3. THE WORLD OF THE EARLY 1920’s World War I has ended, rebuilding cities Russian Revolution ended, Russian communism takes over Stalin in power, social realism is the only art allowed Nazi party forming Color theory, light theory, cosmology, morphology, quantum mechanics, math and physics evolve Development of photograph, methods of reproduction 3
4. WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE THINK ABOUT ABSTRACTIONISM? You just take an object and morph it using shapes There’s no meaning to the shapes Making fun of the object portrayed 4
5. WHAT’S IT REALLY ABOUT? Non-objective, No Imitation Geometric shapes, no objects from observed world Forms and colors exist for their own expressive sake, symbols Dematerialization of the object Clarity, certainty, order Peering deeper into the mind, theosophy Scientific, universal language of senses in a growing, chaotic world 5
6. KANDINSKY Accredited with first abstract work Art is like music (inspired, structured, feeling, calculated, rhythm) Abstract forms have spiritual basis Color and shape are symbolic, ex: white=great silence, circle=wholeness “Inner necessity”- artist’s intuitive, emotional response to the world His work not supposed to be observed but felt slowly Teacher at the Bauhaus in Germany Express inner life of humans and their most intimate emotions Viewer’s eye moves freely without limits imposed by artist 6
11. MALEVICH Believed abandoning need to depict external world would break into deeper level of meaning “Suprematism”- visual object is meaningless, feeling holds significance Abandoned painting for a while to sketch suprematist cities Imprisoned by Stalin for free-thinking art Lover of math, tried to incorporate passionate emotion Believed non-objective would overcome conflict between man v. nature, mind v. matter 11
15. MONDRIAN Believed art of clarity and balance would lead to a society governed by universal visual harmony Disciplined in life and art Love of jazz Simplified, mathematic structure “Plastic reality”- reality was presence of the painting itself, not imitated nature No symbolic meaning to colors No communication with Russia because of war Only through non-objective could humans approach the divine, the universal 15
18. 18 1933 Lozenge Composition with Four Yellow Lines – Piet Mondrian
19. CONTRIBUTIONS TO ART Cities are based on abstract forms The painting was about the feeling you get looking at it, not the visual aspect of the object Light, vital energy, feelings, and emotions coupled with math and science Simplified geometric figures could reach deeper into the soul Impact on industrial and advertisement art 19