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(1866-1944)
Ranked among the artists whose work changed the history of art in the early
years of the 20th century, the Russian abstract painter Wassily Kandinsky
is generally regarded as one of the originators of abstract painting, or abstract
expressionism. In both his painting and his theoretical writings he influenced
modern styles. Spending many years of his life in Germany, Kandinsky became
an instrumental force in the development of German expressionism.
Kandinsky was born in Moscow on Dec. 4, 1866. He studied law and political
economy at the University of Moscow, but after a visit in 1895 to an exhibition
of French impressionist paintings in Moscow, Kandinsky decided to become a
painter. Moving to Munich, Germany, he worked under Anton Azbé and
Franz von Stuck, studying impressionist color and art nouveau (an ornamental
style of about 1890 to 1910). From the very beginning Kandinsky's own work
showed an interest in fantasy.
Between 1900 and 1910 Kandinsky traveled widely, including visits to Paris
that put him in contact with the art of Paul Gauguin, the neoimpressionists,
and fauvism (a style with aggressive use of brilliant colors). He began developing
his ideas concerning the power of pure color and nonrepresentational painting.
In 1909 Kandinsky helped found the New Artists' Association in Munich.
Kandinsky painted his first abstract watercolor in 1910 and began formulating
his important theoretical study, 'Concerning the Spiritual in Art', which
was published originally in German in 1912. In this work he examined the psychological
effects of color and made comparisons between painting and music. Together
with the German painter Franz Marc, Kandinsky became a leader in the influential
Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider) movement, an expressionist group. He and Marc edited
a Blue Rider almanac in which they reproduced art from all ages.
Marc and Kandinsky organized avant-garde international exhibitions in Munich
and elsewhere--exhibitions that proved to be major events in the development
of German expressionism. With the outbreak of World War I, Kandinsky left
Germany to return to Russia, where he taught and organized numerous artistic
activities. He went back to Germany in 1921 and became one of the principal
teachers at the Bauhaus school in Weimar, remaining with the school until
it was closed by the Nazi regime in 1933. Kandinsky then moved to a Parisian
suburb, where he stayed until his death on Dec. 13, 1944. |
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