What Was The First Abstract Painting In History
The story of a legendary dispute: who created the work that was to change modern art forever?
Is it possible to invent an artistic style? Could it be an individual creation? A personal invention? One name which comes to mind when we speak of the birth of abstract art is, inevitably, Wassily Kandinsky. In 1935, the Russian artist wrote to his gallerist in New York to make a claim that was no small thing: to have created the first abstract painting in the history of art, a work made in 1911. “Indeed, it’s the world’s first ever abstract picture, because back then not one single painter was painting in an abstract style. A ‘historic painting,’” wrote the painter.
Even Kandinsky’s widow later participated in the discussion. In 1946, soon after her husband’s death, she defended his place as the original creator of abstract art. The dispute included other artists some of whom even changed the dates of their works to claim the coveted title. Among them were Robert Delaunay, Mikhail Larionov, Natalia Goncharova, and Kazimir Malevich.
Window on the City No. 3, Robert Delaunay (1912).
At the beginning of the 20th century, art took a new direction thanks to advances in communications and transportation. Trains, steamships, and cars helped art, and the culture around it, to spread faster. The mass media and the critical reviews which it distributed made artistic works that much more “democratic.” It was an era in which itinerant art exhibitions arose, a practice initiated by the Italian Futurists. And all of this had its effects, as it is possible to see, in what today are called “intellectual property rights.”
For a long time, art experts argued that Komposition V, one of Kandinsky’s best-known paintings, was the first to capture the attention of a wide audience when it was exhibited in Munich in 1911. This painting, according to some, made a new form of artistic representation plausible. It’s curious that Kandinsky’s manifesto, On the Spiritual in Art (1909), which would lay the foundations for the ideological development of abstraction (and from which we can still extract some valuable lessons on life), was written before the painter did his abstract works. That’s to say, the Russian painter theorized the movement before giving it shape.
Komposition V, Wassily Kandinsky (1911).
At the same time, other artists were, in fact, completing works which are now classified as “abstract.” These include the Czech, František Kupka (whose Amorpha, Chromatique chaude, and Amorpha, Fugue à deux coleurs, were exhibited in Paris in 1912), or Francis Picabia, whose watercolor, Caoutchouc, was completed in 1909, before the Kandinsky manifesto. There’s no doubt, the discussion is difficult because it is possible to say that abstract art came into the world little by little and silently. Before the great works could be thus classified, and abstract artists could identify themselves as abstract, there were already works with touches of abstraction. Such is the case of the Swedish artist, Hilma af Klint. In her lifetime, she was known as a portraitist and landscape painter. But as of 1906, (guided by what she described as “spiritual forces”), some of her paintings were composed with spirals and decidedly abstract organic forms.
Primordial Chaos, Hilma af Klint (1906).
Trying to define which is the first abstract painting (as with the first surrealist or impressionist works) would in many ways be an idle, meaningless task. It’s also important to ask ourselves if an artistic style can really be “invented” by a person, or if it might be the result of a collective and gradual movement, one with many steps and multiple origins. We might do well to remember that the photograph was developed in at least three places simultaneously, but it was Daguerre who made the possibility of developing photographs more successful with his then unlikely daguerreotype. Still, the search is worthy – the search for a seed. It’s a journey which, in this case, takes us through works of intense beauty, and through creations which would eventually change the history of art in the West.
Via: Artsy.
Related Articles
Pictorial spiritism (a woman's drawings guided by a spirit)
There are numerous examples in the history of self-taught artists which suggest an interrogation of that which we take for granted within the universe of art. Such was the case with figures like
Astounding fairytale illustrations from Japan
Fairy tales tribal stories— are more than childish tales. Such fictions, the characters of which inhabit our earliest memories, aren’t just literary works with an aesthetic and pleasant purpose. They
A cinematic poem and an ode to water: its rhythms, shapes and textures
Here lies One Whose Name was writ in Water. - John Keats Without water the equation of life, at least life as we know it, would be impossible. A growing hypothesis holds that water, including the
Watch beauty unfold through science in this "ode to a flower" (video)
The study of the microscopic is one of the richest, most aesthetic methods of understanding the world. Lucky is the scientist who, upon seeing something beautiful, is able to see all of the tiny
To invent those we love or to see them as they are? Love in two of the movies' favorite scenes
So much has been said already, of “love” that it’s difficult to add anything, much less something new. It’s possible, though, perhaps because even if you try to pass through the sieve of all our
This app allows you to find and preserve ancient typographies
Most people, even those who are far removed from the world of design, are familiar with some type of typography and its ability to transform any text, help out dyslexics or stretch an eight page paper
The secrets of the mind-body connection
For decades medical research has recognized the existence of the placebo effect — in which the assumption that a medication will help produces actual physical improvements. In addition to this, a
The sea as infinite laboratory
Much of our thinking on the shape of the world and the universe derives from the way scientists and artists have approached these topics over time. Our fascination with the mysteries of the
Sharing and collaborating - natural movements of the creative being
We might sometimes think that artistic or creative activity is, in essence, individualistic. The Genesis of Judeo-Christian tradition portrays a God whose decision to create the world is as vehement
John Malkovich becomes David Lynch (and other characters)
John Malkovich and David Lynch are, respectively, the actor and film director who’ve implicitly or explicitly addressed the issues of identity and its porous barriers through numerous projects. Now