Title: Der Blaue Reiter
1Der Blaue Reiter
- Wassily Kandinsky
- Franz Marc
2Der Blaue Reiter
- In1909 a group of Munich-based artists announced
their common aim of organising art exhibitions
in Germany and abroad, and of reinforcing their
effect by lectures, publications and similar
means. - They were known as Die Neue Kunstlervereinigung
München (New Artists Alliance, Munich) or NKVM.
Founding members included Alexij von Jawlensky,
Alexander Kanoldt, Adolf Erbsloh, Marianne
Werefkin, Wassily Kandinsky and Gabriele Munter. - The NKVM hosted three major shows. The first
featured the founding members, the second
included French and Russian artists (including
Picasso, Braque, Derain, Vlaminck, and two future
Blaue Reiter artists Macke and Marc). - There came a rift in the NKVM when in their
third show they rejected an art work by Kandinsky
because of the jury deemed it too large for the
show. Many members argued that it should be
admitted, but in the end it was not. - Kandinsky left the NKVM and in 1911 they held
their first exhibition (members included
Kandinsky, Marc, and Munter). Interestingly, Die
Brucke artists had left the New Artists Session
in Berlin around the same time.
3Der Blaue Reiter - Whats with the name?
- Some argue that the name was taken from a
Kandinsky work done in 1905 titled Blue Horseman.
The horse rider had been inspired by Russian
folk tales. - On the first Blaue Reiter Almanac is an image of
St. George atop a horse slaying a dragon in the
forground. It is thought that St. George was
used as a symbol of the artists spiritual role of
rescuing innocence from the ravages of
materialism. - The horse rider was an allusion to the Four
Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Der Blaue Reiter
artists, especially under the influence of
Theosophy, saw an apocalypse as the only way that
a new, non-materialistic epoch will be reached.
This was in reaction to the decadent bourgeois
culture that was corrupted because of industrial
change and exploitation. - Lastly, the horse was seen to be a potent symbol
of elemental forces by both Kandinsky and Marc.
4Der Blaue Reiter and philosophical influences.
Theosophy - Drawing from philosophical and
religious backgrounds (Hinduism, Judaism,
Zoroastrianism), it was established by the
Russian Madame Blavatsky in 1875. They believed
in the idea of universal brotherhood the idea
that colour and form can enrich the soul that
people have colour auras (thought forms) that
change colour according to peoples mood that an
apocalypse will bring about a final spiritual
world and that the 21st century will be a time
of paradise on earth.
Psychology - Synaesthesia a belief that some
people have the ability to see colours when they
hear a particular sound/music. Kandinsky wrote,
Various attempts to exploit this power of colour
and apply it to different nervous disordersred
light has an enlivening and stimulating affect.
Freud his theories on automatic drawing, or to
create from the unconscious rather than conscious
part of the mind as a way of tapping into a
universal understanding.
5Der Blaue Reiter and philosophical influences.
Darwinism - Der Blaue Reiter artists like
Kandinsky and Marc used animals as symbols in
their works at they saw them as existing in
balance with naturethis aligned well with their
interest in spirituality. Kandinsky used the
horse as a symbol of power and passion whereas
Marc used animals to represent truth, purity, and
beauty.
The Apocalypse - For Kandinsky, this was going to
bring about a necessary change and bring forth a
new, non-material world. Many had seen science
as something that was advancing too quickly and
bringing too many changes and creating a corrupt
and unbalanced world. Kandinsky wrote, The
collapse of the atom was equatedwith the
collapse of the whole world. Many artists and
liberal thinkers believed that the world was soon
to collapse on itself. Such people included
Kandinsky, Neitzsche, and Wagner. Der Blaue
Reiter saw their task as prophesising this
apocalypse.
6Wassily Kandinsky (1866 1944)
- In 1896 (30) he gave up his successful careeer as
a lawyer (Phd) and economist to become a painter.
He moved to Munich to study art. - One of few expressionists in Germany whose work
was based on a comprehensive and well founded
theory. In 1912 he wrote one of Arts most
influential texts On the Spiritual in Art. - His style changed and grew from Art Nouveau
(Jugendstil), Russian symbolist, Fauvism,
Post-Impressionism and eventually abstraction. - By 1909 his works, while still containing ciphers
(abbreviated symbols of natural objects), his use
of colour becomes much more expressive and
non-representational. - Works take on unconventional titles and start
with Impression, Improvisation, or Composition. - 1911 an important year, it is thought that this
was the year that he painted his first true
abstract oil painting. - 1913 space or movement is created by weight, the
advancing or receding, of colour. - 1914 is forced to leave Germany, though he
returns in 1922 to teach at the Bauhaus.
7Riding Couple, 1906-07, oil on canvas,
8Colourful Life. 1907 oil on canvas.
9- Kandinskys early work (1896-1908)
- A Divisionist technique, using unmixed colours in
juxtaposition (similar to Pointalism, some
scholars will refer to this application of paint
as Tesserae). - Not strictly systematic.
