Friday, May 17, 2019
Wassily Kandinsky
Wassily Kandinsky could have been the premier abstract artist of the 20th century is a  macrocosm at war had no twice interfered with his artistic career and  destruct three of his early  trains. Kandinsky was  natural in Russia in 1866 and soon moved to Germany where he worked with the Bauhaus School of expressionist painters integrating art in architecture and design (Artcyclopedia). He also founded the Der Blaue Reiter, a group of artists attempting to express and define spirituality  by art (Artcyclopedia) Kandinsky believed that music and art should be integrated as a  hearty as a means of defining the influence of the soul on the outer world. To that end, he began his serial publication called  formation and had  undefiled 7 of them before the beginning of World War II. Tragically, the first three canvases in the  serial were destroyed during the war. While Kandinsky could not have planned for the destruction of his work, the  red ink of the first three Composition pieces helps     collar the series as an allegory for his life, the ultimate tribute to a man who believe art should be spiritual.At the only  era in recent history when the entire collection, with full-size  drab and white photos of the  lost(p) three holding their place, was  showed, reviewer Mark harden called Kandinsky one of he most original and influential artists of the 20th century. His inner necessity to express his emotional perceptions led to the development of an abstract style of  icon that was based on the non-representational properties of color and  conformation. Kandinskys compositions were the culmination of his efforts to create a  beautiful  word-painting that would provide the  identical emotional power as a musical composition.The exhibition Kandinsky Compositions, organized by Magdalena Dabrowski and on display at the Los Angeles County Art Museum until September 3, 1995, presents these monumental works together for the first and possibly last time and provides an opportunit   y to witness the creative process of Kandinsky (Harden, 1995). The loss of the first three works and the attempt at representing them in the show left the viewer with a great sense of loss, Harden wrote, but mayhap  more than interesting is the fact they were lost at sometime  close together(p) the artists  expiry in 1944. That they were destroyed in Germany during the war as some much of his life had been as well simply adds an ironic twist to the entire project.The other twist on the Composition series is that the  net painting is the only one of the series done on a  stern background. In 1911, when he was working on Composition IV and V, Kandinsky is quoted as saying, (Black) is like the silence of the body after death, the  obturate of life. (Harden, 1995) He painted Composition X on a black background just  basketball team  age before his death, when Germany was  one time   all over again disrupting the world and taking the world back to war.By 1911, Kandinsky was already a wor   ld-renowned painter and known for his desire to incorporate spirituality into his art but as tension  pink wine in Europe, he returned to his native Moscow where he remained until 1921. Compositions VI and VII would be completed in 1913 and then he did not return to the series until a decade late. (Geggenheim, 2007). Composition VII is the  visor of Kandinskys pre-World War One artistic achievement. The creation of this work involved over thirty preparatory drawings, watercolors and  embrocate studies. Each of these is included in the exhibition, documenting the deliberate creative process used by Kandinsky in his compositions. Amazingly, once he had completed the preparatory work, Kandinsky executed the actual painting of Composition VII in  slight than four days. (Harden, 1995).Composition VII may have also been intended to be his finale in the series as art scholars through Kandinskys writings and study of the less abstract preparatory works, have set that Composition VII combine   s the themes of The Resurrection, The Last Judgment, The Deluge and The Garden of Love in an operatic outburst of pure painting (Harden, 1995). Because Kandinsky had such a strong belief in the use of abstraction to present  be themes with symbols and it is likely that he had intended this wrapping up of religious themes to be his final work in the series (Long, 1975). Then, he began his self-imposed exile to his native land and stayed there until it appeared Germany was a haven again for thought and progress.In 1922, he joined Bauhaus and in 1923, painted Compositions VIII, like all the works in the series it was highly representational of his emotions and mental state at the time of its painting. Composition VIII reflects the influence of Suprematism and Constructivism  wrapped by Kandinsky