Mondrian arrived in New York in 1940, one of the many European artists who moved to the United States to escape World War II. He immediately fell in love with the city and with boogie-woogie music, to which he was introduced on his first evening in New York. Soon he began, as he said, to put a little boogie-woogie into his paintings.

Mondrian’s aesthetic doctrine of Neo-Plasticism restricted the painter to the most basic kinds of line—that is, to straight horizontals and verticals—and to a similarly limited color range, the primary triad of red, yellow, and blue plus white, black, and the grays in between. But Broadway Boogie Woogie omits black and breaks Mondrian’s once uniform bars of color into multicolored segments. Bouncing against each other, these tiny, blinking blocks of color create a vital and pulsing rhythm, an optical vibration that jumps from intersection to intersection like traffic on the streets of New York. At the same time, the picture is carefully calibrated, its colors interspersed with gray and white blocks.

Mondrian’s appreciation of boogie-woogie may have sprung partly from the fact that he saw its goals as analogous to his own: “destruction of melody which is the destruction of natural appearance; and construction through the continuous opposition of pure means—dynamic rhythm.”

Publication excerpt from

MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)

Gallery label from Artist’s Choice: Arthur Jafa—Less Is Morbid , November 19, 2025–July 5, 2026

Mondrian fled Nazi Germany in 1941 with the help of the art historians Alfred and Margaret Barr, MoMA’s first director and his wife. The night Mondrian arrived in New York, the Barrs introduced him to Boogie Woogie music, a form of syncopated jazz characterized by piano playing with repetitive bass patterns on the left hand and improvisational melodies on the right hand.

Provenance Research Project

This work is included in the Provenance Research Project, which investigates the ownership history of works in MoMA's collection.

1942-43, Piet Mondrian, New York
1943, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, purchased from/through Valentine Gallery (Valentine Dudensing), New York, with funds provided by an anonymous donor

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Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 50 x 50" (127 x 127 cm)
Credit Given anonymously
Object number 73.1943
Department Painting & Sculpture

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Piet Mondrian

Piet Mondrian

Dutch, 1872–1944 30 works online

For Piet Mondrian, abstract painting was the means of achieving an equilibrium between the “concrete” (the tangible and specific aspects of reality perceived by the senses) and the “universal” (the underlying, essential truths that he believed were constant and unchanging).

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