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Kandinsky, Vasily Vasilyevich
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Vasily Kandinsky
Date of birth: December 16, 1866 (1866-12-16)
Place of birth: Moscow (Russian Empire)
Date of death: December 13, 1944 (1944-12-13) (77 years old)
Place of death: Neuilly sur Seine (France, near Paris)
Country: France
The Russian Empire
Germany
Genre: painter, graphic artist and art theorist
Study: private studio of Anton Ashbe (Munich), Munich Academy of Fine Arts
Signature:
Works on Wikimedia Commons on Wikimedia Commons
There are articles on Wikipedia about other people with the surname Kandinsky.
Vasily Vasilyevich Kandinsky (December 16 (4), 1866, Moscow — December 13, 1944, Neuilly sur Seine, France) was an outstanding Russian painter, graphic artist and fine art theorist, one of the founders of abstract art.
He was one of the founders of the group "Blue Rider", a teacher at the Bauhaus.
Born in Moscow, he received his basic musical and artistic education in Odessa, when the family moved there in 1871.
His parents assumed for his son the profession of a lawyer, Vasily Vasilyevich brilliantly graduated from the Law Faculty of Moscow State University.
In 1896, the famous University of Dorpat in Tartu offered a professor's position, but Kandinsky refused.
So, for a number of reasons, at the age of 30, he decided to become an artist; this was influenced by the Impressionist exhibition in Moscow in 1895 and the painting "Haystacks" by Claude Monet.
In 1896, he moved to Munich, where he met the German Expressionists.
After the outbreak of the First World War, he returned to Moscow, but, not agreeing with the attitude to art in Soviet Russia, in 1921 he left for Germany again.
After the closing of the Bauhaus by the Nazis, he moved with his wife to France, in 1939 he received French citizenship.
Content
[remove]
1 Biography 2 The best years 3 The most famous works 4 Solo exhibitions 5 Essays 6 Memory 7 Sources 8 Bibliography 8.1 Albums, catalogs, monographs, collections of articles 8.2 Articles
9 Notes 10 References
Biography[edit / edit wiki text]
Kandinsky came from a family of Nerchinsk merchants, descendants of convicts.
His great grandmother was the Tunguska princess Gantimurova, and his father was a representative of the ancient Trans Baikal (Kyakhta) family of Kandinsky, who derive themselves from the surname of the princes of the Mansiysk Kondinsky principality.
Vasily Kandinsky was born on December 16 (December 4, 1866) in Moscow, in the family of merchant Vasily Silvestrovich Kandinsky (1832-1926).
During his childhood, he traveled with his parents to Europe and Russia.
In 1871, the family settled in Odessa, where the future artist graduated from the gymnasium, also receives art and music education.
In 1885-93 (with a break in 1889-91) he studied at the Faculty of Law of Moscow University, where he studied at the Department of Political Economy and Statistics under the supervision of Professor A. I. Chuprov, studying economics and law.
In 1889, he interrupted his studies for health reasons, and from May 28 (June 9) to July 3 (July 17), he made an ethnographic expedition to the northern counties of the Vologda province[1].
In 1893, V. Kandinsky graduated from the Faculty of Law.
In (1895-1896) he worked as an artistic director of the printing house of the Partnership of I. N. Kushnerev and Co., on Pimenovskaya Street, in Moscow.
Kandinsky chose his career as an artist relatively late — at the age of 30.
In 1896, he settled in Munich and then remained in Germany until 1914.
In Munich, he met with Russian artists: A. G. Yavlensky, M. V. Verevkina, V. G. Bekhteev, D. N. Kardovsky, M. V. Dobuzhinsky, I. Ya.
Bilibin, K. S. Petrov Vodkin, I. E. Grabar.
Since 1897, he studied painting in the private studio of A. Ashbe.[2]
In 1900, he entered the Munich Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied under Franz von Stuck.
Since 1901, Kandinsky created the art association "Phalanx", organized a school with him, in which he himself taught.
Since 1900, Kandinsky has traveled a lot, visiting North Africa, Italy, France; he visits Odessa and Moscow.
