Amsterdam Honors Mondrian with Major Exhibition on 150 Jubilee

Employees pose for a photograph with "Composition: No. II with Yellow, Red and Blue" by Piet Mondrian prior to the New York spring season of evening sales at Christie's gallery in London, Britain, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Employees pose for a photograph with "Composition: No. II with Yellow, Red and Blue" by Piet Mondrian prior to the New York spring season of evening sales at Christie's gallery in London, Britain, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
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Amsterdam Honors Mondrian with Major Exhibition on 150 Jubilee

Employees pose for a photograph with "Composition: No. II with Yellow, Red and Blue" by Piet Mondrian prior to the New York spring season of evening sales at Christie's gallery in London, Britain, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Employees pose for a photograph with "Composition: No. II with Yellow, Red and Blue" by Piet Mondrian prior to the New York spring season of evening sales at Christie's gallery in London, Britain, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

Squares, lines, colors: this abstract linear approach to art helped the Dutch painter Piet Mondrian (1872-1944) gain fame around the world. Mondrian, who, many art historians would argue, was the inventor of the abstract, would have turned 150 this year, according to the German News Agency.

To mark this jubilee, the museum with the world’s largest collection of Mondrian works is now honoring the artist with a major exhibition.

Running until September, Mondrian Moves in the Kunstmuseum Den Haag features major works in a gallery that even has its own dedicated soundtrack – techno music made in the style of Mondrian’s abstract methods.

“Mondrian had a great influence on 20th century art,” said director Benno Tempel at the show’s launch in The Hague on the last day of March. The museum wants to show “how Mondrian moved between his friends and contemporaries and how great his artistic influence was on artists after him.”

The museum owns more than 300 works by the painter, making it the world’s most extensive Mondrian collection. And it is now also showing numerous works by other artists influenced by his unmistakable abstract style.

For the exhibition, Steven Brunsmann and Marco Spaventi even composed a piece of techno music based on the painter’s ideas. This can also be heard when looking at the pictures. At the same time, the exhibition also shows how closely Mondrian was connected with other artists, such as his Dutch colleague Theo van Doesburg or the American dancer and singer Josephine Baker.



84% of the World’s Coral Reefs Hit by Worst Bleaching Event on Record 

This handout photo taken on March 12, 2025 and released on March 26 by the Minderoo Foundation shows a diver inspecting corals impacted by a bleaching event on the Ningaloo Reef off Australia's west coast. (Photo by Violeta J Brosig / Minderoo Foundation / AFP)
This handout photo taken on March 12, 2025 and released on March 26 by the Minderoo Foundation shows a diver inspecting corals impacted by a bleaching event on the Ningaloo Reef off Australia's west coast. (Photo by Violeta J Brosig / Minderoo Foundation / AFP)
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84% of the World’s Coral Reefs Hit by Worst Bleaching Event on Record 

This handout photo taken on March 12, 2025 and released on March 26 by the Minderoo Foundation shows a diver inspecting corals impacted by a bleaching event on the Ningaloo Reef off Australia's west coast. (Photo by Violeta J Brosig / Minderoo Foundation / AFP)
This handout photo taken on March 12, 2025 and released on March 26 by the Minderoo Foundation shows a diver inspecting corals impacted by a bleaching event on the Ningaloo Reef off Australia's west coast. (Photo by Violeta J Brosig / Minderoo Foundation / AFP)

Harmful bleaching of the world's coral has grown to include 84% of the ocean's reefs in the most intense event of its kind in recorded history, the International Coral Reef Initiative announced Wednesday.

It's the fourth global bleaching event since 1998, and has now surpassed bleaching from 2014-17 that hit some two-thirds of reefs, said the ICRI, a mix of more than 100 governments, non-governmental organizations and others. And it's not clear when the current crisis, which began in 2023 and is blamed on warming oceans, will end.

“We may never see the heat stress that causes bleaching dropping below the threshold that triggers a global event,” said Mark Eakin, executive secretary for the International Coral Reef Society and retired coral monitoring chief for the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

“We’re looking at something that’s completely changing the face of our planet and the ability of our oceans to sustain lives and livelihoods,” Eakin said.

Last year was Earth’s hottest year on record, and much of that is going into oceans. The average annual sea surface temperature of oceans away from the poles was a record 20.87 degrees Celsius (69.57 degrees Fahrenheit).

That's deadly to corals, which are key to seafood production, tourism and protecting coastlines from erosion and storms. Coral reefs are sometimes dubbed “rainforests of the sea” because they support high levels of biodiversity — approximately 25% of all marine species can be found in, on and around coral reefs.

Coral get their bright colors from the colorful algae that live inside them and are a food source for the corals. Prolonged warmth causes the algae to release toxic compounds, and the coral eject them. A stark white skeleton is left behind, and the weakened coral is at heightened risk of dying.

The bleaching event has been so severe that NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch program has had to add levels to its bleaching alert scale to account for the growing risk of coral death.

Efforts are underway to conserve and restore coral. One Dutch lab has worked with coral fragments, including some taken from off the coast of the Seychelles, to propagate them in a zoo so that they might be used someday to repopulate wild coral reefs if needed. Other projects, including one off Florida, have worked to rescue corals endangered by high heat and nurse them back to health before returning them to the ocean.

But scientists say it's essential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that warm the planet, such as carbon dioxide and methane.

“The best way to protect coral reefs is to address the root cause of climate change. And that means reducing the human emissions that are mostly from burning of fossil fuels ... everything else is looking more like a Band-Aid rather than a solution,” Eakin said.

“I think people really need to recognize what they’re doing ... inaction is the kiss of death for coral reefs,” said Melanie McField, co-chair of the Caribbean Steering Committee for the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network, a network of scientists that monitors reefs throughout the world.

The group's update comes as President Donald Trump has moved aggressively in his second term to boost fossil fuels and roll back clean energy programs, which he says is necessary for economic growth.

“We’ve got a government right now that is working very hard to destroy all of these ecosystems ... removing these protections is going to have devastating consequences,” Eakin said.