- His themes are mingled with his rural Russian
background and its fairy tales. The style
alludes to Russian folk art with the use of
bright colours against a dark background. - Art Nouveau influence can be seen.
- Landscapes based more on psychological symbolism
than on-site studies of nature. - Short vivid brushstrokes give a vibrant, luminous
quality.
10Claude Monet Haystacks
Kandinsky was deeply impressed with Monets
haystacks. In was around 1905 that he went to a
French Impressionist exhibition in Moscow.
Kandinsky wrote The catalogue told me that it
was a haystack I couldnt tell it from looking.
Not being able to to tell it upset me. I also
considered that the artist had no right to paint
so indistinctlyI had the dull sensation that the
subject was missing. And was amazed and confused
to realize that the picture did not merely fascin
ate but impressed itself indelibly on my memory.
11Wassily Kandinsky - Munich-Schwabing with the
Church of St. Ursula. 1908. Oil on cardboard.
68.8 x 49 cm.
12Wasily Kandinsky, Blue Mountain, 190809. Oil on
canvas, 41x38 inches.
13- Kandinsky work -1908-1909.
- Silhouetted flatness of form.
- Influence of Fauves as during this period
Kandinsky had travelled to Paris and met Matisse,
Derain, and Vlaminck as well as Picasso and
Braque. He was impressed by the Fauves arbitrary
use of colour and the Expression that they
captured in their work. - Often sharp contrast of light and dark and warm
and cold. - Alternations between different coloured dabs and
blobs of paint give the paintings a restless
quality.
14- Kandinskys Metamorphosis - 1909-1911
- In Germany, Kandinsky developed his idea of the
correspondence between a work of Art and the
viewer, and called it Klang (sound or
resonance). - In his book Spirituality in Art he wrote
- Colour is the power which directly influences
the soul. Colour is the keyboard, the eyes are
the hammers, the soul is the piano with the
strings. The Artist is the hand which plays,
touching one key or another, to cause vibrations
of the soul.
15- Metamorphosis 1909-1911.
- In this period of artistic development, he began
to divide his paintings into 3 categories - Impressions which still show some
representational elements. - Improvisations which convey spontaneous emotion
reactions. - Compositions which are ultimate works of art,
created only after a long period of preparations
and preliminaries.
16Kandinsky, Mountain, 1909, Oil on canvas,
109x109cm.
17Mountain, 1909
Blue Mountain, 190809
Looking at these two works what stylistic
features have changed? List three similarities
and three differences.
18Wassily Kandinsky. Picture with an Archer. 1909.
Oil on canvas, 175 x 144 cm .
19Picture with an Archer. 1909
Church of St. Ursula, 1908
Looking at these two works what stylistic
features have changed? List three similarities
and three differences.
20Wassily Kandinsky -Improvisation 6 (African),
1909. Oil on canvas. 109 x99 cm.
21Wassily Kandinsky, Two Riders and Reclining
Figure, 1909-10.
22Improvisation 7 1910, Oil on canvas, 131 x 97
cm.
23- Kandinskys work -1909-1910.
- Landscape is still the basis of the subject
matter though elements are only hinted at as if
they are a mere pretext for a colourful play of
glowing contrasts. - Shapes are reduced.
- Loose thick areas of colour are spread broadly
and generously. - Non-Naturalistic.
24Wassily Kandinsky
Picasso
Matisse
Cubism had demonstrated a means to be liberated
from traditional representation of form.
Had seen that colour didnt have to signify
objects. .has its own spiritual significance.
25- Synaesthesia
- (K.) Had a neurological disorder known as
synaesthesia. - Defined as sensory stimulation that is perceived
by a separate sense. - Kandinsky exhibited the most common form known as
coloured hearing. This means that he could hear
music when he saw colours each colour has its
musical equivalent. - Each indiv. Would hear different musical tones on
seeing different colours. - Example When he saw the colour yellow in which
he reported hearing the sound of a shrill
trumpet. - He wrote of this in his theoretical texts. He
stated that when you see a bright colour you do
not associate deep bass sound with it, and
likewise upon seeing a dark colour a high treble
sound.
26Kandinsky, "First Abstract Watercolour"1910.
Pencil, watercolour and India ink, 49.6 x 64.8 cm.
27- Breakthrough to the abstract 1910/11-1913
- The lopsided painting, scholars are in debate
as to whether this is the first true abstract art
work. - Brings in connections between art and music where
he saw musics free chords and harmonic tones as
an analogy for abstract art. - Early abstract forms still bound in some way to
nature ie. werent just shapes and colour for
their own sake.
28Kandinsky, Improvisation 19, 1911. Oil on canvas,
120x141cm.
29Kandinsky, Improvisation 19, 1911. Oil on canvas,
120x141cm.
- The black outlines still suggest the figurative,
but there is absolutely no connection between
them and the vibrant field of colour which they
frame.
30Wassily Kandinsky - Lyrical. 1911. Oil on canvas.
94 x 130 cm.
31Composition ll. 1909-1910
32Cossacks 1910-11
33Cossacks 1910-11
- Is this work devoid of anything representational?
