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Abstract art

Abstract art uses visual language of shape, form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world.[1]

Robert Delaunay, 1912–13, Le Premier Disque, 134 cm (52.7 in.), private collection

Western art had been, from the Renaissance up to the middle of the 19th century, underpinned by the logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible reality. By the end of the 19th century many artists felt a need to create a new kind of art which would encompass the fundamental changes taking place in technology, science and philosophy. The sources from which individual artists drew their theoretical arguments were diverse, and reflected the social and intellectual preoccupations in all areas of Western culture at that time.[2]

Abstract art, non-figurative art, non-objective art, and non-representational art are all closely related terms. They have similar, but perhaps not identical, meanings.

Abstraction indicates a departure from reality in depiction of imagery in art. This departure from accurate representation can be slight, partial, or complete. Abstraction exists along a continuum. Even art that aims for verisimilitude of the highest degree can be said to be abstract, at least theoretically, since perfect representation is impossible. Artwork which takes liberties, e.g. altering color or form in ways that are conspicuous, can be said to be partially abstract. Total abstraction bears no trace of any reference to anything recognizable. In geometric abstraction, for instance, one is unlikely to find references to naturalistic entities. Figurative art and total abstraction are almost mutually exclusive. But figurative and representational (or realistic) art often contain partial abstraction.

Both geometric abstraction and lyrical abstraction are often totally abstract. Among the very numerous art movements that embody partial abstraction would be for instance fauvism in which color is conspicuously and deliberately altered vis-a-vis reality, and cubism, which alters the forms of the real-life entities depicted.[3][4]

History

Prehistoric

Much of the art of earlier cultures – signs and marks on pottery, textiles, and inscriptions and paintings on rock – used simple, geometric and linear forms which might have had a symbolic or decorative purpose.[5] It is at this level of visual meaning that abstract art communicates.[6] One can enjoy the beauty of Chinese calligraphy or Islamic calligraphy without being able to read it.[7]

Minoan and Mycenaean figurines

Classical antiquity

Islamic world

 
A hilya, a decorated description of Muhammad’s physical appearance, dating to the 19th century.

Islam's sometimes negative view of figurative art has led to the proliferation of complex non-figurative artistic expression across the Islamic world. Non-figurative Islamic art is nearly as old as Islam itself, and some of the oldest examples of it can be found on such early buildings as the Dome of the Rock. While Islamic art may have reservations about painting humans and animals, it does not, however, feel the same about plants and inanimate objects.

Islamic art traditionally revolves around calligraphy, tessellating geometric patterns, and vegetal motifs called arabesques. These elements can be found in all Islamic applied arts, including architecture, rugmaking, pottery, glassmaking, and metalwork, as well as decorating the borders of otherwise figurative paintings.

As a result of the extensive dialogue between the Christian and Islamic world brought about by the Crusades, Islamic patterns and techniques would also come to be applied to European decorative arts, especially in Italy and Spain. Prominent examples include Spanish Mudéjar art and Venetian Gothic architecture.

East Asia

 
Mountain market, clearing Mist, Yu Jian, China

In Chinese painting, abstraction can be traced to the Tang dynasty painter Wang Mo (王墨), who is credited to have invented the splashed-ink painting style.[8] While none of his paintings remain, this style is clearly seen in some Song Dynasty Paintings. The Chan buddhist painter Liang Kai (梁楷, c. 1140–1210) applied the style to figure painting in his "Immortal in splashed ink" in which accurate representation is sacrificed to enhance spontaneity linked to the non-rational mind of the enlightened. A late Song painter named Yu Jian, adept to Tiantai buddhism, created a series of splashed ink landscapes that eventually inspired many Japanese Zen painters. His paintings show heavily misty mountains in which the shapes of the objects are barely visible and extremely simplified. This type of painting was continued by Sesshu Toyo in his later years.

Another instance of abstraction in Chinese painting is seen in Zhu Derun's Cosmic Circle. On the left side of this painting is a pine tree in rocky soil, its branches laced with vines that extend in a disorderly manner to the right side of the painting in which a perfect circle (probably made with help of a compass[9]) floats in the void. The painting is a reflection of the Daoist metaphysics in which chaos and reality are complementary stages of the regular course of nature.

In Tokugawa Japan, some Zen monk-painters created Enso, a circle who represents the absolute enlightenment. Usually made in one spontaneous brush stroke, it became the paradigm of the minimalist aesthetic that guided part of the Zen painting.

19th century

Patronage from the church diminished and private patronage from the public became more capable of providing a livelihood for artists.[12][13] Three art movements which contributed to the development of abstract art were Romanticism, Impressionism and Expressionism. Artistic independence for artists was advanced during the 19th century. An objective interest in what is seen can be discerned from the paintings of John Constable, J M W Turner, Camille Corot and from them to the Impressionists who continued the plein air painting of the Barbizon school. Early intimations of a new art had been made by James McNeill Whistler who, in his painting Nocturne in Black and Gold: The falling Rocket, (1872), placed greater emphasis on visual sensation than the depiction of objects. Even earlier than that, with her 'spirit' drawings, Georgiana Houghton's choice to work with abstract shapes correlate with the unnatural nature of her subject, in a time when abstraction” isn't yet a concept (she organized an exhibit in 1871).

Expressionist painters explored the bold use of paint surface, drawing distortions and exaggerations, and intense color. Expressionists produced emotionally charged paintings that were reactions to and perceptions of contemporary experience; and reactions to Impressionism and other more conservative directions of late 19th-century painting. The Expressionists drastically changed the emphasis on subject matter in favor of the portrayal of psychological states of being. Although artists like Edvard Munch and James Ensor drew influences principally from the work of the Post-Impressionists they were instrumental to the advent of abstraction in the 20th century. Paul Cézanne had begun as an Impressionist but his aim – to make a logical construction of reality based on a view from a single point,[14] with modulated color in flat areas – became the basis of a new visual art, later to be developed into Cubism.

Additionally in the late 19th century in Eastern Europe mysticism and early modernist religious philosophy as expressed by theosophist Mme. Blavatsky had a profound impact on pioneer geometric artists like Hilma af Klint and Wassily Kandinsky. The mystical teaching of Georges Gurdjieff and P.D. Ouspensky also had an important influence on the early formations of the geometric abstract styles of Piet Mondrian and his colleagues in the early 20th century.[15] The spiritualism also inspired the abstract art of Kasimir Malevich and František Kupka.[16]

Early 20th century

Fauvism and Cubism

At the beginning of the 20th century Henri Matisse and several other young artists including the pre-cubist Georges Braque, André Derain, Raoul Dufy and Jean Metzinger revolutionized the Paris art world with "wild", multi-colored, expressive landscapes and figure paintings that the critics called Fauvism. The raw language of color as developed by the Fauves directly influenced another pioneer of abstraction, Wassily Kandinsky.

