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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (BD 293X), 1960
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (BD 293X), 1960

Burgoyne Diller American, 1906-1965

Untitled (BD 293X), 1960
Pastel and charcoal on paper
14 3/4 x 13 3/4 in.
37.5 x 34.9 cm.
Signed and dated "d 60" lower right; signed and inscribed "BD 281 - 8L" to verso

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Provenance

Spanierman Gallery, New York
Burgoyne Diller (b. 1906) was among the first American artists to explore the possibilities of hard-edge geometric abstraction and colour field in his work. After attending the New York Art...
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Burgoyne Diller (b. 1906) was among the first American artists to explore the possibilities of hard-edge geometric abstraction and colour field in his work. After attending the New York Art Students League and working with the WPA for a number of years, Diller's style became more geometric as he began to integrate European Neoplasticism and Constructivism (particularly the ideas of Piet Mondrian and Kazimir Malevich) into his work.


“[F]or Diller, abstraction was “the ideal realm of harmony, stability, and order.” In the 1930s, he was the first American artist to embrace the conventions of the international art and design style called Neo-Plasticism founded by Dutch artist Piet Mondrian: grid-like compositions and a palette limited to black, white, and the primary colors. Many of his paintings were first conceived as collages—he would plan the composition by arranging paper cutouts of lines, squares, and rectangles.” (Minneapolis Institute of Art)

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Related artworks
  • Burgoyne Diller, Second Theme (BD 63X), ca. 1948
    Burgoyne Diller, Second Theme (BD 63X), ca. 1948
  • Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (BD 368X), 1960
    Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (BD 368X), 1960
  • Burgoyne Diller, Third Theme, 1950
    Burgoyne Diller, Third Theme, 1950
  • Burgoyne Diller, Composition, 1960
    Burgoyne Diller, Composition, 1960
  • Burgoyne Diller, Color Sketch, 1932
    Burgoyne Diller, Color Sketch, 1932
  • Burgoyne Diller, Untitled, 1962
    Burgoyne Diller, Untitled, 1962
  • Burgoyne Diller, Abstraction
    Burgoyne Diller, Abstraction
  • Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (First Theme), 1964
    Burgoyne Diller, Untitled (First Theme), 1964
  • Burgoyne Diller, Abstract Composition, 1950
    Burgoyne Diller, Abstract Composition, 1950

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