Otto Gustaf Carlsund

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portrait by Jan de Meyere

Otto Gustaf Carlsund (11 December 1897 – 25 July 1948) was a

Neo-Plasticism, and Concrete art
.

Biography

In 1924 he moved to

Rand School (1931). As he met Piet Mondrian, Theo van Doesburg and the circle of radical artists working in the Neo-Plasticist aesthetic, he came to adopt an increasingly reduced vocabulary of abstract rectilinear form, as well as being more and more affected by Constructivism
.

Art concret

Mural "Rapid" at the restaurant Parkrestaurangen Lilla Paris, Stockholm, 1930.

In 1929 he and van Doesburg,

Marcel Wantz (1911-79) founded the group Art Concret, and the following year they published their joint manifesto.[5] "Their proclamation called for a universal art composed of planes and colours executed crisply, precisely, mechanically. Form and rhythm were governed by mathematical principles, while abstract cinema provided a model of combining space and time in a single work of art"[6] The group was short lived and only exhibited together at three occasions in 1930 as part of larger group exhibitions, the first being at Salon des Surindépendents in Paris in June, followed by Production Paris 1930 in Zürich, and in August at the exhibition AC: Internationell utställning av postkubistisk konst (International exhibition of post-cubist art) in Stockholm, curated by Carlsund himself. In the catalog to the latter, Carlsund states that the group's "programme is clear: absolute Purism. Neo-Plasticism, Purism and Constructivism combined".[7]
The Stockholm exhibition was largely a failure, getting harsh judgement from unsupportive critics, and ultimately led to Carlsund's decision to move back to Stockholm. Following van Doesburg's death in 1931, the Art Concret group united with the larger association Abstraction-Création, founded in 1932, though was never formally dissolved.

Later life

After 1932, Carlsund was primarily active as an art critic, still painting and creating murals but not exhibiting his art. Following increased domestic attention to geometric abstraction in the 1940s, a retrospective exhibition was held in Stockholm in 1947 to great acclaim.

References

  1. ^ Fogelström, Lollo (ed.): Otto G. Carlsund: konstnär, kritiker och utställningsarrangör, Liljevalchs konsthall, 2007, p. 53.
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  4. ^ Fogelström, Lollo (ed.): Otto G. Carlsund: konstnär, kritiker och utställningsarrangör, Liljevalchs konsthall, 2007, p. 55
  5. ^ Numéro d'introduction du group et de la Revue Art Concret, Impr. Union, Paris, 1930.
  6. ^ "Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde: Room 11: Art Concret". Tate. Retrieved 2015-03-07.
  7. ^ "AC: Internationell utställning av postkubistisk konst", Stockholm, 1930, p.3