Cubism, based on Cézanne's idea that all depiction of nature can be reduced to cube, sphere and cone became, along with Fauvism, the art movement that directly opened the door to abstraction in the early 20th century.

Early Abstract Art

 
František Kupka, Amorpha, Fugue en deux couleurs (Fugue in Two Colors), 1912, oil on canvas, 210 x 200 cm, Narodni Galerie, Prague. Published in Au Salon d'Automne "Les Indépendants" 1912, Exhibited at the 1912 Salon d'Automne, Paris.

During the 1912 Salon de la Section d'Or, where František Kupka exhibited his abstract painting Amorpha, Fugue en deux couleurs (Fugue in Two Colors) (1912), the poet Guillaume Apollinaire named the work of several artists including Robert Delaunay, Orphism.[17] He defined it as, "the art of painting new structures out of elements that have not been borrowed from the visual sphere, but had been created entirely by the artist...it is a pure art."[18]

Since the turn of the century, cultural connections between artists of the major European cities had become extremely active as they strove to create an art form equal to the high aspirations of modernism. Ideas were able to cross-fertilize by means of artist's books, exhibitions and manifestos so that many sources were open to experimentation and discussion, and formed a basis for a diversity of modes of abstraction. The following extract from The World Backwards gives some impression of the inter-connectedness of culture at the time: "David Burliuk's knowledge of modern art movements must have been extremely up-to-date, for the second Knave of Diamonds exhibition, held in January 1912 (in Moscow) included not only paintings sent from Munich, but some members of the German Die Brücke group, while from Paris came work by Robert Delaunay, Henri Matisse and Fernand Léger, as well as Picasso. During the Spring David Burliuk gave two lectures on cubism and planned a polemical publication, which the Knave of Diamonds was to finance. He went abroad in May and came back determined to rival the almanac Der Blaue Reiter which had emerged from the printers while he was in Germany".[19]

From 1909 to 1913 many experimental works in the search for this 'pure art' had been created by a number of artists: Francis Picabia painted Caoutchouc, c. 1909,[20] The Spring, 1912,[21] Dances at the Spring[22] and The Procession, Seville, 1912;[23] Wassily Kandinsky painted Untitled (First Abstract Watercolor), 1913,[24] Improvisation 21A, the Impression series, and Picture with a Circle (1911);[25] František Kupka had painted the Orphist works, Discs of Newton (Study for Fugue in Two Colors), 1912[26] and Amorpha, Fugue en deux couleurs (Fugue in Two Colors), 1912; Robert Delaunay painted a series entitled Simultaneous Windows and Formes Circulaires, Soleil n°2 (1912–13);[27] Léopold Survage created Colored Rhythm (Study for the film), 1913;[28] Piet Mondrian, painted Tableau No. 1 and Composition No. 11, 1913.[29]

With his expressive use of color and his free and imaginative drawing Henri Matisse comes very close to pure abstraction in French Window at Collioure (1914), View of Notre-Dame (1914), and The Yellow Curtain from 1915.

And the search continued: The Rayist (Luchizm) drawings of Natalia Goncharova and Mikhail Larionov, used lines like rays of light to make a construction. Kasimir Malevich completed his first entirely abstract work, the Suprematist, Black Square, in 1915. Another of the Suprematist group' Liubov Popova, created the Architectonic Constructions and Spatial Force Constructions between 1916 and 1921. Piet Mondrian was evolving his abstract language, of horizontal and vertical lines with rectangles of color, between 1915 and 1919, Neo-Plasticism was the aesthetic which Mondrian, Theo van Doesburg and other in the group De Stijl intended to reshape the environment of the future.

Russian avant-garde

Many of the abstract artists in Russia became Constructivists believing that art was no longer something remote, but life itself. The artist must become a technician, learning to use the tools and materials of modern production. Art into life! was Vladimir Tatlin's slogan, and that of all the future Constructivists. Varvara Stepanova and Alexandre Exter and others abandoned easel painting and diverted their energies to theatre design and graphic works. On the other side stood Kazimir Malevich, Anton Pevsner and Naum Gabo. They argued that art was essentially a spiritual activity; to create the individual's place in the world, not to organize life in a practical, materialistic sense. During that time, representatives of the Russian avant-garde collaborated with other Eastern European Constructivist artists, including Władysław Strzemiński, Katarzyna Kobro, and Henryk Stażewski.

Many of those who were hostile to the materialist production idea of art left Russia. Anton Pevsner went to France, Gabo went first to Berlin, then to England and finally to America. Kandinsky studied in Moscow then left for the Bauhaus. By the mid-1920s the revolutionary period (1917 to 1921) when artists had been free to experiment was over; and by the 1930s only socialist realism was allowed.[30]

Music

As visual art becomes more abstract, it develops some characteristics of music[citation needed]: an art form which uses the abstract elements of sound and divisions of time. Wassily Kandinsky, himself an amateur musician,[31][32][33] was inspired by the possibility of marks and associative color resounding in the soul. The idea had been put forward by Charles Baudelaire, that all our senses respond to various stimuli but the senses are connected at a deeper aesthetic level.

Closely related to this, is the idea that art has The spiritual dimension and can transcend 'every-day' experience, reaching a spiritual plane. The Theosophical Society popularized the ancient wisdom of the sacred books of India and China in the early years of the century. It was in this context that Piet Mondrian, Wassily Kandinsky, Hilma af Klint and other artists working towards an 'objectless state' became interested in the occult as a way of creating an 'inner' object. The universal and timeless shapes found in geometry: the circle, square and triangle become the spatial elements in abstract art; they are, like color, fundamental systems underlying visible reality.

The Bauhaus

The Bauhaus at Weimar, Germany was founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius.[34] The philosophy underlying the teaching program was unity of all the visual and plastic arts from architecture and painting to weaving and stained glass. This philosophy had grown from the ideas of the Arts and Crafts movement in England and the Deutscher Werkbund. Among the teachers were Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Johannes Itten, Josef Albers, Anni Albers, and László Moholy-Nagy. In 1925 the school was moved to Dessau and, as the Nazi party gained control in 1932, The Bauhaus was closed. In 1937 an exhibition of degenerate art, 'Entartete Kunst' contained all types of avant-garde art disapproved of by the Nazi party. Then the exodus began: not just from the Bauhaus but from Europe in general; to Paris, London and America. Paul Klee went to Switzerland but many of the artists at the Bauhaus went to America.

