Gerrit Rietveld – The Revolution of Space

17 maggio - 16 settembre 2012, Weil am Rhein (DE)
The Vitra Design Museum presents “Gerrit Rietveld – The Revolution of Space”. The Dutchman Gerrit Rietveld (1888-1964) was one of the most important designers and architects of the 20th century. Today his work is primarily associated with his two most famous designs, which have become icons of modernism: the Red-Blue Chair (1918/1923) and the Rietveld-Schröder House (1924). But this exhibition shows that Rietveld’s oeuvre contains many more facets that deserve to be rediscovered. Gerrit Rietveld, who was trained as a carpenter, was associated early on with the De Stijl movement and its central figures, Theo van Doesburg and Piet Mondrian. Beginning in 1918, his work reflects the artistic ideals of this group. Rietveld transformed objects and buildings into abstract compositions of lines and planes, mainly in black, white, grey and the primary colours yellow, red and blue. However, he initially developed his legendary Red-Blue Chair in 1918 without the striking colour scheme from which its name is derived – the coloured version dates from the year 1923. Rietveld’s first architectural project, the Rietveld-Schröder House, followed in 1924. It was commissioned by Truus Schröder, a widow who not only played a decisive role in the design of her house, but also provided essential impulses for subsequent works by Rietveld. Info: www.design-museum.de