New York, United States, June 1st, 2026, Chainwire
Piet Mondrian influenced the course of modern visual culture through his pioneering abstract works defined by geometric grids and primary colours. Although he experimented with a range of styles early in his career, he is most closely associated with the De Stijl movement, founded in 1917 by Theo van Doesburg, for which Mondrian developed the theoretical framework known as Neoplasticism. His grid-based compositions have had a lasting influence on modern design, architecture, and visual systems, shaping approaches to structure and layout across many creative fields. Now, for the first time in the Estate’s history, those iconic works have been officially reimagined.
This is the first time the Estate has ever approved a collaboration that reimagines Mondrian’s original works. Five of his most celebrated compositions have been reinterpreted through the Doodleverse, Mondrian’s precision meeting Doodles’ colour, character, and playful energy. The structure stays. The balance stays. Everything else is new.
Five Masterworks, Reimagined
The collection reimagines five compositions that span Mondrian’s career — from his early geometric experiments to his final unfinished masterpiece:
• Composition with Grid 9: Checkerboard Composition with Light Colors, 1919
• Composition with Red, Black, Blue, and Yellow, 1928
• Composition with Red, Blue and Yellow, 1930
• Composition No. 10, 1939–42, with Blue, Yellow, and Red
• Victory Boogie Woogie (unfinished), 1942–44 Mondrian’s final painting, left incomplete at the time of his death in 1944
What Collectors Get
The Blind Box: A special edition celebrating Piet Mondrian, featuring all five reimagined compositions as digital collectibles. Available on OpenSea.
Two Limited Edition Doodles Digital Collectibles with Physical Art Prints: Two Doodles digital collectibles featuring reimagined versions of Composition with Red, Black, Blue, and Yellow (1928) and Composition with Red, Blue and Yellow (1930). Each digital collectible comes with a redeemable museum-quality physical art print via ElmonX. 20% of the collection features a special screenprint on holographic foil paper (250gsm), while 80% is a screenprint halftone print (300gsm). A real Mondrian Doodles you can hang on your wall at home. Available on OpenSea. Redeemable through ElmonX.
Free VeVe Redeemables (Doodle Dog & Doodle Pencil) Every collector who purchases any piece from the OpenSea collection receives a free redeemable 3D and augmented reality collectible on VeVe, the world’s largest carbon-neutral digital collectibles platform. Two exclusive pieces: Doodle Dog and Doodle Pencil which have been created for VeVe, bringing Mondrian’s iconic grid into an immersive 3D experience. One VeVe redeemable per collectible purchased; once redeemed, it is consumed and cannot be used again. Redeemable through ElmonX, then usable in the VeVe app.
A New Generation Meets Mondrian
Mondrian’s visual language is already everywhere, but not everyone knows where it came from. This collection changes that. The Piet Mondrian Estate / Holtzman Trust and Doodles are bringing one of the most important artists in history directly to a younger global audience across music, gaming, sports, and digital culture in a format they already engage with.
For Doodles, the collaboration represents a powerful return to artistic roots. Doodles has always lived by the ethos “make art, make history, make something” partnering with Mondrian’s Estate gives that phrase genuine historical weight and positions Doodles not as a brand doing brand deals, but as a cultural movement connecting with one of the most important artists who ever lived.
The Doodles community and the Mondrian Estate’s institutional audience, galleries, museums, and traditional collectors rarely overlap. Bridging these two worlds creates something genuinely new: a moment where fine art heritage and contemporary digital culture don’t just coexist, they belong together.
Statements
Madalena Holtzman, Trustee, Mondrian/Holtzman Trust: “This is perfect for engaging younger adults and will surely be successful to the extent that Doodles are recognised in different sectors of the market, from music, gaming, and sports. I approve, and I am excited to see what becomes of this adventure with them.”
Availability
About Piet Mondrian
Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) was a Dutch painter whose work helped shape the course of modern visual culture through his pioneering abstract compositions. After an early career that explored a range of representational styles, he became closely associated with the De Stijl movement, founded in 1917 by Theo van Doesburg, with Mondrian as one of its central figures and leading theorists. Within this context, he developed Neoplasticism, a disciplined approach to abstraction based on vertical and horizontal lines, primary colours, and carefully balanced asymmetry.
His mature work has had a lasting impact on modern design, architecture, and visual communication, influencing approaches to structure, layout, and visual harmony across a wide range of creative disciplines. In 1940, Mondrian moved to New York City, where the energy of Manhattan’s grid and the rhythm of boogie-woogie jazz informed his late paintings, including the unfinished Victory Boogie Woogie.
About the Collaborators
About OpenSea
Credit Piet Mondrian Estate / Holtzman Trust. Doodles, ElmonX & Bridgeman Images
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