Abstraction in Paris and London

During the 1930s Paris became the host to artists from Russia, Germany, the Netherlands and other European countries affected by the rise of totalitarianism. Sophie Tauber and Jean Arp collaborated on paintings and sculpture using organic/geometric forms. The Polish Katarzyna Kobro applied mathematically based ideas to sculpture. The many types of abstraction now in close proximity led to attempts by artists to analyse the various conceptual and aesthetic groupings. An exhibition by forty-six members of the Cercle et Carré group organized by Joaquín Torres-García[35] assisted by Michel Seuphor[36] contained work by the Neo-Plasticists as well as abstractionists as varied as Kandinsky, Anton Pevsner and Kurt Schwitters. Criticized by Theo van Doesburg to be too indefinite a collection he published the journal Art Concret setting out a manifesto defining an abstract art in which the line, color and surface only, are the concrete reality.[37] Abstraction-Création founded in 1931 as a more open group, provided a point of reference for abstract artists, as the political situation worsened in 1935, and artists again regrouped, many in London. The first exhibition of British abstract art was held in England in 1935. The following year the more international Abstract and Concrete exhibition was organized by Nicolete Gray including work by Piet Mondrian, Joan Miró, Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson. Hepworth, Nicholson and Gabo moved to the St. Ives group in Cornwall to continue their 'constructivist' work.[38]

Late 20th century

 
A 1939–1942 oil on canvas painting by Piet Mondrian titled Composition No. 10. Responding to it, fellow De Stijl artist Theo van Doesburg suggested a link between non-representational works of art and ideals of peace and spirituality.[39]

During the Nazi rise to power in the 1930s many artists fled Europe to the United States. By the early 1940s the main movements in modern art, expressionism, cubism, abstraction, surrealism, and dada were represented in New York: Marcel Duchamp, Fernand Léger, Piet Mondrian, Jacques Lipchitz, André Masson, Max Ernst, and André Breton, were just a few of the exiled Europeans who arrived in New York.[40] The rich cultural influences brought by the European artists were distilled and built upon by local New York painters. The climate of freedom in New York allowed all of these influences to flourish. The art galleries that primarily had focused on European art began to notice the local art community and the work of younger American artists who had begun to mature. Certain artists at this time became distinctly abstract in their mature work. During this period Piet Mondrian's painting Composition No. 10, 1939–1942, characterized by primary colors, white ground and black grid lines clearly defined his radical but classical approach to the rectangle and abstract art in general. Some artists of the period defied categorization, such as Georgia O'Keeffe who, while a modernist abstractionist, was a pure maverick in that she painted highly abstract forms while not joining any specific group of the period.

Eventually American artists who were working in a great diversity of styles began to coalesce into cohesive stylistic groups. The best-known group of American artists became known as the Abstract expressionists and the New York School. In New York City there was an atmosphere which encouraged discussion and there was a new opportunity for learning and growing. Artists and teachers John D. Graham and Hans Hofmann became important bridge figures between the newly arrived European Modernists and the younger American artists coming of age. Mark Rothko, born in Russia, began with strongly surrealist imagery which later dissolved into his powerful color compositions of the early 1950s. The expressionistic gesture and the act of painting itself, became of primary importance to Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, and Franz Kline. While during the 1940s Arshile Gorky's and Willem de Kooning's figurative work evolved into abstraction by the end of the decade. New York City became the center, and artists worldwide gravitated towards it; from other places in America as well.[41]

21st century

Digital art, hard-edge painting, geometric abstraction, minimalism, lyrical abstraction, op art, abstract expressionism, color field painting, monochrome painting, assemblage, neo-Dada, shaped canvas painting, are a few directions relating to abstraction in the second half of the 20th century.

In the United States, Art as Object as seen in the Minimalist sculpture of Donald Judd and the paintings of Frank Stella are seen today as newer permutations. Other examples include Lyrical Abstraction and the sensuous use of color seen in the work of painters as diverse as Robert Motherwell, Patrick Heron, Kenneth Noland, Sam Francis, Cy Twombly, Richard Diebenkorn, Helen Frankenthaler, Joan Mitchell.

Elements

Analysis

One socio-historical explanation that has been offered for the growing prevalence of the abstract in modern art – an explanation linked to the name of Theodor W. Adorno – is that such abstraction is a response to, and a reflection of, the growing abstraction of social relations in industrial society.[42]

Frederic Jameson similarly sees modernist abstraction as a function of the abstract power of money, equating all things equally as exchange-values.[43] The social content of abstract art is then precisely the abstract nature of social existence – legal formalities, bureaucratic impersonalization, information/power – in the world of late modernity.[44]

Post-Jungians by contrast would see the quantum theories with their disintegration of conventional ideas of form and matter as underlying the divorce of the concrete and the abstract in modern art.[45]

