Unpublished sketch by Mondrian in letter to Anna Bergman, dated 1931, collection MondriaanhuisIn 2010 the Dutch Mondriaanhuis museum received a generous bequest by the heirs of Anna Bergman, a good friend of world-famous painter Piet Mondriaan. It was known that Cees Bergman was a friend of Mondrian; nothing was known, however of his sister Anna’s friendship with Mondrian. All materials are now on loan at the RKD in The Hague.
The Bergman archive contains several unknown letters by the painter written in 1938 and 1939, some of which contain startling information. in one letter to Cees Bergman, Mondrian states he “has no philosophy as far as art is concerned.” There are annotated pictures by Mondrian of his work, composition schemes, sketches and catalogues he gave to Anna. It also contains the typewritten first version of two Mondrian articles.
Finally, there is the correspondence between Anna Bergman and publisher Kroonder concerning the Mondrian typescript she tried to publish.
detail from letter written by Anna Bergman to publisher Kroonder,
coll. MondriaanhuisThe Anna Bergman archive contains a first draft of two articles written by Mondrian in 1934 as he was living in his studio on the Rue du Départ in Paris:
l'art nouveau, la vie nouvelle en
La vraie valeur des oppositions. The cover page has the title
L’art et la vie. Anna Bergman mentions in a letter to publisher Kroonder she had been given the articles by Mondrian. The typewritten articles have been corrected in Mondrians handwriting.
cover page of L’art et la vie, first draft, coll. MondriaanhuisMondrian dies in 1944. Two years later Anna Bergman tries to get l'art nouveau, la vie nouvelle published. Mondrians friends Mart and Olga Stam are in on the effort because they consider the articles "a last will of sorts”. The article is a plea for a new political and social order, which would make hate and egotism disappear. the “new art” would prepare humanity and purify the minds of men for the reception of this new social order.
The article was never published in the Netherlands regardless of the fact that everything had been prepared and Dutch as well as English translations had been made. The publisher pulled back in the end. All those concerned were greatly disappointed: Anna Bergman herself, Mart and Olga Stam, and translator Til Brugman. It appeared that publication rights were with Mondrians sole heir, Harry Holtzman. Holtzman and Mondrian had rewritten the article in 1941 and Holtzman published it after Mondrians death under the title "
Oppression and Freedom in Art".
Eva Kleeman, 2010