collage, installation-art, wood
de-stijl
neo-plasticism
collage
geometric-abstraction
installation-art
abstraction
wood
Félix Del Marle designed this Neo-Plastic furniture, featuring bold vertical and horizontal lines, geometric shapes, and primary colors. These elements are not merely decorative; they represent a deeper quest for universal harmony. The grid structure, so prominent here, echoes ancient cosmologies where the world is seen as ordered and structured. Think of the Roman grid-like city plans or even further back, to the division of fields in ancient Egypt, all attempts to impose order on the chaos of nature. The use of stark lines and blocks of color strips away the superfluous, seeking the essential. This pursuit can be found in other realms, for example, in the reductionist philosophies of early Greek thinkers who sought the basic elements of existence. This Neo-Plasticism, in its striving for ultimate clarity and reduction, taps into a primal desire for order and understanding, connecting us to the past in a never-ending quest for meaning.
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