Gallery

See also

In other media

References

  1. ^ Rudolph Arnheim, Visual Thinking, University of California Press, 1969, ISBN 0-520-01871-0
  2. ^ Mel Gooding, Abstract Art, Tate Publishing, London, 2000
  3. ^ "Abstract Art – What Is Abstract Art or Abstract Painting, retrieved January 7, 2009". Painting.about.com. 2011-06-07. from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-11.
  4. ^ . Nga.gov. 2000-07-27. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-11.
  5. ^ György Kepes, Sign, Image and Symbol, Studio Vista, London, 1966
  6. ^ Derek Hyatt,"Meeting on the Moor", Modern Painters, Autumn 1995
  7. ^ Simon Leys, 2013. The Hall of Uselessness: Collected Essays. New York: New York Review Books. p. 304. ISBN 978-1-59017-620-7.
  8. ^ Lippit, Y. (2012). "Of Modes and Manners in Japanese Ink Painting: Sesshū's Splashed Ink Landscape of 1495". The Art Bulletin, 94(1), p. 56.
  9. ^ Watt, J. C. (2010). The World of Khubilai Khan: Chinese Art in the Yuan Dynasty. Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 224
  10. ^ Whistler versus Ruskin, Princeton edu. June 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 13, 2010
  11. ^ From the Tate 2012-01-12 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved April 12, 2009
  12. ^ Ernst Gombrich, "The Early Medici as Patrons of Art" in Norm and Form, pp. 35–57, London, 1966
  13. ^ Judith Balfe, ed. Paying the Piper: Causes and Consequences of Art Patronage, Univ. of Illinois Press
  14. ^ Herbert Read, A Concise History of Modern Art, Thames and Hudson
  15. ^ "Hilton Kramer, "Mondrian & mysticism: My long search is over", New Criterion, September 1995". Newcriterion.com. from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  16. ^ Brenson, Michael (December 21, 1986). "Art View; How the Spiritual Infused the Abstract". The New York Times. from the original on July 23, 2020. Retrieved May 18, 2020.
  17. ^ La Section d'or, 1912–1920–1925, Cécile Debray, Françoise Lucbert, Musées de Châteauroux, Musée Fabre, exhibition catalogue, Éditions Cercle d'art, Paris, 2000
  18. ^ Harrison and Wood, Art in theory, 1900–2000, Wiley-Blackwell, 2003, p. 189. ISBN 978-0-631-22708-3.books.google.com"
  19. ^ Susan P Compton, The World Backwards, British museum Publications, London, 1978
  20. ^ "Francis Picabia, Caoutchouc, c. 1909, MNAM, Paris". Francispicabia.org. from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  21. ^ "Museum of Modern Art, New York, Francis Picabia, The Spring, 1912". Moma.org. from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  22. ^ "MoMA, New York, Francis Picabia, Dances at the Spring, 1912". Moma.org. from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  23. ^ "National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC., Francis Picabia, The Procession, Seville, 1912". Nga.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  24. ^ Stan Rummel (2007-12-13). . Faculty.txwes.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  25. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-18. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  26. ^ "Philadelphia Museum of Art, Disks of Newton (Study for "Fugue in Two Colors") 1912". Philamuseum.org. from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  27. ^ (in French). Centrepompidou.fr. Archived from the original on September 7, 2012. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  28. ^ "Museum of Modern Art, New York, Léopold Survage, Colored Rhythm (Study for the film) 1913". Moma.org. 1914-07-15. from the original on 2010-12-22. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  29. ^ . Kmm.nl. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  30. ^ Camilla Gray, The Russian Experiment in Art, 1863–1922, Thames and Hudson, 1962
  31. ^ Shawn, Allen. 2003. Arnold Schoenberg's Journey 2023-01-15 at the Wayback Machine. Harvard University Press. p. 62. ISBN 0-674-01101-5
  32. ^ François Le Targat, Kandinsky, Twentieth Century masters series, Random House Incorporated, 1987, p. 7, ISBN 0-8478-0810-6
  33. ^ Susan B. Hirschfeld, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Hilla von Rebay Foundation, Watercolors by Kandinsky at the Guggenheim Museum: a selection from the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Hilla von Rebay Foundation, 1991. In 1871 the family moved to Odessa, where the young Kandinsky attended the Gymnasium and learned to play the cello and piano.
  34. ^ Walter Gropius et al., Bauhaus 1919–1928 Herbert Bayer ed., Museum of Modern Art, publ. Charles T Banford, Boston,1959
  35. ^ Seuphor, Michel (1972). Geometric Abstraccion 1926-1949. Dallas Museum of Fine Arts.
  36. ^ Michel Seuphor, Abstract Painting
  37. ^ Anna Moszynska, Abstract Art, p. 104, Thames and Hudson, 1990
  38. ^ Anna Moszynska, Abstract Art, Thames and Hudson, 1990
  39. ^ Utopian Reality: Reconstructing Culture in Revolutionary Russia and Beyond; Christina Lodder, Maria Kokkori, Maria Mileeva; BRILL, Oct 24, 2013 "Van Doesburg stated that the purpose of art was to imbue man with those positive spiritual qualities that were needed in order to overcome the dominance of the physical and create the conditions for putting an end to wars. In an enthusiastic essay on Wassily Kandinsky he had written about the dialogue between the artist and the viewer, and the role of art as 'the educator of our inner life, the educator of our hearts and minds'. Van Doesburg subsequently adopted the view that the spiritual in man is nurtured specifically by abstract art, which he later described as 'pure thought, which does not signify a concept derived from natural phenomena but which is contained in numbers, measures, relationships, and abstract lines'. In his response to Piet Mondrian's Composition 10, Van Doesburg linked peace and the spiritual to a non-representational work of art, asserting that 'it produces a most spiritual impression...the impression of repose: the repose of the soul'."
  40. ^ Gillian Naylor, The Bauhaus, Studio Vista, 1968
  41. ^ Henry Geldzahler, New York Painting and Sculpture: 1940–1970, Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art, 1969
  42. ^ David Cunningham, 'Asceticism Against Colour', in New Formations 55 (2005) p. 110
  43. ^ M. Hardt/K. Weeks eds., The Jameson Reader (2000) p. 272
  44. ^ Cunningham, p. 114
  45. ^ Aniela Jaffé, in C. G. Jung ed., Man and his Symbols (1978) pp. 288–89, 303

Sources

  • ^ Compton, Susan (1978). The World Backwards: Russian Futurist Books 1912–16. The British Library. ISBN 978-0-7141-0396-9.
  • ^ Stangos, Nikos, ed. (1981). Concepts of Modern Art. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-20186-2.
  • ^ Gooding, Mel (2001). Abstract Art. Movements in Modern Art series. Tate Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85437-302-1.
  • ^ Rump, Gerhard Charles (1985). How to look at an abstract painting. Inter Nationes.

External links

  • The term "Abstraction" spoken about at Museum of Modern Art by Nelson Goodman of Grove Art Online
  • Tate UK "Abstract art is..."

