Blossoming Apple Tree, 1912 Piet Mondrian (1872-1944)

Location: Haags Gemeentemuseum The Hague Netherlands
Original Size: 78.5 x 107.5 cm

Oil Painting Reproduction

$697.75 USD
Condition:Unframed
SKU:MOP-16538
Painting Size:

If you want a different size than the offered

Description

Completely Hand Painted
Painted by European Аrtists with Academic Education
Museum Quality
+ 4 cm (1.6") Margins for Stretching
Creation Time: 8-9 Weeks
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We create our paintings with museum quality and covering the highest academic standards. Once we get your order, it will be entirely hand-painted with oil on canvas. All the materials we use are the highest level, being totally artist graded painting materials and linen canvas.

We will add 1.6" (4 cm) additional blank canvas all over the painting for stretching.

High quality and detailing in every inch are time consuming. The reproduction of Piet Mondrian also needs time to dry in order to be completely ready for shipping, as this is crucial to not be damaged during transportation.
Based on the size, level of detail and complexity we need 8-9 weeks to complete the process.

In case the delivery date needs to be extended in time, or we are overloaded with requests, there will be an email sent to you sharing the new timelines of production and delivery.

TOPofART wants to remind you to keep patient, in order to get you the highest quality, being our mission to fulfill your expectations.

We not stretch and frame our oil paintings due to several reasons:
Painting reproduction is a high quality expensive product, which we cannot risk to damage by sending it being stretched.
Also, there are postal restrictions, regarding the size of the shipment.
Additionally, due to the dimensions of the stretched canvas, the shipment price may exceed the price of the product itself.

You can stretch and frame your painting in your local frame-shop.

Once the painting Blossoming Apple Tree is ready and dry, it will be shipped to your delivery address. The canvas will be rolled-up in a secure postal tube.

We offer free shipping as well as paid express transportation services.

After adding your artwork to the shopping cart, you will be able to check the delivery price using the Estimate Shipping and Tax tool.

Over 20 Years Experience
Only Museum Quality

The paintings we create are only of museum quality. Our academy graduated artists will never allow a compromise in the quality and detail of the ordered painting. TOPofART do not work, and will never allow ourselves to work with low quality studios from the Far East. We are based in Europe, and quality is our highest priority.

"Blossoming Apple Tree" (1912) by Piet Mondrian is a painting that walks the fine line between abstraction and nature, teetering at the very edge of Cubism before Mondrian famously broke away. At first glance, it’s easy to feel like you’re staring into a mist, shapes curling and flowing in ways that seem barely tethered to reality - like nature is fading into some kind of dream world. But no, it’s an apple tree. Or it was, once.

The branches twist and weave in organic, almost skeletal forms, and yet they’re encased in a structure - black, sharp lines dissecting the whole like some stubborn geometry professor trying to impose order on chaos. These lines suggest limbs and leaves but also threaten to disassemble the image completely. It’s as if Mondrian is deconstructing the very essence of the tree, breaking it apart, but in the process, something new, something almost architectural emerges. There’s a tension here, a battle between the natural curve and the human desire for structure.

Color-wise, it’s muted. Not in the sense of dullness, but more restrained, almost as if Mondrian is whispering where others might scream. Pale grays, soft blues, and gentle beiges dominate the palette, giving the impression of a cold early spring morning - a blossom barely visible through a haze of fog. That gentle pop of green near the base, though? A reminder that life is still pulsing through, even if it’s fighting to stay seen.

The composition? It feels like a frozen river - everything flowing in one unified movement, but stopped, suspended just before complete abstraction takes over. You see the hints of Mondrian’s future - his love affair with straight lines and flat planes - but here it’s still soft, still trying to hold onto the world it’s depicting.
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