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  1. New York City is an 1942 oil-on-canvas painting by Piet Mondrian, completed in 1942. It is on display in the Musée National d'Art Moderne at the Centre Pompidou in Paris , France. [1]

  2. Learn about the new phase of Mondrian's work that began with New York City I, 1942, where he used colored lines and bands to create a dynamic rhythm. Discover how his move to America and the modern metropolis influenced his style and harmony.

  3. Inspired by a true story, Invincible recounts the last 48 hours in the life of Marc-Antoine Bernier, a 14-year-old boy on a desperate quest for freedom. ‘New York City I’ was created in 1942 by Piet Mondrian in Neoplasticism style. Find more prominent pieces of abstract at Wikiart.org – best visual art database.

  4. Exhibition History. Title: New York City 2 [unfinished, formerly New York City III] Artist: Piet Mondrian (Dutch, Amersfoort 1872–1944 New York) Date: 1941. Geography: Country of Origin USA. Medium: Oil and tape on canvas. Dimensions: 45 1/4 × 38 7/8 in. (114.9 × 98.7 cm) Classification: Paintings.

  5. Piet Mondrian (Pieter-Cornelis Mondriaan, dit) (1872, Pays-Bas - 1944, États-Unis) New York City. 1942. La structure orthogonale traduit l'effervescence de New York. À New York, le gigantisme architectural, l'urbanisme orthogonal et la circulation effrénée ont un impact fort sur les artistes européens exilés, comme Mondrian qui y débarque en 1940.

  6. In view of the Nazi advance, in 1938, after the signing of the Treaty of Munich, Piet Mondrian decided to abandon Paris, his city of residence for nearly twenty years, and moved to London, where his friends Ben and Winifred Nicholson found him a studio in Hampstead.

  7. In his article on Piet Mondrian's New York works, published ten years ago, Joseph Masheck very judiciously analyzes the particularity and the newness of New York City in relation to preceding works.