He participated in exhibitions of the Moscow Association of Artists.
"Amazon".
1911.
Azerbaijan Museum of Art, Baku
In 1910 and 1912, he also participated in exhibitions of the art association "Jack of Diamonds".
During these years, he developed an innovative concept of the" rhythmic " use of color in painting.
In 1909, Kandinsky organized the "New Munich Art Association", in 1911 the almanac and the group "Blue Rider", whose members were famous expressionist artists, Franz Mark, Alexey Jawlensky, Marianna Verevkina, as well as Paul Klee.
At the same time, he had his first solo exhibition.
In 1914, the artist returned to Moscow.
In the following years, he worked on realistic and semi abstract canvases, mainly landscapes.
On February 11, 1917, he married Nina Nikolaevna Andreevskaya (1893-1980).
After the Revolution of 1917 Kandinsky was actively engaged in public work.
In 1918, he participated in the organization of monument protection, the creation of the Museum of Picturesque Culture and the Russian Academy of Art Sciences, taught at VKhUTEMAS and published an autobiographical book "Steps" (Moscow, 1918).
In 1918-1919, he was a member of the art board of the Department of Art of the People's Commissariat of Education, in 1919-1921 — chairman of the All Russian Procurement Commission, scientific consultant and head of the reproduction workshop, honorary professor of Moscow University.
Kandinsky was also elected vice president of the RAHN.
He continued to write — during this period, in particular, decorative compositions on glass "Amazon" (1918) and "Amazon in the Mountains" (1919) were created.
In December 1921, Kandinsky went to Berlin to organize a branch of the RAHN.
He participated in the First exhibition of Russian art in Germany.
He has not returned to Russia.
In Berlin, Vasily Kandinsky began teaching painting and became a prominent theorist of the Bauhaus school.
Soon Kandinsky received worldwide recognition as one of the leaders of abstract art.
In 1928, the artist took German citizenship, but when the Nazis came to power in 1933, he emigrated to France.
From 1933 to 1944, he lived in Paris, actively participating in the international art process.
In 1939, Vasily Kandinsky took French citizenship.
He died on December 13, 1944 in the Paris suburb of Neuilly sur Seine.
He was buried in the New Cemetery of Neuilly, located in the communes of Puteaux and Nanterre near Paris.
The best years[edit / edit wiki text]
The heyday of the artist's creativity falls on the years when he taught summer courses at the Munich art school (Münchner Malschule Phalanx), which went to the town of Kallmünz, located in a picturesque area at the confluence of the Fils with the Neb.
In everyday life, this town is called "The Pearls of the Oberpfalz" Here, 35 year old Kandinsky got close to Gabriele Munter, a 26 year old student of the school.
However, he did not formalize the marriage, although in 1911 he divorced his first wife Anna Chemyakina.
After the outbreak of World War II, they separated due to Kandinsky's departure to Russia, but in 1915 they spent three months together again in Stockholm.
By this time, Gabriela had already become a real artist, although her manner was different from Kandinsky's style.
During the years of Nazism, his works were classified as "degenerate art" and were not exhibited anywhere.
However, some of them were saved by Gabriela, who lived permanently in Murnau am Staffelsee in the house in which she lived with Vasily.
She died there in 1962.
The most famous works[edit / edit wiki text]
"Oscillation" "Composition" "Moscow" "East".
List of works [show]
"The Blue Rider", 1903, "Two on a horse", 1906, "Motley Life", 1907, " Rock.
Red Wall", 1909, "Blue Mountain", 1909, "Ladies in crinolines", 1909, "Interior (my dining room)", 1909, "Lake", 1910, "Improvisation No. 7", 1910, "Etude to "Composition II"", 1910, "Untitled (The First abstract watercolor)", 1910, "Composition IV", 1911, "Composition V", 1911, "Impression III (Concert)", 1911, "Painting with a black arch", 1912, "Painting with a white border", 1913, "Little joys", 1913, "Composition VI", 1913, "Composition VII", 1913, "Improvisation.
The Flood", 1913, "Fugue", 1914, " Moscow.
Red Square", 1916, " Moscow.
