
Étude No. 1
<p>Widely considered Georges Vantongerloo’s first abstract painting, <em>Étude No. 1</em> is the culmination of a series of increasingly complex geometric analyses of a seated female figure. Although difficult to discern within the cascades of overlapping circles, a body starts to emerge when we direct our eyes toward the red triangle at bottom. From this sharply pointed toe, legs and torso ascend, rising up along an axis that is also the physical centerline of the painting. Early critics sometimes faulted Vantongerloo for the draft-like or unfinished appearance of his work from this period, alluded to in the picture’s title. But the artist himself admired and sought out this hazy, lightly painted look, where interlocking solids and voids might suggest bodies in a state of perpetual motion.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1917
- Medium
- Oil on pressboard
- Dimensions
- 55 × 55 cm (21 5/8 × 21 5/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Georges Vantongerloo
Artist

Printmaking
Georges Vantongerloo was a Belgian sculptor and painter who worked with geometric abstraction and mathematical systems throughout the twentieth century. He explored three-dimensional form through carved wood, stone, and bronze, as well as constructed works in metal and plastic that embodied principles of proportion and spatial harmony. His practice bridged sculpture and painting through a rigorous engagement with linear perspective and architectural space. Vantongerloo's work was central to the development of constructivist and geometric abstraction in Europe between the wars and afterward.
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More by Georges Vantongerloo
Plate 20 from Futurists, Abstractionists, Dadaists: the Forerunners of the Avant-Garde, vol. I
1962 · Etching from an illustrated book with nineteen etchings (three with drypoint, two with aquatint, and one with aquatint and embossing) and one engraving
Plate (folio 22) from 10 Origin
1942 · Linoleum cut from a portfolio of six linoleum cuts, three woodcuts, and one lithograph
10 Origin
1942 · Portfolio of six linoleum cuts, three woodcuts, and one lithograph
Relation of Lines and Colors
1939 · Oil on board
Curving Function Greenish Brown
1938 · Oil on hardboard
The Function of Lines
1936 · Brush with opaque and transparent watercolor and pen and black ink on beige, wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Georges Vantongerloo
- Year
- 1917
- Medium
- Oil on pressboard
- Dimensions
- 55 × 55 cm (21 5/8 × 21 5/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1917-132985
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





