to my mind.

My hope is that whatever emerges from this research might be of some assistance to all those who fall outside that elite circle of individuals who are able to appreciate Mondrian’s work full.  Therefore, as I am not blessed with that complete understanding, I decided to follow the route in reverse, examining and reintroducing all those components which Mondrian himself eliminated when he stripped down reality to achieve the essence of abstraction. He said: “…I want to get as near as possible to the truth and to abstract everything from it, until I reach the basis (even if just the external basis) of things…”  

This brilliant intuition led him to achieve such a deep synthesis as to propel him far away, into an almost celestial sphere: a realm which ordinary man is perhaps unable to understand.

Unwittingly, I found myself examining his work without ever having documented it or studied his art. I produced hundreds of drawings, driven on by an unstoppable desire, eager to discover what lay within or behind it. Only afterwards did I try to understand what I was doing, and so carried out a retrospective analysis, starting from the result and working back to the origins of it all to give some sense to my research. Unknowingly, and purely by instinct, I discovered I had performed a series of steps that “added”, and which precisely mimicked those made by Mondrian when he wished to “take away”.

I attempted in some way to import his works into a terrain more familiar to me, transposing them into my own reality, my own world: which I have always described as an “alternative reality”.  It is not a different way of seeing the reality known to man, but rather a matter of living in a place under different spatial and temporal conditions, in a parallel world. So I did not examine Mondrian’s works from the perspective of this world, but transposed them into another cosmic dimension, which probably exists within me, to view them with other eyes.

Thus I found myself giving them a sort of three-dimensional form, and putting in all those spatial elements that Mondrian had sought to eliminate. Or else, I created distortions, adding curved lines to Mondrian’s inflexible grid. Yet again, I turned over the original work to explore its reverse, the hidden side, almost as if I wanted to spy on that hidden corner of Mondrian’s mind which even he perhaps would not wish to examine. Therefore, in this process of reversal, even the colours underwent a transformation, becoming the opposite of primary colours.

They say that what we hate most is just the reflected image of something innate in us that we cannot accept. And so red turned to green, a colour much hated by Mondrian: another element that led me to believe that I was probing the inner mind of this genius.

Why at first did Mondrian enjoy confronting reality, with his Dutch landscapes and natural scenes, and then later come to hate trees and to reject the colour green? What triggered the profound kenosis that he underwent at a certain point, which saw the death of that particular man and artist and the rebirth of its exact opposite?

There is another aspect which intrigued me, and which I discovered and understood only later, and in relation to the forms of distortion I experimented with. I was greatly struck by a sort of polarity in the life of Mondrian, rather like a double personality, oscillating between his isolated existence in the studio and his social life; between straight lines and arabesques; between works stripped of any frills, pure, basic, inflexible grids like cages, and a love of jazz, the Charleston and the boogie-woogie: tunes and harmonies rich in variation, contortion, syncopation, dissonance and joy.

And so, without realising it, I found myself adding certain distortions to his works and was astonished to see harmonious, joyful, dancing forms appearing. In some cases they seemed to hover like musical notes and in others they were more similar to floral arrangements.

In conclusion, during this process of study and research, intended as an analysis of his output including abstraction, I found that I was, instead, discovering and getting to know the “other” Mondriaan.

francesco visalli Cover sito inside mondriaan testo valeria arnaldi 1

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Architecture of the spirit, the volatility of matter

by

Valeria Arnaldi – ( 2013 )

 

Once more, before I wander on
And turn my glance forward,
I lift up my hands to you in loneliness —
You, to whom I flee,
To whom in the deepest depths of my heart
I have solemnly consecrated altars
So that
Your voice might summon me again.

On them glows, deeply inscribed, the words:
….

I want to know you, Unknown One,
You who have reached deep into my soul,
Into my life like the gust of a storm,
You incomprehensible yet related one!
I want to know you, even serve you

 (F. W. Nietzsche)

 

The colours splashed over the walls seem the jottings of a philosophy in the making, composed every day in different ways, creating alternations and a play in contrasts. New food for thought. Slashes of light stolen, enhanced and multiplied to clash with surfaces, creating suspension and interference, natural pointers to an unperceived reality. Silence. It is in this environment of light and warmth, even before colour in its ordinary sense, that Mondrian moved when he created. This was the reason for building his own studio, a refuge from the indefinitely large, where inspiration and the feelings to nourish it could have free rein. And it was also the reason for building his work-museum, where people come for pleasure, to relax, or because it is fashionable to do so, without being aware that they are part of a sensory experiment. And to muse.

