Kandinski Path To Abstraction
Kandinski Path To Abstraction
Kandinski Path To Abstraction
KANDINSKY
THE PATH TO ABSTRACTION
22 JUNE 1 OCTOBER 2006
Information
and activity pack
for teachers
Introduction
This teachers pack accompanies Kandinsky: The Path to Abstraction
19081922 at Tate Modern. It focuses on three key works by Kandinsky,
providing information, discussion points and classroom activities about each
one. A theoretical and historical context for Kandinskys abstraction is
illustrated with 4 further works. The pack has been designed to both support
a visit to the exhibition and to link with work you are doing in the classroom.
For more
information
QCA
schemes
of work
Viewpoints
A sense of place
Shared view
Objects and viewpoints
Life events
Personal places, public spaces
Sketch for
Composition II 1910
Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum,
New York
ADAGP, Paris and
DACS, London 2006
rider, and the free, dynamic treatment of the subject shows his familiarity
with the calligraphic style of Asian art and his skill with the medium. The
fluidity of this print, gives the image an appropriate dynamism as the rider
rushes forward. It is a symbol of change, of conflict, and of engagement.
Sketch for Composition II (1910) shows the motif of the rider on a white horse
leaping from left to right. Just below and to the right, a white rider rears up
on a purple/blue horse, amid what is ostensibly a landscape. The
recognisable elements of this painting, such as the scene and the figures, no
longer serve illustrative purposes, but have sprung from the inner necessity
of Kandinskys imagination. Kandinsky made many preparatory sketches for
the cover of the Blue Rider Almanac, and finally chose to produce a print
referring to St George, the dragon-vanquishing Patron Saint of Russia. In On
The Spiritual In Art Kandinsky described blue as a spiritual colour, and the
Blue Rider Almanac is a symbol of the avant-gardes battle with the
traditional limits of artistic expression, while it also represents the battle
between spiritual values and the materialism of contemporary life.
Sociology was developing as a new discipline at the time, with theorists
such as Georg Simmel analysing Germanys recent transition from a rural to
an urban society. Urban centres appeared to be entirely governed by
industrial production and material consumption. Germanys first department
store was built in 1896, but slums emerged at the same time. The rate of
change was startling. Mystical philosophies and religions, which questioned
the validity of the outer world and promoted a search for hidden truths,
were fashionable. Kandinskys conviction that abstract art had a role to play
in developing humankinds capacity for spiritual experience was buoyed by
the sociological and mystical issues of his time.
Composition VI 1913
State Hermitage, St Petersburg
ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2006
Composition VI 1913
In general, colour is a means of exerting a direct influence
upon the soul. Colour is the keyboard. The eye is the
hammer. The soul is the piano, with its many strings. The
artist is the hand that purposefully sets the soul vibrating by
means of this or that key. KANDINSKY
While still living in Russia, Kandinsky found an important connection between
colour and music. Kandinsky is believed to have had synaesthia, a condition
that makes people perceive colour not only as a visual property of objects,
but with sounds of different qualities and intensities. As he looked out over
the rooftops of Moscow, he felt that what was profound about the scene
before him could not be represented in graphic and realistic detail although
he had a desire to capture the scene on canvas. In Kandinskys words: The
sun dissolves the whole of Moscow into a single spot, which, like a wild
tuba, set all of ones soul vibrating... To paint this hour, I thought, must be for
an artist the most impossible, the greatest joy. It was sometime later, at a
musical performance of Wagners Lohengrin, that Kandinsky believed his
sunset hour had been realised in art, in all of its emotional intensity.
In his book On The Spiritual in Art, Kandinsky associated properties of
shape and colour with certain emotional effects. Kandinsky further
suggested that the artist should not seek a strictly harmonious abstract art,
but that the current social and spiritual conditions demanded opposition
and contradiction.
These effects can be seen in Composition VI. The surface of this large
canvas is teeming with energy, and even though the individual elements are
balanced, the composition is very complex, and does not have a central
point of focus. Kandinsky described this painting as having two centres. One,
to the left, comprised delicate, indefinite lines over a rosy and blurred centre,
and a second focal point is to the right, and is a crude, red-blue, rather
discordant area with strong and precise lines. Less obvious is a third focal
point, seething with red and white, closer to the centre of the canvas.
Kandinskys initial idea for this composition developed from an earlier work
on the theme of the Deluge and Composition VI retains an effect of
immersion. Kandinsky compared the indefinite effects of this canvas to being
in a Russian steam bath.
