wassily
kandinsky |
"Technically,
every work of art comes into being
in the same way as the cosmos - by
means of catastrophes, which ultimately
create out of the cacophony of the
various instruments that symphony
we call the music of the spheres.
The creation of the work of art is
the creation of the world."
Wassily Kandinsky.
Wassily Kandinsky was born in Moscow
where he studied economics, law and
ethnography. In 1889, upon receiving
a commission by the Russian Imperial
Society of Friends of Natural History,
Anthropology and Ethnography, Kandinsky
embarked on a solo expedition to the
remote Vologda province where he was
impressed by native folk art. After
being deeply moved by Monet's 'Haystack'
in 1896, he moved to Munich to study
painting. From 1901 to 1904, Kandinsky
was heavily involved in the Phalanx
exhibition society. After this he
lived in a number of locations around
Europe.
In 1909 Kandinsky began what was to
be his most powerful and ambitious
project entitled 'Compositions'. The
first seven were produced between
1909 and 1913 and the final three
in 1923, 1936 and 1939. At the same
time he also commenced his 'Impressions'
series, and both these projects were
to be known as the 'Improvisations'
series. In these he removed any representational
aspects in order to work in a purely
abstract form. In a collection of
his writings Concerning the Spiritual
in Art (first published in 1912),
Kandinsky explained how mysticism
and theosophy were important to his
attempts to express deep emotions
in his work. When his work was rejected
by the Neue Künstlervereinigung group,
he set up the Blaue Reiter (the Blue
Rider group) in 1911 with Franz Marc
and August Nache. For the next three
years, Kandinsky produced an enormous
amount of work and with a number of
prestigious exhibitions around the
world achieved considerable success.
Paintings from this period include
'Composition VI' (1913) and 'Light
Picture' (1913).
With the outbreak of the First World
War, Kandinsky was forced to leave
Munich and return to Russia where
he became a respected teacher in various
schools before taking up a post at
the Bauhaus in 1922. Despite the geometrical
precision that was the Bauhaus style,
Kandinsky experimented with such forms
as circles, triangles and uneven lines.
In 1922 Kleine Welten was published
containing examples of possibly Kandinsky's
finest work as a graphic artist, and
at this time he broadened his artistic
range to designing stage sets, costumes
and ceramic tiles.
In both his writings and paintings,
Kandinsky has been enormously influential.
He was intrigued by the possibility
of conveying a range of emotions through
the variety of colours and lines he
chose to use. Kandinsky was influenced
by a great many styles throughout
his career, such as Art Nouveau at
the turn-of-the-century, Symbolism
around 1910 in his interest in the
similar effects caused by both colours
and sounds, and Surrealism towards
the end of his career in 'Sky Blue'
(1940) for example. His many works
continue to be exhibited in many galleries
worldwide.
|