It was the movement which seduced the artist. To observe, rethink, build, but never to decide. Movement as a result of intelligence or instinct, of the cosmos or the community. Never an end in itself but as evidence of an underlying harmony, which is the foundation of life, not otherwise perceptible. On the other hand, Mondrian had a musical soul, one that unfolded in the first beats in the passages which he did not succeed in bringing to his jazz notes and his “agitated” nights, where the absolute, rebuilt or theorised, gave way to the irruptions – and frenzy – of life. Between differing instincts, the rigors of the day and the excitement of the evening, the ambitions of the creative “cell” and moving from night entertainment to and dancers, Mondrian attempted to stop existence, not to contemplate it, let alone to play it, but to dissect and discover its mechanisms and rules. The inspiration is therefore in a mobile vision because tension is eternally immobile. It is not aesthetic rigor which guided his pictorial abstractions, but the will, of power as well, as a tool to capture the absolute, univocal concept of truth that admits opinion only as a phase of its own evolution. For Mondrian, chaos was not an absolute, quite the opposite it was harmony, the denominator of philosophical and artistic existence. And perfect harmony, able to create life in its various forms.

Harmony of nature and harmony of naivety, harmony of a chaos that needs no further description, that is pure creation, a lucid, intellectual harmony which, instead, is pure construction. His challenge was not in the market, his audience was not the observer. The goal was the absolute, the stage was life, the curtain frames an inward gaze, able to go beyond the known in a confusion of time and space that is the only eternity humanly conceivable. Constructible. This is what Mondrian wanted: to construct a perfect harmony, absolute, eternal. Line for line. It was his mission, his manifesto. Even, his obsession, from 1911 when he saw his works exhibited in Amsterdam alongside those of Picasso, Cezanne, Braque, and perceived, in the act, a transformation and transfiguration of the cosmos. That flash of lightening converted Mondrian to the abstract, he denied his roots and, above all, the reputation acquired. The desire, the only possible one, was to reach the truth of art and in art, to search out the form and overcome it to reach its essence and the very roots of life, reduced to simplicity, and perhaps even to the detriment, but in all its magic, of lines and colours.

The canvas is not a surface but an alphabet, the form is not the subject but the metaphor, the order is not the compulsion but the breathe. It then follows that the straight lines which meet to become the protagonists of his works are not “lines” but conflicting feelings which on the one hand fall heavily into the soul, and on the other hand, an energy which quickly climbs peaks of excitement and delirium, forcing Icarus to look in the mirror to discover himself to be Prometheus. And, unfortunately, vice versa. So the elliptical but obvious three-dimensionality is not a simple thickness but a depth of intellectual inquiry, a thought which sinks the blade of the blade of lucidity into the meat of intuition to arrive at the root of experience. Perceived, understood and overcome. In this way, colour is not only feeling and invention, but sometimes also a pause to which we abandon ourselves, a stasis in the bustle of creative beating which imposes a washing of the conscience on the imagination, and sometimes the carrier and director of eternity and rhythm.

It is the urgency of Being that is portrayed, the same urgency that is also drives the search. The self does not seduce him with the trap of self-assertion but leads into the lattice of a broad consciousness that is the life-blood of the cosmos, without other distinction of identity from the vision. Mondrian was a visionary and was not afraid to be so. Just as he was not afraid to deny himself, if he needed to expand the horizons of consciousness and conquest.

The aim is to celebrate the capacity to think. The mondrian man thinks and rethinks his horizons in the illusion of being able to determine or even invent the classic concept and modern ambitions in a battle between Genius and Nature for the conquest of Beauty, that manifests itself in the work of the artist as an architecture of the spirit, as a monument of volatile matter.

“I think it is possible” – he writes – “that, through horizontal and vertical lines constructed with awareness, but not with calculation, led by highly developed intuition, and brought to harmony and rhythm, these basic forms of beauty, assisted where necessary by other lines or curves, can become a work of art, as strong as it is true.” Here are his patterns of essence and existence, a geometry pulsing and without breath, the result of encounters and plots, more, perhaps, of balls of an unravelled religion, science, philosophy, ideology, consciousness of beauty and his feelings. Harmony is an ancient ambition and classical perspective, but also a desire of the modern which finds the foundations of that will which makes a man unique in the universe. Beauty is an invented concept, an even rhetorical figure, a self-imposed canon which makes man feel in control of something and any form of evolution, entirely controllable. It is an aspiration unchanged which has not changed over the centuries, but also a profoundly changeable concept. Mondrian knew this and did not care. Beauty is not in the canvas, which is instead the path which must lead to beauty, tracing a journey that for its very nature cannot have a destination if not death and the absolute certainty of not being able to see beyond it. The aesthetic of man is not merely an understood taste, but a modular architecture, composed of bricks of time and common sense, and the imperatives and rules, personal and collective. In order to be subjected to the evolution of which he is a witness, however, the architecture of beauty must understand the levity of which the possibility of constantly changing consists. He must allow himself to be handled and not act, metaphysics, never physics.

