Color directly influences the soul. Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand that plays, touching one key or another purposively, to cause vibrations in the soul.
Kandinsky brought his circles into the foreground for the first time in this artwork from 1923, which was
titled Circles in a Circle. It is a particularly tidy piece with most elements contained neatly within a large thick
circle.
This painting from 1923 can now be found under the ownership of the Philadelphia
Museum of Art. This highly significant art institution features an excellent overall collection of European art, including Impressionist
and Post-Impressionist artists. There is also a good number of articles from other regions and periods to satisfy almost any artistic
taste. With regards the Europeans, you can find the likes of Renoir, Monet, Manet, Degas and Cézanne all represented here. There is also
the Rodin Museum for sculpture fans, located very close by. In all, there is enough original, historic art in this city to keep you busy
for a long weekend, probably even longer for those with sufficient attention spans and a passion for a variety of artistic
styles.
"...It is the first picture of mine to bring the theme of circles to the
foreground..."
There are two bright beams of colour which jut in from the corners of
the painting, intercepting each other diagonally, in the centre of the work. One is green, the other yellow. This provides colour but
also forces your focus towards the centre, where a flurry of small circles can be found. Most of them overlap each other, with the
artist also adding a series of sharp lines alongside. It appears random, but the artist always worked with planning and precision. He
did not work spontaneously, even though some of his abstract pieces would sometimes appear so. In order to provide an organised
atmosphere to this painting, a thick stroke of black encircles the other main elements, and the remaining space outside is left entirely
blank, other than the two stripes we mentioned earlier. The work feels particularly modern, with its sharp lines and shapes, so it may
surprise some to know that it was completed as early as 1923 - this underlines the creativity of this groundbreaking artist. You will
find many more variations on this theme within our collection of famous Kandinsky paintings, though in many he also experimented with
squares too, and how the two shapes could interact with each other.
Posters in many formats, natural white, 250 g/m² premium paper Wooden picture frame
Colours and forms determine the abstract works of art of the Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky. His works have shaped an epoch. The paintings led to a libera...
Colours and forms determine the abstract works of art of the Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky. His works have shaped an epoch. The paintings led to a libera...