Project Details
- Project Name
- Theo Van Doesburg interior design for Café de l’Aubette at Galerie Gmurzynska during TEFAF Maastricht 2020
- Location
-
MECC Maastricht Forum 100
NETHERLANDS
- Developer/Owner
- Galerie Gmurzynska
- Client/Owner
- Galerie Gmurzynska
- Project Types
- Cultural
- Project Scope
- Interiors
- Year Completed
- 2020
- Team
- Mathias Rastorfer, CEO and Co-Founder
- Consultants
- Interior Designer: Tom Postma
- Project Status
- Built
- Room or Space
- Architectural Detail
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
For this year’s edition of TEFAF Maastricht, Galerie Gmurzynska presents an exclusively designed booth by Tom Postma, inspired by an icon of De Stijl “Color Design for the Café de l’Aubette Ciné-dancing” (1926-1927) by Dutch artist Theo van Doesburg, which is one of the highlights of the gallery’s exhibition.
Postma sets a high value on the materials used, such as velvet in dark red and blue hues, and the visual coherence with the exhibited artworks. The geometric pattern of the walls repeats the hard-edge abstract rendering of the masterpiece.
Van Doesburg, a co-founder of the De Stijl movement with Piet Mondrian, was commissioned to refurbish the interior of the historical Aubette building in 1926 in order to convert it into a complex with restaurant, bars, cabaret and the ciné-dancing hall, together with the artists Jean Arp and Sophie Tauber-Arp.
Referred to as “The Sistine Chapel of Abstract Art” by Hans Haug, founder of the Musée de Strasbourg, this ambitious project, conceived as a ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’, became one of the most iconic works of De Stijl, and allowed van Doesburg to develop and apply his theory of Elementarism, as he explained is “based on the neutralization of positive and negative directions by the diagonal and, as far as color is concerned, by the dissonant.”
Only three major public collections and Galerie Gmurzynska conserve the Color designs in gouache for the Café de l’Aubette: Centre Pompidou in Paris, MoMA in New York, Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam (former Dutch Institute for Architecture) and Galerie Gmurzynska conserve the final color studies.
The Color design is documented in depth with historic photographs of the work in the office set up by van Doesburg at Place Kléber while working at the project, and featured in the catalogue raisonné as well as in many publications.
The ciné-dancing hall was restored between 1985 through 1994, and by 2006 Café de l’Aubette was restored to its original appearance.