abstract, uses, visual, language, shape, form, color, line, create, composition, which, exist, with, degree, independence, from, visual, references, world, robert, delaunay, 1912, premier, disque, private, collection, western, been, from, renaissance, middle, . Abstract art uses visual language of shape form color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world 1 Robert Delaunay 1912 13 Le Premier Disque 134 cm 52 7 in private collection Western art had been from the Renaissance up to the middle of the 19th century underpinned by the logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible reality By the end of the 19th century many artists felt a need to create a new kind of art which would encompass the fundamental changes taking place in technology science and philosophy The sources from which individual artists drew their theoretical arguments were diverse and reflected the social and intellectual preoccupations in all areas of Western culture at that time 2 Abstract art non figurative art non objective art and non representational art are all closely related terms They have similar but perhaps not identical meanings Abstraction indicates a departure from reality in depiction of imagery in art This departure from accurate representation can be slight partial or complete Abstraction exists along a continuum Even art that aims for verisimilitude of the highest degree can be said to be abstract at least theoretically since perfect representation is impossible Artwork which takes liberties e g altering color or form in ways that are conspicuous can be said to be partially abstract Total abstraction bears no trace of any reference to anything recognizable In geometric abstraction for instance one is unlikely to find references to naturalistic entities Figurative art and total abstraction are almost mutually exclusive But figurative and representational or realistic art often contain partial abstraction Both geometric abstraction and lyrical abstraction are often totally abstract Among the very numerous art movements that embody partial abstraction would be for instance fauvism in which color is conspicuously and deliberately altered vis a vis reality and cubism which alters the forms of the real life entities depicted 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistoric 1 2 Minoan and Mycenaean figurines 1 3 Classical antiquity 1 3 1 Islamic world 1 3 2 East Asia 1 4 19th century 1 5 Early 20th century 1 5 1 Fauvism and Cubism 1 5 2 Early Abstract Art 1 5 3 Russian avant garde 1 5 4 Music 1 5 5 The Bauhaus 1 5 6 Abstraction in Paris and London 1 6 Late 20th century 1 7 21st century 2 Elements 3 Analysis 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksHistory EditPrehistoric Edit Main article Prehistoric art Much of the art of earlier cultures signs and marks on pottery textiles and inscriptions and paintings on rock used simple geometric and linear forms which might have had a symbolic or decorative purpose 5 It is at this level of visual meaning that abstract art communicates 6 One can enjoy the beauty of Chinese calligraphy or Islamic calligraphy without being able to read it 7 Minoan and Mycenaean figurines Edit Classical antiquity Edit Islamic world Edit A hilya a decorated description of Muhammad s physical appearance dating to the 19th century Islam s sometimes negative view of figurative art has led to the proliferation of complex non figurative artistic expression across the Islamic world Non figurative Islamic art is nearly as old as Islam itself and some of the oldest examples of it can be found on such early buildings as the Dome of the Rock While Islamic art may have reservations about painting humans and animals it does not however feel the same about plants and inanimate objects Islamic art traditionally revolves around calligraphy tessellating geometric patterns and vegetal motifs called arabesques These elements can be found in all Islamic applied arts including architecture rugmaking pottery glassmaking and metalwork as well as decorating the borders of otherwise figurative paintings As a result of the extensive dialogue between the Christian and Islamic world brought about by the Crusades Islamic patterns and techniques would also come to be applied to European decorative arts especially in Italy and Spain Prominent examples include Spanish Mudejar art and Venetian Gothic architecture East Asia Edit Mountain market clearing Mist Yu Jian China In Chinese painting abstraction can be traced to the Tang dynasty painter Wang Mo 王墨 who is credited to have invented the splashed ink painting style 8 While none of his paintings remain this style is clearly seen in some Song Dynasty Paintings The Chan buddhist painter Liang Kai 梁楷 c 1140 1210 applied the style to figure painting in his Immortal in splashed ink in which accurate representation is sacrificed to enhance spontaneity linked to the non rational mind of the enlightened A late Song painter named Yu Jian adept to Tiantai buddhism created a series of splashed ink landscapes that eventually inspired many Japanese Zen painters His paintings show heavily misty mountains in which the shapes of the objects are barely visible and extremely simplified This type of painting was continued by Sesshu Toyo in his later years Another instance of abstraction in Chinese painting is seen in Zhu Derun s Cosmic Circle On the left side of this painting is a pine tree in rocky soil its branches laced with vines that extend in a disorderly manner to the right side of the painting in which a perfect circle probably made with help of a compass 9 floats in the void The painting is a reflection of the Daoist metaphysics in which chaos and reality are complementary stages of the regular course of nature In Tokugawa Japan some Zen monk painters created Enso a circle who represents the absolute enlightenment Usually made in one spontaneous brush stroke it became the paradigm of the minimalist aesthetic that guided part of the Zen painting 19th century Edit Main articles Romanticism Impressionism Post Impressionism Expressionism and Spiritualist art James McNeill Whistler Nocturne in Black and Gold The Falling Rocket 1874 10 11 Detroit Institute of Arts Patronage from the church diminished and private patronage from the public became more capable of providing a livelihood for artists 12 13 Three art movements which contributed to the development of abstract art were Romanticism Impressionism and Expressionism Artistic independence for artists was advanced during the 19th century An objective interest in what is seen can be discerned from the paintings of John Constable J M W Turner Camille Corot and from them to the Impressionists who continued the plein air painting of the Barbizon school Early intimations of a new art had been made by James McNeill Whistler who in his painting Nocturne in Black and Gold The falling Rocket 1872 placed greater emphasis on visual sensation than the depiction of objects Even earlier than that with her spirit drawings Georgiana Houghton s choice to work with abstract shapes correlate with the unnatural nature of her subject in a time when abstraction isn t yet a concept she organized an exhibit in 1871 Expressionist painters explored the bold use of paint surface drawing distortions and exaggerations and intense color Expressionists produced emotionally charged paintings that were reactions to and perceptions of contemporary experience and reactions to Impressionism and other more conservative directions of late 19th century painting The Expressionists drastically changed the emphasis on subject matter in favor of the portrayal of psychological states of being Although artists like Edvard Munch and James Ensor drew influences principally from the work of the Post Impressionists they were instrumental to the advent of abstraction in the 20th century