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Wassily Kandinsky - A Portrait of Kandinsky the Artist
The houses and churches were painted with such glittering colors that he thought he was inside a picture when he entered them.
Art In Context • Wassily Kandinsky - A Portrait of Kandinsky the Artist
He would subsequently reflect on this encounter: “The brochure advised me that it was a haystack. I had no idea what that was. This non-recognition was excruciatingly distressing for me. The painter, in my opinion, had no right to depict incoherently. I had a distinct impression that the painting’s subject was absent. And I was surprised and perpl
... See moreArt In Context • Wassily Kandinsky - A Portrait of Kandinsky the Artist
Kandinsky’s paintings from this time are huge, emotive colored masses that are judged independently of shapes and lines; these no longer serve to delimit them, but instead, overlap freely to produce paintings of tremendous energy.
Art In Context • Wassily Kandinsky - A Portrait of Kandinsky the Artist
Kandinsky the painter believed that the aim of art was to transmit the artist’s uniqueness and inner vision, which necessitated the elevation of objective reality.
Art In Context • Wassily Kandinsky - A Portrait of Kandinsky the Artist
“The keyboard is color, the eyes are hammers, and the heart is a piano with several strings. The musician is the hand that plays, feeling one note or another in order to create vibrations in one’s soul.”