Milwaukee Art Museum -- Collection
 




Kandinsky, Vassily
(Russian, 1866-1944)
Fragment I for Composition VII (Center)
1913
Oil on canvas
34 15/16 x 39 7/16 in.
Gift of Mrs. Harry Lynde Bradley
© 2003 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris
M1958.12


This study of the center section is one of numerous preparatory works for the last of the seven great compositions Wassily Kandinsky created between 1910 and 1913.

Despite being generally recognized as the “father of abstraction,” Kandinsky began his colorful, rhythmic paintings with specific themes from the bible or from Russian folktales.

In this active swirl of colors and forms, certain motifs suggest underlying New Testament themes such as the Resurrection and Last Judgment along with the Deluge from the Old Testament. A rudimentary figure in a boat at the left, a twin-oarred bark at the center right, and the central mountain heaved onto its side with the deep blue of sky or water behind it, are evidence of great natural turbulence. The complete finished Composition VII is in the State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.






Search Collection Highlights





Browse by Artist


a  b  c  d  e  f  g  h  i  j  k  l  m
n  o  p  q  r  s  t  u  v  w  x  y  z


Browse by Period


19th Century European Art
American Art to 1900
Ancient Art
Contemporary Art
Early European Art
Folk, Self-Taught, Outsider
Haitian Art
Modern Art


 
 
 


 
home  |  visit  |  calendar  |  exhibitions  |  rights + reproduction  |  credits  |  webmaster
  ©2010 Milwaukee Art Museum