Golden Mean 10a

Page 1: Intro

Page 2: Euclid

Page 3: Repeating geometry

Page 4: Golden Rectangle

Page 5: Golden rectangles entangled

Page 6: Golden section construction

Page 7: Golden figures

Page 8: Golden mean in nature

Page 9: Golden mean in architecture

Page 10: Golden mean in art

Page 11: Golden mean and Fibonacci Numbers

Hermes

PIET MONDRIAN

Pieter Cornelis Mondriaan 1872-1944)
In the early 1900s many artists tried various abstract ways of representing reality. Mondrian went beyond them. In his final compositions he avoided any suggestion of reproducing the material world. Instead using horizontal and vertical black lines that outline blocks of pure white, red, blue or yellow, he expressed his conception of ultimate harmony and equilibrium. Mondrian was born on March 7, 1872 in Amersfoort, The Netherlands. He studied at the Amsterdam Academy from 1892 to 1895 then began painting on his own. Most of his early works were landscapes. In 1909 he began a series of paintings of trees in which he developed an increasingly abstract style. He moved to Paris, about 1912, where he was influenced by the cubist painters. During World War I, Mondrian painted in The Netherlands. There he helped found De Stijl a magazine of the arts that influenced European painting, architecture, and design. He also began to formulate his own aesthetic theories. His style, and its underlying artistic principles, he called neoplasticism. The later paintings, which date from 1920 until his death, have simple titles, such as ‘Composition in Red, Yellow and Blue’ painted in 1926, and ‘Composition in White, Black and Red’ (1936). (source)

Mondrian's Broadway

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