The excitement of the architecture of Mondrian is not in the stone but in the flesh and in its instincts. Day and night come together in the meeting of two lines, the perception warms the projection, the horizontal is woman and the vertical becomes man, because from the imperceptible nodes of their contact emerges disruptive dizziness. Form the colour as well. Harmony carries on the battle, lance in rest, it sees form and material face each other to discover that even philosophy and art, the “heights” of man, are lies that God presents to human beings to give them the courage to face life and death. This disassembled and reassembled “system” is Mondrian’s song, his invisible city made of sculptural illusions on paper. Profound truths resting on the surface.

From this imaginative universe, enthusiastic but also consciously dramatic that seems to pay homage to the death as the only real evidence of a life that is not a dream, Francesco Visalli’s search within the works of Mondrian begins. “Inside Mondriaan” is an almost psychoanalytical work of art which starts from an arrived at harmony to search for the chaos that has generated it. The biography calls him an artist, speaking little of the man, but rather of a person who has taken up his brushes to become a creator, a man who has entrusted his evolutionary track to the canvases . The traditional triangle of inspiration – muse, opera, author – here becomes a line and an element of a larger pattern, which guide the harmony or its engine, which in this case is Mondrian. Not the visionary, at least not yet, but the latent revolutionary, the unwitting witness of his own mutation, the protester – still – without a poster. It is the battle between Mondrian and Mondriaan which fascinates Visalli, who, in order to read man, has chosen the alphabet of the artist. The result is a meeting of affinity and dissonance. Perfect harmony becomes therefore an urgency for Visalli as well, who studies it in order to attempt to annul it, returning to its roots. The voyage within the canvas, by the artist’s own admission, is first a stimulus, then a ferment, and finally “cage” from which there is no escape except by rewinding the unwound ball, turned into a prison of the only line of fact without rhyme or reason. There is no way to escape that Inside which multiplies the faces of Mondrian in an infinite play of reflections and refractions.

The creative urge becomes in any case the driving force common to all artists, even those taking antithetical paths. Where Mondrian looked for the naked soul, Visalli overlaps baroquisms to cover it, without imposing gestures but only following the same hands that had stripped. It is the poetic reminder, the prediction made with the farsightedness of hindsight. The arduous judgment of posterity that is not judgment but exploration. Again, reflection. Mondrian conceived his works as two-dimensional architectures to remove any patina of concreteness from the purity of the concept, Visalli plunges into the depths of thought to return depth to the idea and turn it into that monument that Mondrian theorized. The journey itself is architecture. Harmony is made of measures, projections, expansions, transformations. And Visalli measures, projects, dilates, transfigures. They are dimensions which expand, while respecting the proportions of the look, colours reversed on their opposites, ideal pins which rotate lines to make them into vortices which give substance to the vibration that gave them order. The inquiry arrives at the point from where it was removed. It uses matter, paradoxically, to highlight the soul.

The process is that of a real study, which then becomes a work of the work, another through its own driving force. The first step is to distance the elements, using the colour planes to derive the “size” of the thickness. The “plant” thus becomes architecture, immediately showing its three-dimensionality. When the works are reversed to be mirror images of themselves, the game of diffraction and interference returns, the one that one of Mondrian’s muses plays with a mirror, interested in looking at the forms in her infinite faces and facets. Even misleading, where there is the sense, with the error inherent in its inherent imperfection – it is created, it is not the creator – leads to the “mistake” of a creative perception, original and unique. The next step can not only be that of colour, investigated for its vitality. It is not a stain, nor a background, but an instinct and heart, tension in fact, that determines the rhythms of the space. It was frequencies, understood as vibrations, which conquered first Mondrian and then, as a result of his analysis, Visalli. Colour became time, even in perception, but also in expression, and in this intimate path in the work and in the operation of Mondrian is dissected for its emotional essence. Mondrian’s colours are the primary ones, not for physical or calculated reasons, but because for the primary emotions and actions they represent; passion, calm and reflection. Visalli delete the three pillars of Mondrian’s conquest in order to identify the determinants. If each tone is nothing but an error of the senses, then the only truth ‘mondrianaly’ conceivable is actually the grey tint of the physical world, which Mondrian the hunter decided to cancel, rejecting the dominance of science over art in the name of an allegedly shared objectivity, to exalt instead the Genius as the only shared ambition.

