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Of all the giants of twentieth-century art, Wassily Kandinsky
(1866-1944) was the most prolific writer. Here, available for the
first time in paperback, are all of Kandinsky's writings on art,
newly translated into English. Editors Kenneth C. Lindsay and Peter
Vergo have taken their translations directly from Kandinsky's
original texts, and have included select interviews, lecture notes,
and newly discovered items along with his more formal writings. The
pieces range from one-page essays to the book-length treatises "On
the Spiritual in Art" (1911) and "Point and Line to Plane" (1926),
and are arranged in chronological order from 1901 to 1943. The
poetry, good enough to stand on its literary merits, is presented
with all the original accompanying illustrations. And the book's
design follows Kandinsky's intentions, preserving the spirit of the
original typography and layout.Kandinsky was nearly thirty before
he bravely gave up an academic career in law for his true passion,
painting. Though his art was marked by extraordinarily varied
styles, Kandinsky sought a pure art throughout, one which would
express the soul, or "inner necessity," of the artist. His
uncompromising search for an art which would elicit a response to
itself rather than to the object depicted resulted in the birth of
nonobjective art--and in these writings, Kandinsky offered the
first cogent explanation of his aims. His language was
characterized by its desire for vivification, of the infusion of
life into mundane things.Considered as a whole, Kandinsky's
writings exceed all expectations of what an artist should
accomplish with words. Not only do his ideas and observations make
us rethink the nature of art and the wayit reflects the aspirations
of his era, but they touch on matters vital to the situation of the
human soul.
The artistic stagnation of Vienna at the end of the 19th century
was rudely shaken by the artists of the Vienna Secession. Their
work shocked a conservative public, but their successive
exhibitions, their magazine Ver Sacrum, and their application to
the applied arts and architecture soon brought them an enthusiastic
following and wealthy patronage. Art in Vienna, 1898-1918: Klimt,
Kokoschka, Schiele and their Contemporaries, now published in its
4th edition, brilliantly traces the course of this development.
Klimt, Kokoschka and Schiele were the leading figures in the fine
arts; Wagner, Olbrich, Loos and Hoffmann in architecture and the
applied arts. In other fields, Mahler, Freud and Schnitzler were
influencing the avant-garde. The book includes eye-witness accounts
of exhibitions, the opening of the Secession building and other
events, and the result is a fascinating documentary study of the
members of an artistic movement which is much admired today. Some
150 color images and 75 black and white archival illustrations make
this a sumptuous and historically engrossing study of a period when
Vienna was the centre of the European art world.
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