Paul Cezanne had begun as an Impressionist but his aim to make a logical construction of reality based on a view from a single point 14 with modulated color in flat areas became the basis of a new visual art later to be developed into Cubism Additionally in the late 19th century in Eastern Europe mysticism and early modernist religious philosophy as expressed by theosophist Mme Blavatsky had a profound impact on pioneer geometric artists like Hilma af Klint and Wassily Kandinsky The mystical teaching of Georges Gurdjieff and P D Ouspensky also had an important influence on the early formations of the geometric abstract styles of Piet Mondrian and his colleagues in the early 20th century 15 The spiritualism also inspired the abstract art of Kasimir Malevich and Frantisek Kupka 16 Early 20th century Edit Main articles Western painting Fauvism and Cubism Fauvism and Cubism Edit Francis Picabia c 1909 Caoutchouc Centre Pompidou Musee national d art moderne Paris At the beginning of the 20th century Henri Matisse and several other young artists including the pre cubist Georges Braque Andre Derain Raoul Dufy and Jean Metzinger revolutionized the Paris art world with wild multi colored expressive landscapes and figure paintings that the critics called Fauvism The raw language of color as developed by the Fauves directly influenced another pioneer of abstraction Wassily Kandinsky Cubism based on Cezanne s idea that all depiction of nature can be reduced to cube sphere and cone became along with Fauvism the art movement that directly opened the door to abstraction in the early 20th century Early Abstract Art Edit Frantisek Kupka Amorpha Fugue en deux couleurs Fugue in Two Colors 1912 oil on canvas 210 x 200 cm Narodni Galerie Prague Published in Au Salon d Automne Les Independants 1912 Exhibited at the 1912 Salon d Automne Paris During the 1912 Salon de la Section d Or where Frantisek Kupka exhibited his abstract painting Amorpha Fugue en deux couleurs Fugue in Two Colors 1912 the poet Guillaume Apollinaire named the work of several artists including Robert Delaunay Orphism 17 He defined it as the art of painting new structures out of elements that have not been borrowed from the visual sphere but had been created entirely by the artist it is a pure art 18 Since the turn of the century cultural connections between artists of the major European cities had become extremely active as they strove to create an art form equal to the high aspirations of modernism Ideas were able to cross fertilize by means of artist s books exhibitions and manifestos so that many sources were open to experimentation and discussion and formed a basis for a diversity of modes of abstraction The following extract from The World Backwards gives some impression of the inter connectedness of culture at the time David Burliuk s knowledge of modern art movements must have been extremely up to date for the second Knave of Diamonds exhibition held in January 1912 in Moscow included not only paintings sent from Munich but some members of the German Die Brucke group while from Paris came work by Robert Delaunay Henri Matisse and Fernand Leger as well as Picasso During the Spring David Burliuk gave two lectures on cubism and planned a polemical publication which the Knave of Diamonds was to finance He went abroad in May and came back determined to rival the almanac Der Blaue Reiter which had emerged from the printers while he was in Germany 19 From 1909 to 1913 many experimental works in the search for this pure art had been created by a number of artists Francis Picabia painted Caoutchouc c 1909 20 The Spring 1912 21 Dances at the Spring 22 and The Procession Seville 1912 23 Wassily Kandinsky painted Untitled First Abstract Watercolor 1913 24 Improvisation 21A the Impression series and Picture with a Circle 1911 25 Frantisek Kupka had painted the Orphist works Discs of Newton Study for Fugue in Two Colors 1912 26 and Amorpha Fugue en deux couleurs Fugue in Two Colors 1912 Robert Delaunay painted a series entitled Simultaneous Windows and Formes Circulaires Soleil n 2 1912 13 27 Leopold Survage created Colored Rhythm Study for the film 1913 28 Piet Mondrian painted Tableau No 1 and Composition No 11 1913 29 With his expressive use of color and his free and imaginative drawing Henri Matisse comes very close to pure abstraction in French Window at Collioure 1914 View of Notre Dame 1914 and The Yellow Curtain from 1915 And the search continued The Rayist Luchizm drawings of Natalia Goncharova and Mikhail Larionov used lines like rays of light to make a construction Kasimir Malevich completed his first entirely abstract work the Suprematist Black Square in 1915 Another of the Suprematist group Liubov Popova created the Architectonic Constructions and Spatial Force Constructions between 1916 and 1921 Piet Mondrian was evolving his abstract language of horizontal and vertical lines with rectangles of color between 1915 and 1919 Neo Plasticism was the aesthetic which Mondrian Theo van Doesburg and other in the group De Stijl intended to reshape the environment of the future Russian avant garde Edit Main articles Russian avant garde and Futurism art Kazimir Malevich Black Square 1923 The Russian Museum Many of the abstract artists in Russia became Constructivists believing that art was no longer something remote but life itself The artist must become a technician learning to use the tools and materials of modern production Art into life was Vladimir Tatlin s slogan and that of all the future Constructivists Varvara Stepanova and Alexandre Exter and others abandoned easel painting and diverted their energies to theatre design and graphic works On the other side stood Kazimir Malevich Anton Pevsner and Naum Gabo They argued that art was essentially a spiritual activity to create the individual s place in the world not to organize life in a practical materialistic sense During that time representatives of the Russian avant garde collaborated with other Eastern European Constructivist artists including Wladyslaw Strzeminski Katarzyna Kobro and Henryk Stazewski Many of those who were hostile to the materialist production idea of art left Russia Anton Pevsner went to France Gabo went first to Berlin then to England and finally to America Kandinsky studied in Moscow then left for the Bauhaus By the mid 1920s the revolutionary period 1917 to 1921 when artists had been free to experiment was over and by the 1930s only socialist realism was allowed 30 Music Edit As visual art becomes more abstract it develops some characteristics of music citation needed an art form which uses the abstract elements of sound and divisions of time Wassily Kandinsky himself an amateur musician 31 32 33 was inspired by the possibility of marks and associative color resounding in the soul The idea had been put forward by Charles Baudelaire that all our senses respond to various stimuli but the senses are connected at a deeper aesthetic level Closely related to this is the idea that art has The spiritual dimension and can transcend every day experience reaching a spiritual plane The Theosophical Society popularized the ancient wisdom of the sacred books of India and China in the early years of the century It was in this context that Piet Mondrian Wassily Kandinsky Hilma af Klint and other artists working towards an objectless state became interested in the occult as a way of creating an inner object The universal and timeless shapes found in geometry the circle square and triangle become the spatial elements in abstract art they are like color fundamental systems underlying visible reality The Bauhaus Edit The Bauhaus at Weimar Germany was founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius 34 The philosophy underlying the teaching program was unity of all the visual and plastic arts from architecture and painting to