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Mondrian’s Dress

Yves Saint Laurent, Piet Mondrian, and Pop Art

Nancy J Troy author Ann Marguerite Tartsinis author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:MIT Press Ltd

Published:17th Oct '23

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Mondrian’s Dress cover

An extraordinary look at how the style of Piet Mondrian’s abstract paintings was posthumously appropriated by 1960s fashion, Pop art, and consumer culture.

Yves Saint Laurent’s 1965 Mondrian dresses are among the twentieth century’s most celebrated and recognizable fashions, but the context of their creation involves much more than meets the eye. In Mondrian’s Dress, Nancy J. Troy and Ann Marguerite Tartsinis offer a fresh approach to the coupling of Piet Mondrian’s interwar paintings with Saint Laurent’s couture designs by exposing the rampant merchandising and commodification that these works experienced in the 1960s. The authors situate the consolidation of Saint Laurent’s fashion brand alongside the work of such Pop artists as Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, and Tom Wesselmann, and show how conventional understandings of Mondrian’s avant-garde abstractions were transformed by the mass circulation of his signature style. 

Beyond its attention to 1960s fashion, Pop art, and consumer culture, Mondrian’s Dress offers critical assessments of Saint Laurent’s so-called dialogue with art, the remarkable art collection that he built with his partner Pierre Berge, and the crucial role that photography plays in the marketing of couture. The first book-length study of its kind, Mondrian’s Dress is a provocative reevaluation of how art, commerce, and fashion became fundamentally intertwined in the postwar period.

“When Piet Mondrian started making his geometric abstractions in primary colors, he was going for something accessible: breaking down images into their purest and simplest forms. But they didn’t refer to reality in recognizable ways, and, to some, their harsh lines came off as cold and uninviting. After his death, however, in a posthumous collaboration with fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent in 1965, Mondrian’s work was finally able to reach the mass audience he always wanted. This glamorous yet scholarly book from MIT Press tells the story in the context of that era’s Pop art.”
Art in America


“Celebrating the 1965 launch of Yves Saint Laurent's iconic frock, Mondrian's Dress by Nancy J. Troy and Ann Marguerite Tartsinis documents the spectacular, fortuitous collision of French couture, Dutch abstract art, and American pop culture that resulted from that simple yet striking dress. Talented storytellers with a true passion for their subject matter, art scholars Troy and Tartsinis embellish Mondrian's Dress with lavish photography, newspaper and magazine articles from the era, and eye-catching graphics illustrating the ‘phenomenal impact’ of Saint Laurent's geometric patterned dress on New York street fashion. This elegant coffee-table collectible is sure to intrigue readers with its animated exploration of the ‘manifold connections’ between fashion and art in the pop-culture explosion of the swinging '60s.”
Shelf Awareness

"A new book published by MIT Press provides a fresh take on this iconic pop culture phenomenon that spans decades and generations. Art scholars Nancy J. Troy and Ann Marguerite Tartsinis offer much context and background on the different threads of stories that link the two artists together. Using archival clippings from newspaper and magazine articles published at the time, as well as eye-catching graphics, the book explains the impact of one of the twentieth century’s most recognizable fashions, using anecdotes and sources. It goes into how and why the design became so iconic, and how merchandizing and commodification played strategic roles in the popularization of the pop culture phenomenon.
—Arab News

Mondrian’s Dress: Yves Saint Laurent, Piet Mondrian, and Pop Art is an illustrated monograph that explores a mid-’60s moment, one that has been sitting in plain sight, largely unexamined, for more than half a century—and whose significance went well beyond fashion. As the authors reveal, the untitled yet instantly allusive ‘Mondrian Dresses’ were like sails catching a trade wind. Tagged after the fact in a rush to capitalize on the critics’ raves, they not only achieved an image reboot for Saint Laurent—who’d been left behind by André Courrèges, Pierre Cardin and their space-age ethos—but spurred a triumph of trickle-down copying that injected Pop Art and its flat affect into Western visual culture.”
Wall Street Journal

ISBN: 9780262048354

Dimensions: 319mm x 252mm x 21mm

Weight: 1400g

192 pages