If colour is then acquired by will and selected for ambition, what determines the intimate palette of the artist? If the well-known blues, yellows and reds of abstraction are cancelled and even the grey scale is rejected, so real that it seems lie, Visalli returns to the mirrors of the classic inquiry and to those of the artist’s studio, search for the primitive pantone. The inversion brings new emotions, and not just colours then, to the artworks: orange, green and purple are the secondary colours, the spectrum of opposition, the constructions of man. Mondrian shunned these to seek perfection, because they are the accessory inventions of accessory lives. Visalli returns to them in his voyage in reverse, to search for the prison from which the artist was trying to break free.

At this point, it is the cage which transforms. The straight lines are out, room for chaos returns, the shapes twist, turning on themselves in a vortex. The distortion multiplies the gaze and the gazers. The same object becomes a mask of itself, but in the series of wheels and turns, shows its peacock tail to the point of disorientation. Before perfect harmony, therefore, man is not subject to evolution but is imprisoned in the involution, closed in and twisted on himself. It is the spiritual and creative agony of whoever has not yet become aware of the weight that the will has on their horizons. If it were not like this, if one were to accept the determinism of the life plan, then the accuracy and clarification of the human gaze would lose its centrality in a alternation of empty and full, understood as the simple randomness of matter. If the will is a given as a category, then the penetration becomes the categorical imperative and requirement of understanding, being the first and unquestionable requirement of participation.

Perfect harmony exists only if it includes man as part of the whole. The outside observer is the artist who accepts the sacrifice of exclusion in order to have the privilege of consciousness. It is the exaltation of the creative role as a transcendent power, but with the possibility of choice, in this case as an immanent duty. The opposites are bound, therefore, as extremes of a common parabola, impossible to separate, pendants of a binary system, but also of a chain of mirrors, in which the viewer is no longer given knowledge. Here perfection and harmony are viewed from different fronts, including fusion and confusion. Stripped to the bone, the universe is revealed as vibration, energy of an illusory form.

Art is combined with philosophy, creating a machine which, being ‘technical’, becomes instead a monument of a soul’s depths, that core of the spirit that is pure reaction and pure passion. From the architecture of the tract ones passes now finally to the construction of the act. If tension is the only dimension, then the propensity can only be to sensory multiplication. The architecture of the two-dimensional canvases from Mondrian becomes three-dimensional in Visalli’s paintings, in a common recognition of the thickness as a concept, before being distance. The human is so human that is almost touches the divine. The rest is chess game of certain will between eras, perceptions and habits. The victory is the urgency that is manifested in all its pressure at the in the moment that it attracts attention by leaving the body breathless to breathe new life to thoughts. Light, heat and silence returns to “quell” the tired body of man weakened by the deafening awareness of the gift of art. And his imaginative thinking.

In the survey of Visalli, therefore, research on Mondrian becomes an even autobiographical revelation of its dual path of expression, as well as a learning experience for the architect and artist, in a “solution” or sublimation of the psychoanalytic debate between Freud and Lacan. If psychoanalysis analyses art as a manifestation of the intimate unconscious thought or art pre-empts psychoanalysis thus favouring its development, this problem is overcome. Just as with the conflict between Freud and Jung on the object of the inquiry, whether the analysis is of the man in the work or the work itself. Here art examines art and is a subject which observes, an object that is looked at, an instrument of inquiry and reflection, “verb” and silence, therefore, conscious and unconscious, in the same study plan which is actually most of all and above all, a vital need, and even a physical, muscular tension, which refers directly to the ancient inspiration, like the breath of the supernatural, sacred first, then of secular conception.

For here beyond Nature there seems to be only the Idea. So, in a reversal of parts played, man becomes more than the god because he was able to think of him and the artist more than the man because he knew, perhaps only to admit to having invented it. The poetic vision is more the monument than its fruit. The mondriano lattice describes the architecture of the soul as a landscape of thought and the architecture of the soul is the subject and stage of Visalli’s inquiry, well before this investigation. The real “deity” is in not perceiving the limits of the material, whatever the source, which are in any case the aware and proud owners of the immortality of the invention. The observer contemplates, understands the true image and accepts it if it is recognised, and in so doing he comforts the beliefs of the artist. Art sublimates and art incites, art talks and art puts to rest. Art tends to harmony, to attain it or to negate it, to consecrate to the absolute or to desecrate it. The Inside by Visalli goes beyond recalling how the uniqueness of a gaze can be a driving force for an entire era and even centuries to come. There is a harmonious undercurrent that guides the world to a discovery of itself, passing through the “dream” of the artist.

francesco visalli Cover sito introduzione al progetto Carolina Lio 1

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INSIDE MONDRIAAN

INTRODUCTION OF THE PROJECT

Transposition of matter of an abstract view – from Painting to Architecture

by Carolina Lio – ( 2014 )

In 2011, Francesco Visalli saw a retrospective of Piet Mondrian (Pieter Cornelis Mondriaan) at the Vittoriano in Rome and was struck by title “The perfect harmony”. Actually, he found in the whole show – and in general in all the pieces by the Dutch master – a remarkably simple and yet revolutionary perfection of forms, balances, colors as well as the equilibrium in the relationship between solids and voids . From this sudden fascination was born the project “Inside Mondriaan”, a conceptual research.

