The term "concrete art" was first used in the 1920s in Russia, as a development of
constructivism. After the formal break up of
De stijl, following the last issue of its magazine in 1928, van Doesburg began considering the creation of a new collective centered on a similar approach to abstraction. In 1929 he discussed his plans with Uruguayan painter
Joaquín Torres-García, with candidates for membership of this group including
Georges Vantongerloo,
Constantin Brâncuși,
František Kupka,
Piet Mondrian,
Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart and
Antoine Pevsner, among others. However, van Doesburg divided the candidates between artists whose work was still not completely abstract and those free of referentiality. As this classification entailed the possibility of a disqualification of the first group, the discussions between the two soon broke down, prompting Torres-García to team up instead with Belgian critic
Michel Seuphor and form the group
Cercle et Carré. Following this, van Doesburg proceeded to propose a rival group,
Art Concret, championing a geometrical
abstract art closely related to the aesthetics of
Neo-plasticism. In his opinion, the term 'abstract' as applied to art had negative connotations; in its place he preferred the more positive term 'concrete'. Van Doesburg was eventually joined by
Otto G. Carlsund,
Léon Arthur Tutundjian,
Jean Hélion and his fellow lodger, the typographer
Marcel Wantz (1911–1979), who soon left to take up a political career. In May 1930 they published a single issue of their own French-language magazine,
Revue Art Concret, which featured a joint
manifesto, positioning them as the more radical group of abstractionists. "
BASIS OF CONCRETE PAINTING We say: • Art is universal. • A work of art must be entirely conceived and shaped by the mind before its execution. It shall not receive anything of nature's or sensuality's or sentimentality's formal data. We want to exclude lyricism, drama, symbolism, and so on. • The painting must be entirely built up with purely plastic elements, namely surfaces and colors. A pictorial element does not have any meaning beyond "itself"; as a consequence, a painting does not have any meaning other than "itself". • The construction of a painting, as well as that of its elements, must be simple and visually controllable. • The painting technique must be mechanic, i.e., exact, anti-impressionistic. • An effort toward absolute clarity is mandatory." The group was short lived and only exhibited together on three occasions in 1930 as part of larger group exhibitions, the first being at the
Salon des Surindépendents in June, followed by
Production Paris 1930 in
Zürich, and in August the exhibition
AC: Internationell utställning av postkubistisk konst (International exhibition of post-cubist art) in
Stockholm, curated by Carlsund. In the catalog to the latter, Carlsund states that the group's "programme is clear: absolute Purism.
Neo-Plasticism,
Purism and
Constructivism combined". Shortly before van Doesburg's death in 1931, the members of the Art Concret group still active in Paris united with the larger association
Abstraction-Création. ==Theoretical background==