Kasimir
Malevich's art and his Suprematist manifesto are amongst the most vital
artistic developments of this century. Most of his paintings are limited to
geometric shapes and a narrow range of colors, but the pinnacle of his
Suprematism was his White on White series. He claimed to have
reached the summit of abstract art by denying objective representation.
Russian suprematism
Although
Chagall and Soutine both left Russia to seek inspiration in France, the early
20th century saw an amazing renewal in Russian art. Since the far-off days of
the icon painters, there had been nothing in this great country but the
monotony of academic art. Now, as if unconsciously anticipating the coming
revolution of 1917, one great painter after another appeared. They were not
universally welcomed in their homeland, and more than one artist sought a
response elsewhere, but some of the most significant painters dedicated their
lives and their art to their country.
They
are difficult artists. Kasimir Malevich (1878-1935), who founded what he called
Suprematism, believed in an extreme of reduction: ``The object in itself is
meaningless... the ideas of the conscious mind are worthless''. What he wanted
was a non-objective representation, ``the supremacy of pure feeling.'' This can
sound convincing until one asks what it actually means. Malevich, however, had
no doubts as to what he meant, producing objects of iconic power such as his
series of White on White paintings or Dynamic Suprematism
(1916; 102 x 67 cm (40 x 26 1/2 in)), in which the geometric patterns are
totally abstract.
Malevich
had initially been influenced by Cubism and primitive art, which were both
based on nature, but his own movement of Suprematism enabled him to construct
images that had no reference at all to reality. Great solid diagonals of color
in Dynamic Suprematism are floating free, their severe sides
denying them any connection with the real world, where there are no straight
lines. This is a pure abstract painting, the artist's main theme being the
internal movements of the personality. The theme has no precise form, and
Malevich had to search it out from within the visible expression of what he
felt. They are wonderful works, and in their wake came other powerful
Suprematist painters such as Natalia Goncharova and Liubov Popova.
Список
литературы
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