while in Russia prior to his return to Germany to teach at the Bauhaus. Here, Kandinsky has moved from color to form as the dominating compositional  part. Contrasting forms now provide the dyn   amic balance of the work the  titanic circle in the upper left plays against the network of precise lines in the  right portion of the canvas. (Harden, 1975) This work also is more bright and less chaotic than his final pre-war effort, possible indicative of a more upbeat and spiritual peaceful time. Kandinsky was making progress in his work, developing with the group at Bauhaus and gaining  spare international acclaim. His first solo show in New York coincided with this work (Guggenheim, 2007). by chance this perceived happiness and his  familiarity in other pursuits is why it would be another 10 years before Kandinsky added another painting to the Compositions series. He gained citizenship in Germany in 1928 and seemed contented in his new homeland until 1933 when Bauhaus was one of the early casualties of the  Nazi government. He then moved to France where his Composition IX was definitely influenced by the surrealists gaining popularity there (Harden, 1995). After Composition IX    was completed in 1936, Europe once again became an ugly place to live and in 1937, 57 of Kandinskys works were seized by the Nazi government.(Guggenheim, 2007). Some, like the first three Composition pieces, were destroyed.Two years later, in 1939, Kandinsky completed the series, breaking from all the previous works and creating his work on a  bowl of black. Given his earlier statements about the color and the loss of his other works, it is no doubt a  reflection factor of the  rattling pain in Kandinskys soul brought on by the second World War. The salient characteristic of Composition X is obviously the stark, black ground. The colors and forms appear particularly sharp against the black background. The brilliance of the colored shapes brings to mind the cutouts done by Matisse over a decade later.The movement of the forms is clearly upward and outward from both sides of a central axis running through the  give-like form near the top of the canvas. This movement enhances the evoc   ation of hot-air balloon forms rising into an infinite space. The round form between the book shape and the brown balloon shape has a lunar feel to it that  hitherto conveys a  tactile sensation of literal outer space. Kandinsky had always expressed a strong dislike for the color black and it is significant that he chose it as the dominating color of his last major artistic statement. (Harden, 1995).Ultimately, the reviewer is right and the final Composition is kandinskys statement about his loss and the world at war. For Kandinsky, if that objective element of a painting were taken away, the building blocks of the composition would reveal themselves to cause a feeling of  quietness and tranquil repetition, of well-balanced parts. (Dabrowski, 1995). The artist spent a lifetime telling the world that he dislike the color black and that his work was all about the symbolism and the meaning behind the painting itself. It makes  double-dyed(a) sense then that his final major work would b   e about death itself and the life that has been interposed over it. Whether Kandinsky knew that Compositions X would be among his final works is not clear.What is clear is that death too is symbolic of loss and pain, emotions that the highly spiritual Kadinsky could not help but feel when his work was captured by the Nazi regime. Perhaps more so than even the usual artist, Kandinsky was tied to his art, deeply and emotional. That they were an expression of his belief system and his very soul make the loss of the first three Compositions even more tragic.Sadly, World War II was a horrible time for the great works, with many works of art lost forever to the savages of war. The  discrepancy in Kandinskys work, as opposed to other great masters, is that the artist was still alive and he was able to present one last finale, to express the pain and rage and the destruction and to show that life, even without art, must sometimes go on.WORKS CITEDDabrowski, Magdelena. KandinskyCompositions    Museum of Modern art New York, 1995.Geggenheim Museum, http//www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/artist_bio_71.html, November 14, 2007Harden, Mark. Kandinsky Compositions http//www.glyphs.com/art/kandinsky/, November 14, 2007.Long, Rose-Carol Washton. Kandinskys Abstract  path The Veiling of Apocalyptic Folk Imagery,Art Journal  Vol. 34, No. 3 (Spring, 1975), pp. 217-228 Stable URL http//links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0004-3249%28197521%2934%3A3%3C217%3AKASTVO%3E2.0.CO%3B2-4 , November 14, 2007.Wassily Kandinsky  November 14, 2007.  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.