Zubovskaya Square", about 1916, "Vague", 1917, "Gray oval", 1917, "Twilight", 1917, "White oval", 1919, "Composition VIII", 1923, "In a black square", 1923, "Yellow, red, blue", 1925, "A little Dream in red", 1925, "Several circles", 1926, "Up", 1929, "Gentle ascent", 1934, "Dominant curve", 1936, "Composition IX", 1936, "Motley Ensemble", 1938, "Composition X", 1939, "Around the Circle", 1940, "Sky Blue", 1940, "Various incidents", 1941, "The Last watercolor", 1944,
Personal exhibitions[edit / edit wiki text]
2011-2012 - "Kandinsky and the Blue Horseman", Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Department of Personal Collections, Moscow, October 5, 2011 January 15, 2012[3]
Essays[edit / edit wiki text]
Vasily Kandinsky.
About the spiritual in art.
- 1910.
V. V. Kandinsky (the artist's text).
- M., 1918.
Über das Geistige in der Kunst.
- Münch., 1912 (in Russian, in part, in the book: Proceedings of the All Russian Congress of Artists in Petrograd.
December 1911 January 1912.
- Vol. 1 — - [P., 1914]. - pp. 47-76).
Punkt und Linie zu Fläche.
Beitrag zur Analyse der malerischen Elemente.
- Münch., 1926 (in Russian in the book: Kandinsky V. Point and line on the plane.
- St. Petersburg: Azbuka klastika, 2005. - pp. 63-232.
Translated from the German by Elena Kozina).
Kandinsky V. Selected works on the theory of art in 2 volumes / Ed. collegium and comp.
B. Avtonomova, D. V. Sarabyanov, V. S. Turchin.
- 2001.
- Shooting gallery.
1300 copies, additional edition of 1000 copies.
Kandinsky V. V.
On the spiritual in art (Painting) / Report[4] at the All Russian Congress of Artists in 1911 (in the absence of the author, the report was read by N. I. Kulbin).
Memory[edit / edit wiki text]
In 2007, the annual Kandinsky Prize was established in Russia.
The main criterion for choosing the winners is how much this or that artist has influenced the situation in modern Russian art with his latest works.
On August 6, 2012, a crater on Mercury was named in honor of Kandinsky[5].
The Aeroflot Airbus A319 (VP BUN) aircraft is named after " V. Kandinsky".
Sources[edit / edit wiki text]
Personal file of Vasily Kandinsky, opened in the Imperial Commissariat for the Protection of Public Order in Germany (RGVA. F. 772k, Op. 3, d. 464).
Bibliography[edit / edit wiki text]
Albums, catalogs, monographs, collections of articles[edit / edit wiki text]
Dmitry Sarabyanov, Natalia Avtonomova.
Vasily Kandinsky.
- Moscow: Galart, 1994 — - 238 p — - 5000 copies.
— ISBN 5-269-00880-7.
Turchin V. Kandinsky in Russia.
- Moscow: The artist and the book, 2005 — - 448 p.
— ISBN 5-9900349-1-1.
Althaus Karin, Hoberg Annegret, Avtonomova Natalia.
Kandinsky and the Blue Horseman.
- Moscow: Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation, Publishing House of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, SkanRus, 2013.
- 160 p.
— ISBN 978-5-4350-0011-5.
Articles[edit / edit wiki text]
Reinhardt L. Abstractionism.
/ / Modernism.
Analysis and criticism of the main directions.
- M., 1969.
- pp.
101-111.
Grohmann W. Wassily Kandinsky.
Life and work.
— N. Y., 1958.
Baedecker.
Deutschland.
Verlag Karl Baedeker, 2002.
— ISBN 3-8297-1004-6.
Schulz,Paul Otto.
Ostbauern.
Köln: DuMont, 1998.
— ISBN 3-7701-4159-8.
Azizyan I. A. Moscow V. V. Kandinsky / / Architecture in the history of Russian culture.
- Vol. 2: The Capital City.
- Moscow: URSS, 1998 — - ISBN 5-88417-145-9 pp.
66-71.
