Composition VII (1913) by Vasily KandinskyThe State Tretyakov Gallery
Wassily Kandinsky was the first master of the abstract. This piece, Composition VII, is a visual cacophony of color! Or even, as Kandinsky himself called his paintings, a "color symphony".
Kandinsky closely followed the Theory of Color by German writer, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, which believed in the emotional power of strongly opposed colors like yellow versus blue and green versus red.
Green was, for Goethe and Kandinsky, the color of intellectual repose, the natural state of the mind. Reds and yellows communicated warmth, while blue was active and powerful. But, for Kandinsky, color was more than a visual experience...
Because of his condition called 'synaesthesia', certain colors were experienced as sound - Kandinsky could hear color! For him, lemon yellows sounded like high trumpet lines.
Blue was a particularly complex color in Kandinsky's soundscape. Lighter tones sounded to him like flutes.
Deeper, richer blues had a cello sound.
And the darkest, deepest corners of the blue spectrum had, understandably, a low and heavy sound, like a double-bass or an organ.
All together, the rhythms, points, counterpoints, swells, and calms of these busy, active paintings sounded to Kandinsky like the "vibrations of the soul", an art of color and sound which chimed with his favourite music, like the compositions of Arnold Schoenberg
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.