Links with
other works
in exhibition
Improvisation 30
(Cannons) 1913
The Art Institute of
Chicago, Arthur
Jerome Eddy Memorial
Collection
ADAGP, Paris and
DACS, London 2006
Discussion
and further
development
in the
classroom
Significant Experiences
Discussion Do any of your students identify with Kandinskys experience of
Moscow at sunset? Discuss their own significant experiences (what emotions
were involved?) Would they be willing to put their personal experiences into
art? Is this what art is for?
Activity Compare the experiences discussed. Divide students into groups
of similar experience. What art forms might best capture their experiences?
Consider ways to combine art forms into one artwork per group. Wagners
idea of a gestamtkunstwerk, being a total work of art for the stage (music,
backdrops etc.) was influential for Kandinsky as a way to enhance the
emotional effect of art.
Music
Discussion What music do your students listen to? Why what effect does
it have? What other kinds of music are they familiar with? Is music abstract,
or does it involve imitation, representation, or the inclusion of actual sounds?
Activity Ask your students to bring music into the classroom (an example
of abstraction in music, and a counter example) or (music to match/create a
particular mood.) Some members of Kandinskys Phalanx art group were
cabaret performers. He was fascinated by their performance of musical
drawings where a drawing was made in the rhythm of music being played.
Try it.
Links to
other works
Cossacks 19101911
Tate. Presented by Mrs Hazel McKinley, 1938
ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2006
Cossacks 19101911
It took a long time before this question What should
replace the object? received a proper answer from within
me. KANDINSKY
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rainbow. Cossacks were a romantic motif, legendary soldiers with free reign
to exercise military power throughout Imperial Russia. They had helped
thwart Napoleons advance on Russia at the beginning of the nineteenth
century.
Links with
other works
in exhibition
Song 1906
Centre Pompidou,
Paris. Muse national
dart moderne/centre
de cration
industrielle. Bequest of
Nina Kandinsky, 1981
ADAGP, Paris and
DACS, London 2006
12
Discussion
and further
development
in the
classroom
Abstraction
Discussion What are your students opinions about abstraction? What
makes a painting abstract? Is abstract art only found in galleries? Is graffiti
abstract?
Activity the art historian Charles Harrison distinguished between weak
abstraction and strong abstraction. Weak abstraction applies to paintings
where the subject is simply difficult to see, and strong applies to paintings
that are presented simply as a composition, and are not the result of a
process of distortion. Ask your students to collect examples of abstract
images postcards, magazine images, images from the Internet and
determine whether or not they are weak or strong.
Personal Subjects
Discussion Do your students have favourite subjects to see or to create in
paintings/drawings/sculpture? What subjects do they consider important?
Does it matter if a painting has a subject, which the viewer doesnt
recognise?
Activity Individually, ask your students to develop a set of motifs (such as
Kandinskys memories and myths of Russia) that have personal meaning.
Begin with a scrapbook of images and work towards a set of simplified
cryptic line drawings to use in larger compositions.
Accident in art
Discussion Have any of your students had a similar experience to
Kandinsky, and accidentally seen abstraction because they did not recognise
the subject of a painting? Has any artwork they were making ever been
improved by an accident?
Activity Ask your students to work on a large-scale drawing/painting, in
small groups. Think of ways to introduce chance into the group artwork
such as with eyes closed, working from all sides at once etc. Introduce a
subject to the group drawing half way through (a theme or a current
newspaper image.) How does this alter your students experience of
painting/drawing?
Links to
other works
13
Luc Tuymans paints profound historical events, such the Holocaust, but rather
than selecting recognisable scenes, he uses banal details and he paints in an
almost abstract style, making the content of his paintings difficult to see. His
motifs are all the more striking for being obscurely painted. His triptych
Investigations appears to depict ordinary objects (a lampshade, a tooth, a
window) painted in thin washes with little attention to naturalistic detail, but
they are all objects from the Auschwitz and Buchenwald museums.
15
Link to
another
work in the
exhibition
16
Discussion
and further
development
in the
classroom
Sharing Ideas
Discussion Throughout his life, Kandinsky was actively involved with several
art groups and benefited from sharing ideas with other artists. Does this
come as a surprise to your students? Who/where do they get ideas from?
How do they exchange ideas?
Activity Divide your students into small groups, and using a newspaper,
select a topic/issue for each group to investigate collectively to produce a
group sketchbook representing their responses to the issue. In the style of
the Blue Rider Almanac, the sketchbook could contain opinions, pooled
knowledge, images and cuttings, and ideas for art projects addressing there
given topic/issue.
Links to
other works
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