weaving and stained glass This philosophy had grown from the ideas of the Arts and Crafts movement in England and the Deutscher Werkbund Among the teachers were Paul Klee Wassily Kandinsky Johannes Itten Josef Albers Anni Albers and Laszlo Moholy Nagy In 1925 the school was moved to Dessau and as the Nazi party gained control in 1932 The Bauhaus was closed In 1937 an exhibition of degenerate art Entartete Kunst contained all types of avant garde art disapproved of by the Nazi party Then the exodus began not just from the Bauhaus but from Europe in general to Paris London and America Paul Klee went to Switzerland but many of the artists at the Bauhaus went to America Abstraction in Paris and London Edit Kurt Schwitters Das Undbild 1919 Staatsgalerie Stuttgart During the 1930s Paris became the host to artists from Russia Germany the Netherlands and other European countries affected by the rise of totalitarianism Sophie Tauber and Jean Arp collaborated on paintings and sculpture using organic geometric forms The Polish Katarzyna Kobro applied mathematically based ideas to sculpture The many types of abstraction now in close proximity led to attempts by artists to analyse the various conceptual and aesthetic groupings An exhibition by forty six members of the Cercle et Carre group organized by Joaquin Torres Garcia 35 assisted by Michel Seuphor 36 contained work by the Neo Plasticists as well as abstractionists as varied as Kandinsky Anton Pevsner and Kurt Schwitters Criticized by Theo van Doesburg to be too indefinite a collection he published the journal Art Concret setting out a manifesto defining an abstract art in which the line color and surface only are the concrete reality 37 Abstraction Creation founded in 1931 as a more open group provided a point of reference for abstract artists as the political situation worsened in 1935 and artists again regrouped many in London The first exhibition of British abstract art was held in England in 1935 The following year the more international Abstract and Concrete exhibition was organized by Nicolete Gray including work by Piet Mondrian Joan Miro Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson Hepworth Nicholson and Gabo moved to the St Ives group in Cornwall to continue their constructivist work 38 Late 20th century Edit Main articles Modernism Late modernism American Modernism and Surrealism A 1939 1942 oil on canvas painting by Piet Mondrian titled Composition No 10 Responding to it fellow De Stijl artist Theo van Doesburg suggested a link between non representational works of art and ideals of peace and spirituality 39 During the Nazi rise to power in the 1930s many artists fled Europe to the United States By the early 1940s the main movements in modern art expressionism cubism abstraction surrealism and dada were represented in New York Marcel Duchamp Fernand Leger Piet Mondrian Jacques Lipchitz Andre Masson Max Ernst and Andre Breton were just a few of the exiled Europeans who arrived in New York 40 The rich cultural influences brought by the European artists were distilled and built upon by local New York painters The climate of freedom in New York allowed all of these influences to flourish The art galleries that primarily had focused on European art began to notice the local art community and the work of younger American artists who had begun to mature Certain artists at this time became distinctly abstract in their mature work During this period Piet Mondrian s painting Composition No 10 1939 1942 characterized by primary colors white ground and black grid lines clearly defined his radical but classical approach to the rectangle and abstract art in general Some artists of the period defied categorization such as Georgia O Keeffe who while a modernist abstractionist was a pure maverick in that she painted highly abstract forms while not joining any specific group of the period Eventually American artists who were working in a great diversity of styles began to coalesce into cohesive stylistic groups The best known group of American artists became known as the Abstract expressionists and the New York School In New York City there was an atmosphere which encouraged discussion and there was a new opportunity for learning and growing Artists and teachers John D Graham and Hans Hofmann became important bridge figures between the newly arrived European Modernists and the younger American artists coming of age Mark Rothko born in Russia began with strongly surrealist imagery which later dissolved into his powerful color compositions of the early 1950s The expressionistic gesture and the act of painting itself became of primary importance to Jackson Pollock Robert Motherwell and Franz Kline While during the 1940s Arshile Gorky s and Willem de Kooning s figurative work evolved into abstraction by the end of the decade New York City became the center and artists worldwide gravitated towards it from other places in America as well 41 21st century Edit Main articles Abstract expressionism Color field Lyrical abstraction Post painterly abstraction Sculpture and Minimal artDigital art hard edge painting geometric abstraction minimalism lyrical abstraction op art abstract expressionism color field painting monochrome painting assemblage neo Dada shaped canvas painting are a few directions relating to abstraction in the second half of the 20th century In the United States Art as Object as seen in the Minimalist sculpture of Donald Judd and the paintings of Frank Stella are seen today as newer permutations Other examples include Lyrical Abstraction and the sensuous use of color seen in the work of painters as diverse as Robert Motherwell Patrick Heron Kenneth Noland Sam Francis Cy Twombly Richard Diebenkorn Helen Frankenthaler Joan Mitchell Elements EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it July 2022 Analysis EditOne socio historical explanation that has been offered for the growing prevalence of the abstract in modern art an explanation linked to the name of Theodor W Adorno is that such abstraction is a response to and a reflection of the growing abstraction of social relations in industrial society 42 Frederic Jameson similarly sees modernist abstraction as a function of the abstract power of money equating all things equally as exchange values 43 The social content of abstract art is then precisely the abstract nature of social existence legal formalities bureaucratic impersonalization information power in the world of late modernity 44 Post Jungians by contrast would see the quantum theories with their disintegration of conventional ideas of form and matter as underlying the divorce of the concrete and the abstract in modern art 45 Gallery Edit Albert Gleizes 1910 1912 Les Arbres The Trees oil on canvas 41 27 cm Reproduced in Du Cubisme 1912 Arthur Dove 1911 12 Based on Leaf Forms and Spaces pastel on unidentified support Now lost Francis Picabia 1912 Tarentelle oil on canvas 73 6 92 1 cm Museum of Modern Art New York Reproduced in Du Cubisme Wassily Kandinsky 1912 Improvisation 27 Garden of Love II oil on canvas 120 3 140 3 cm The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Exhibited at the 1913 Armory Show Pablo Picasso 1913 14 Head Tete cut and pasted colored paper gouache and charcoal on paperboard 43 5 33 cm Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Edinburgh Henri Matisse 1914 French Window at Collioure Centre Georges Pompidou Paris Hilma af Klint Svanen The Swan No 17 Group IX Series SUW October 1914 March 1915 This abstract work was never exhibited during af Klint s lifetime Theo van Doesburg Neo Plasticism 1917 Composition VII The Three Graces Fernand Leger 1919 The Railway Crossing oil on canvas 53 8 64 8 cm The Art Institute of Chicago Joseph Csaky Deux figures 1920 relief limestone polychrome 80 cm Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo