Piet Mondrian

Composition with Red and Blue

1933

Oil on canvas

On view MoMA, Floor 4, 412 The David Geffen Wing

In 1961 [George] Segal began using a recently released Johnson & Johnson product—gauze bandages pre-treated with dry plaster—to make full-body plaster casts of family and friends. He combined these unpainted, life-size figures with found objects from everyday life. This portrait pays homage to the legendary art dealer Sidney Janis, who staged an early exhibition of Pop art. He’s shown with one hand perched atop Dutch artist Piet Mondrian’s 1933 painting Composition with Red and Blue, which Janis purchased before its completion. His gesture suggests both a collector’s pride and a salesman’s display of his product.

Gallery label from

2025

Provenance Research Project

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

The artist, Paris, 1933
Sidney and Harriet Janis, New York. Selected from artist in Paris before completion, in 1932. Received in 1933 - 1967
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection, 1967

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Provenance Research Project
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Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 16 1/4 x 13 1/8" (41.2 x 33.3 cm)
Credit The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
Object number 635.1967
Department Painting & Sculpture

Explore more

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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