Kandinsky at the Guggenheim

21 December 2009 | Drawing, Museum Exhibitions, Painting
Several Circles, 1926

Several Circles, 1926

Vasily Kandinsky was born in Moscow in 1866 and died in France in 1944. Having broken new ground in painting at the beginning of the 20th century, the Guggenheim is holding the first retrospective of his work since 1985. In 1929 Solomon Guggenheim, under the advice of Hilla Rebay, purchased Kandinsky in depth, and in 1939 he opened the Museum of Non-Objective Art to display his collection. It was not until 1943 that Frank Lloyd Wright designed the current space which was built to house works like those of Kandinsky which are the “core” of the Guggenheim collection. Having personally never been blown away by the Guggenheim as a viewing space for large exhibitions, it was refreshing to see works on display that the building was actually created for. Included in the exhibition are around 100 paintings and 60 works on paper. Kandinsky lived through two World Wars and the 1917 Russian Revolution; there is no doubt that  his desire to create work that advocated the spiritual experience of life is born out of the environment and time in which he lived.

As a child Kandinsky was exposed to music and art. He studied law and economics but influenced by a viewing of Impressionist work (in particular Monet’s Haystack) at an exhibition in 1895, he left Moscow to study painting in Munich. At a Wagner concert in 1896, he noticed that music can elicit emotions despite its lack of a connection to a recognizable subject. He strove to create a similar experience for viewers of his work.

Landscape near Murnau with Locomotive, 1909

Landscape near Murnau with Locomotive, 1909

His early works evoke the Russia of his childhood and landscapes of places he visited during his many travels. He spent a year in Paris and his brushwork was clearly influenced by the Post-Impressionists and Fauves. In 1908 he returned to Munich and began a period of intense activity. He was a leading force in the avant-garde painting scene. He began to use more bold color and there was a growing trend of abstraction in his work. In 1912 he published Der Blaue Reiter with Franz Marc which contained images and articles united in the common idea of the expressionist potential of color. By 1910 much of his output included depictions of cataclysmic events…”his dream of a better, more spiritual future was achieved through the transformative powers of art.” It was during this time that the horse and rider theme also became prevalent which also represented his path toward salvation. As his work became more abstract, colors no longer corresponded to actual objects: blue trees, purple faces, green horses. This section included my favorite period of his work which is quite aesthetically pleasing.

Accent in Pink, 1926

Accent in Pink, 1926

In 1911 Kandinsky began a correspondence with a Viennese composer named Arnold Schonberg who was experimenting with music in a similar manner that Kandinsky was experimenting with painting. It was during this time that Kandinsky published his famous treatise “On the Spiritual in Art” which “examines the capacity of color to communicate the artist’s innermost psychological concerns.” It was during this period that Kandinsky’s style moved toward complete abstraction. Color, shape, and line became his primary focus. In 1914, due to World War I Kandinsky was forced to leave Germany and his creative period came to a screeching halt. It was not until 1916 that he returned to oil painting. He titled works similarly to musical scores: Improvisation, Composition, etc. One can begin to see how music is in his mind when he creates the work, shapes and line dance across the canvas in bright colors. In the 1920s Kandinsky’s work becomes darker with a more subdued palette. From 1922-1933 he lived and taught at the Bauhaus and the art he created during these years is characterized by a geometric style. He used circles (a form most closely linked to the cosmos), squares (representative of peace and calm), and triangles (symbolizing aggression) along with straight lines and grids. Kandinsky found the Bauhaus environment supportive of his belief in art to “transform self and society.” There are some lovely works in this section where what at first appears to be a monochromatic background upon further inspection turns out to be layers of shades of one color.

Accompanied Contrast, 1935

Accompanied Contrast, 1935

After moving to Paris in 1933, his Surrealist peers Arp, Miro, Ernst, and Klee began to inspire his work. He invented his own language of biomorphic forms and his palette shifted to soft pastels “applied with a lightness of touch.” It was during this time that he began to experiment with different materials, often combining sand with pigment. Not necessarily my taste, I appreciated these later works more on my second visit to the show. During World War II Kandinsky’s work was labeled “degenerate.” His productivity dwindled and in 1944, he died.

Succession, 1935

Succession, 1935


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