Albert Gleizes 1921 Composition bleu et jaune Composition jaune oil on canvas 200 5 110 cm Piet Mondrian Composition with Yellow Black Blue Red and Gray 1921 Art Institute of Chicago Paul Klee Fire in the Evening 1929 Otto Gustaf Carlsund Rapid 1930 a Concrete Art restaurant mural Stockholm Barnett Newman Onement 1 1948 Museum of Modern Art New YorkSee also EditAbstraction Abstract art and Theosophy Abstract expressionism Action painting American Abstract Artists Art history Art periods Asemic writing Color field Concrete art De Stijl Form constant Geometric abstraction Hard edge History of painting Lyrical abstraction Op Art Representation arts Spatialism Surrealism Western painting In other mediaAbstract animation Abstract comics Abstract photography Experimental film Literary nonsense Musique concrete Noise musicReferences Edit Rudolph Arnheim Visual Thinking University of California Press 1969 ISBN 0 520 01871 0 Mel Gooding Abstract Art Tate Publishing London 2000 Abstract Art What Is Abstract Art or Abstract Painting retrieved January 7 2009 Painting about com 2011 06 07 Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 2011 06 11 Themes in American Art Abstraction retrieved January 7 2009 Nga gov 2000 07 27 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 Retrieved 2011 06 11 Gyorgy Kepes Sign Image and Symbol Studio Vista London 1966 Derek Hyatt Meeting on the Moor Modern Painters Autumn 1995 Simon Leys 2013 The Hall of Uselessness Collected Essays New York New York Review Books p 304 ISBN 978 1 59017 620 7 Lippit Y 2012 Of Modes and Manners in Japanese Ink Painting Sesshu s Splashed Ink Landscape of 1495 The Art Bulletin 94 1 p 56 Watt J C 2010 The World of Khubilai Khan Chinese Art in the Yuan Dynasty Metropolitan Museum of Art p 224 Whistler versus Ruskin Princeton edu Archived June 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 13 2010 From the Tate Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine retrieved April 12 2009 Ernst Gombrich The Early Medici as Patrons of Art in Norm and Form pp 35 57 London 1966 Judith Balfe ed Paying the Piper Causes and Consequences of Art Patronage Univ of Illinois Press Herbert Read A Concise History of Modern Art Thames and Hudson Hilton Kramer Mondrian amp mysticism My long search is over New Criterion September 1995 Newcriterion com Archived from the original on 2012 03 09 Retrieved 2012 02 26 Brenson Michael December 21 1986 Art View How the Spiritual Infused the Abstract The New York Times Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved May 18 2020 La Section d or 1912 1920 1925 Cecile Debray Francoise Lucbert Musees de Chateauroux Musee Fabre exhibition catalogue Editions Cercle d art Paris 2000 Harrison and Wood Art in theory 1900 2000 Wiley Blackwell 2003 p 189 ISBN 978 0 631 22708 3 books google com Susan P Compton The World Backwards British museum Publications London 1978 Francis Picabia Caoutchouc c 1909 MNAM Paris Francispicabia org Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Museum of Modern Art New York Francis Picabia The Spring 1912 Moma org Archived from the original on 2013 09 11 Retrieved 2013 09 29 MoMA New York Francis Picabia Dances at the Spring 1912 Moma org Archived from the original on 2013 09 11 Retrieved 2013 09 29 National Gallery of Art Washington DC Francis Picabia The Procession Seville 1912 Nga gov Archived from the original on 2012 08 05 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Stan Rummel 2007 12 13 Wassily Kandinsky Untitled First Abstract Watercolor 1910 Faculty txwes edu Archived from the original on 2012 07 19 Retrieved 2013 09 29 The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Guggenheim Museum Kandinsky Retrospective Guggenheim Museum New York 2009 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 18 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Philadelphia Museum of Art Disks of Newton Study for Fugue in Two Colors 1912 Philamuseum org Archived from the original on 2013 10 02 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Musee National d Art Moderne Centre Georges Pompidou Paris Robert Delaunay Formes Circulaires Soleil n 2 1912 13 in French Centrepompidou fr Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Museum of Modern Art New York Leopold Survage Colored Rhythm Study for the film 1913 Moma org 1914 07 15 Archived from the original on 2010 12 22 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Rijksmuseum Kroller Muller Otterlo Netherlands Piet Mondrian 1913 Kmm nl Archived from the original on October 2 2013 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Camilla Gray The Russian Experiment in Art 1863 1922 Thames and Hudson 1962 Shawn Allen 2003 Arnold Schoenberg s Journey Archived 2023 01 15 at the Wayback Machine Harvard University Press p 62 ISBN 0 674 01101 5 Francois Le Targat Kandinsky Twentieth Century masters series Random House Incorporated 1987 p 7 ISBN 0 8478 0810 6 Susan B Hirschfeld Solomon R Guggenheim Museum Hilla von Rebay Foundation Watercolors by Kandinsky at the Guggenheim Museum a selection from the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum and the Hilla von Rebay Foundation 1991 In 1871 the family moved to Odessa where the young Kandinsky attended the Gymnasium and learned to play the cello and piano Walter Gropius et al Bauhaus 1919 1928 Herbert Bayer ed Museum of Modern Art publ Charles T Banford Boston 1959 Seuphor Michel 1972 Geometric Abstraccion 1926 1949 Dallas Museum of Fine Arts Michel Seuphor Abstract Painting Anna Moszynska Abstract Art p 104 Thames and Hudson 1990 Anna Moszynska Abstract Art Thames and Hudson 1990 Utopian Reality Reconstructing Culture in Revolutionary Russia and Beyond Christina Lodder Maria Kokkori Maria Mileeva BRILL Oct 24 2013 Van Doesburg stated that the purpose of art was to imbue man with those positive spiritual qualities that were needed in order to overcome the dominance of the physical and create the conditions for putting an end to wars In an enthusiastic essay on Wassily Kandinsky he had written about the dialogue between the artist and the viewer and the role of art as the educator of our inner life the educator of our hearts and minds Van Doesburg subsequently adopted the view that the spiritual in man is nurtured specifically by abstract art which he later described as pure thought which does not signify a concept derived from natural phenomena but which is contained in numbers measures relationships and abstract lines In his response to Piet Mondrian s Composition 10 Van Doesburg linked peace and the spiritual to a non representational work of art asserting that it produces a most spiritual impression the impression of repose the repose of the soul Gillian Naylor The Bauhaus Studio Vista 1968 Henry Geldzahler New York Painting and Sculpture 1940 1970 Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art 1969 David Cunningham Asceticism Against Colour in New Formations 55 2005 p 110 M Hardt K Weeks eds The Jameson Reader 2000 p 272 Cunningham p 114 Aniela Jaffe in C G Jung ed Man and his Symbols 1978 pp 288 89 303Sources Edit Compton Susan 1978 The World Backwards Russian Futurist Books 1912 16 The British Library ISBN 978 0 7141 0396 9 Stangos Nikos ed 1981 Concepts of Modern Art Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 20186 2 Gooding Mel 2001 Abstract Art Movements in Modern Art series Tate Publishing ISBN 978 1 85437 302 1 Rump Gerhard Charles 1985 How to look at an abstract painting Inter Nationes External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abstract art Wikiquote has quotations related to Abstract art The term Abstraction spoken about at Museum of Modern Art by Nelson Goodman of Grove Art Online Tate UK Abstract art is Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abstract art amp oldid 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