Azizyan I. A.
The concept of interaction of arts and the genesis of dialogism of the XX century (Vyacheslav Ivanov and Vasily Kandinsky) / / Avangard of the 1910s 1920s.
Interaction of arts — - M., 1998.
Avtonomova N. B. Kandinsky and the artistic life of Russia in the early 1910s / / Poetry and painting: A collection of works in memory of N. I. Khardzhiev / Compilation and general revision by M. B. Meilakh and D. V. Sarabyanov.
- M.: Languages of Russian culture, 2000.
- pp.
120-128 — - ISBN 5-7859-0074-2.
Rappaport A. Kandinsky in London / / Rossica.
— 2002.
— Issue 7/8: Revelations in Colour: Dionisy & Kandinsky.
Or: Kandinsky in London / / Idem.
Azizyan I. A.
The theoretical legacy of V. V. Kandinsky in the artistic consciousness of the XX century // Questions of the theory of architecture: Architectural and theoretical thought of Modern and Modern times / Collection of scientific works edited by I. A. Azizyan.
- M.: KomKniga, 2006.
- pp.
189-249.
Kozhev A. Concrete (objective) painting by Kandinsky (1936) / / "Atheism" and other works.
- Moscow: Praxis, 2007.
- pp.
258-294.
Balakhovskaya Faina.
"Kandinsky and the Blue Horseman" / / Arthronika.
— October 1, 2011.
Sokolov B. M. V. V. Kandinsky's Theory of non objective art in the 1920s 30s.
From social Prophecy to artistic Messianism / / Art Studies.
- 2012.
- No. 3-4.
- pp.
171-191.
Vasily Kandinsky in Wikicitatnik?
Kandinsky, Vasily Vasilyevich on Wikimedia Commons?
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
Канд Kandinsky V. V. Selected works on the theory of art: In 2 vols.
Second edition, corrected and expanded/ Edited by N. B. Avtonomova, D. V. Sarabyanov, V. S. Turchin.
Vol. 2. 1918-1938.
Moscow: Gileya, 2008.
- pp.
365-393, 427-438; (2008, edition of 1500 copies) Severyukhin D. Ya., Lakind O. L. Artists of Russian emigration (1917-1941).
Biographical dictionary.
St. Petersburg, 1994.
- p. 232.
И. I. E. Grabar recalled this: "He wrote small landscape sketches, using not a brush, but a palette knife, and applying individual plans with bright colors.
The result was colorful, not coordinated sketches in any way.
We all treated them with restraint, joked among ourselves about these exercises in "purity of colors".
At Ashbe, Kandinsky also did not succeed too much and did not shine at all with talents. "
/ / Grabar I. E. My life.
Avtomonografiya.
M.-L., 1937.
- pp.
141-142.
Бал Balakhovskaya Faina.
"Kandinsky and the Blue Horseman" / / Arthronika.
— October 1, 2011.
Творчество Creativity No. 8, 9, 10.
1988; No. 1. 1989 ↑ Kandinsky — on the website of the IAU working group on planetary nomenclature the system
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Vasily Kandinsky: more than 400 paintings, photos, biography, books, quotes Vasily Kandinsky: life and work The family tree of the Kandinsky family List of works
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Russian Russian Russian Russian Artists Categories: Born on December 16, Born in 1866 Persons alphabetically Born in Moscow Died on December 13, Died in 1944, Died in Neuilly sur Seine Artists alphabetically Students of Anton Azhbe Artists of the XX century Artists of Germany Artists of France Russian emigrants of the first wave in Germany Russian emigrants of the first wave in France Artists of the Russian avant garde Theorists of the Russian avant garde Artists of Russia Artists of Moscow Artists abstract Artists of Russia Artists of abstract abstraction Artists of France Artists of geometric abstraction Artists of expressionists of Russia Graduates of the Faculty of Law of Moscow State University
Graduates of the Munich Academy of Arts Bauhaus Bauhaus teachers Buried in Neuilly sur Seine Who immigrated to Germany from the USSR Who immigrated to France from Germany Graduates of the Odessa Art School Vasily Kandinsky
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