Mainly, it is a theoretical and technical study in which Visalli takes into account a corpus of 47 selected Mondrian’s paintings belonging to his abstract period, therefore made between 1917 and 1944. Through a series of variations on the theme, intended to enter into the dynamics of the construction of those specific works, he comes to the development of 340 “visitations”. In a first stage, they exist only in digital form with the intention to materialize them in real paintings and then shift on a three-dimensional plane of exponential sizes, from the sculptural model to the   monolithic installation up to architecture. The project can also be applied to the design, but still considering that the all the infinite, different applications of realization are secondary to the genuine intent of the project, which aims to study  Mondrian’s spatial and chromatic dynamics and the compositional grammars of the De Stijl movement applied to a contemporary dimension.

The two starting points of “Inside Mondrian” were the understanding of Mondrian’s gradual addressing towards a simplification of his work, seeking harmony in essentiality, and the comprehension of the main rule of his most mature and balanced pieces: the grid made by black straight lines, both horizontal and vertical, which create spatial planes, empty or filled exclusively by the three primary colors (yellow, red and blue). Francesco Visalli’s actions go in the direction of exploring this purity, creating works that re-experience in reverse the path of cleaning obtained by Mondrian. Through chromatic inversions, distortions, stratifications and shades of color, he imagines the negative face of each artwork and tries to go back in its hypothetical history, retracing in reverse the simplification obtained by Mondrian and looking for the “formulas” of his perfect and basic compositions with an eye almost alchemical and mathematical.

The study starts from the basic artwork that Visalli calls “00”, which is the same seen during the Mondrian’s retrospective in Rome and from which springs the whole idea of the project: “Composition with large red plane, yellow, black, gray and blue” – 1921. This is the first image he digitally reworks, the first of 47 works analyzed through a set of specific actions: exploring, studying, penetrating, inverting, distorting, transforming. Each work is, firstly, enlarged with elaborations conceived doubling its original size and, secondly, split into its two main components: color planes and geometric pattern.

At this point, the operations performed to create the variations of each work follow a precise process in nine steps

  1. detachment of the geometric pattern from the canvas, creating the projection of a shadow on the surface below.
  2. chromatic inversion of the work, an internal reversion where white becomes black and vice versa, red turns into green, yellow turns into violet and blue into orange.
  3. elimination of any chromatism from the work and its reverse, turning it into shades of gray due to the physics assumption that colors are nothing more than frequencies subject to our physical perceptions and that, consequently, do not exist as intrinsic qualities of the elements.
  4. distortion of the geometric grid into curved lines through a “circular distortion” that starts from the center and fades reaching the outer corners of the works, both keeping the original color and applying the effect on the negative piece.
  5. union of the third and fourth point, which is the circular distortion applied to the works in grayscale.
  6. total emptying of the color on the distorted works, using just white and black, plus their inversion.
  7. restoration, from the step 6, of the geometric pattern.
  8. removal of the black and white planes, like puncturing the work and obtaining a hollow structure formed by the geometric pattern highlighted by a shadow that emphasizes the idea of internal emptiness.
  9. reintroduction of the color that is as recessed into the perforated structure, while the originally white spaces remain as empty.

It’s from this point that any further evolution – or involution – necessarily abandons the pictorial side and meets its three-dimensional aspect. This stops being a pure visual impression given by the shadows and takes shape in real sculptural objects or even in architectural designs. Visalli indeed duplicates the dimensions of these bodies up to imagine a hypothetical city built with the laws of the De Stijl movement, a city such as might have existed in Mondrian’s visionarity, which could have been his ideal model to be portrayed in subsequent steps, more and more simplified until reaching a disarming and perfect fundamental solution.

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Through the project “Inside Mondriaan”, therefore, Francesco Visalli’s intention is to rebuild this solution backwards, retracing Mondrian footsteps with a route proposal, trying to theorically recreate his cleaning process, rationalizing and putting into equation the harmony achieved by the analyzed artworks.

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