Gray Tree is a 1911 oil painting by Piet Mondrian. The work was painted on canvas on a board measuring 78.5 × 107.5 cm (8,440 square centimetres, 1,308 sq in). It is exhibited at Kunstmuseum Den Haag in The Hague, the Netherlands.[1]

Gray Tree
ArtistPiet Mondrian
Year1911 (1911)
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions78.50 cm × 107.5 cm (30.9 in × 42.3 in)
LocationKunstmuseum Den Haag, The Hague

The work was created at a time when Mondrian was beginning to experiment with Cubism: its foreground and background elements seem to intermingle, and the palette is very restricted. The tree is subtly oval in form, following another Cubist practice seen in works by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque. Mondrian's oval became explicit, framing the work, in paintings that followed over the next three or four years. Apple Tree in Flower, also from 1912, is a similarly sized composition. Though the outline of the "apple tree" recalls that of Gray Tree, the work is significantly more faceted and abstract.

References

edit
  1. "gemeentemuseum". Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2024-04-30.

Sources

edit
  • Milner, John (1992). Mondrian. First American Edition. Phaidon Press. Pages 98–99. ISBN 1-55859-400-0