- The title of the work suggests that he is
remembering the events of the 1905 Russian
Revolution in which the Cossacks were involved. - The view is expected to read the painting in
three levels - To see the chaos of colour and lines to represent
the chaos of the Revolution - To begin to see the forms created by colours and
lines (eg. the hats of the Cossack soldiers,
their lances, the castle sitting atop the hill) - To begin to understand the meaning of the work as
it was his hope that the viewers would be drawn
into a conversation with the painting while they
try to decipher is.
34Composition IV, 1911, Oil on canvas, 159 x 250 cm
35Composition IV, 1911, Oil on canvas, 159 x 250 cm
- On the left, violent motion is expressed through
the profusion of sharp, jagged and entangled
lines. - On the right, all is calm, with sweeping forms
and colour harmonies. - Cossacks (1910-11) is considered to be the
preparatory study work for this art work. - The dividing lines are actually two lances held
by red-hatted Cossacks. Next to them, a third,
white-bearded Cossack leans on his violet sword. - They stand before a blue mountain crowned by a
castle. In the lower left, two boats are
depicted. - Above them, two mounted Cossacks are joined in
battle, brandishing violet sabers. On the lower
right, two lovers recline, while above them two
robed figures observe from the hillside. - Kandinsky has reduced representation to
pictographic signs in order to obtain the
flexibility to express a higher, more cosmic
vision.
36Kandinsky, Composition V (The last judgement),
1911, Oil on Canvas, 200x300cm.
37Later in 1911, Kandinsky produced Composition V,
a much more abstract work. Several angels
blowing trumpets are included in the upper
portion of the canvas. The strong black line
crossing from right to left can be felt as a
representation of the blowing of the trumpets.
Above this line, the towers of a walled-in city
are visible. Below the line, the thin application
of paint produces a luminescence that affects our
perception of space in that portion of the
canvas. The whiteness conveys a sense of
infinity through the lack of volume and
perspective. Out of this void, the viewer can
sense the rising of the dead.
38Kandinskys Colour Theory.
- Kandinsky felt that each colour had an inherent
character defined by its relationship to its
opposing colour. For instance -plus/minus,
warm/cool, active/passive, female/male and
believed that these characteristics, on an
intuitive level and in certain combinations,
could communicate an emotion or idea to the
spectator. - Kandinskys colour principles
- Yellow Warm, Convulsive, irritating.
- Blue Tranquil, Severe, Cold.
- Red Hot, Passionate, Virile.
- Green Static, Neutral, Passive.
- White A silence pregnant with sound.
- Black Silence of death.
39Kandinskys Colour Theory.
Yellow
Orange
Green
Black
White
Violet
Red
Blue
40Kandinsky, Improvisation 26 (Oars), 1912, Oil on
Canvas, 97x107cm
41Kandinsky, Picture with a Black Arch, 1912. Oil
on canvas, 188x196 cm.
42Kandinsky, Picture with a Black Arch, 1912. Oil
on canvas, 188x196 cm.
- Made up of 3 areas of shapes pressing against
each other. - Bottom right corner shape leads to Vermillion at
centre, opposite a blue shape that has dark lines
with light greens, whites and orange. - Black Arch shape gives weight to the image. Binds
them together. - Black Arch appears as an eruption of energy,
violent struggle. Red1side. Blue the other. - Theme of conflict and struggle.
43- Conflict
- An aim to capture the turmoil of inner life as
captured in the conflict of the Music of Mozart
or Wagner. - -evident in the contrast of the red and Blue in
Black Arch. - Colour, line and free flowing form to make up a
dramatic visual language which expresses the
antagonism between matter and spirit. - Translates the entire sceptical mood of pre WW1
Europe into an abstract but accessible range of
symbols.
44Kandinsky, Picture with white border, 1913. Oil
on canvas, 140x200cm
45Kandinsky, Picture with white border, 1913.
- Washed out blue figure in middle fighting
figure. - White line lance directed at a dragon in lower
left.
46Kandinsky, Composition VI, 1913, Oil on canvas,
195x300cm.
47- Kandinsky saw three centres to this Composition
- First) The eye is drawn to the pink and white
vortex in the left centre. - Second) The multiple lines representing
torrential rain carry the focus to the right
section, where a darker centre of discordant
forms and stronger rain lines adds to the tumult.
- Third) The eye slides to the lower centre, where
a blue form outlined in black cowers below the
torrents of rain and crashing waves. In this
work, Kandinsky has pushed further beyond
representation to the very limits of abstraction.
48Composition VII. 1913
49Composition VII is the pinnacle of Kandinsky's
pre-World War One artistic achievement. Its
creation involved over thirty preparatory
drawings, watercolours and oil studies. Through
all of the preparatory works and in the final
painting itself, the central motif (an oval form
intersected by an irregular rectangle) is
maintained. This oval seems almost the eye of a
compositional hurricane, surrounded by swirling
masses of colour and form. In Composition VII's
final form, Kandinsky has obliterated almost all
pictorial representation. Art scholars, through
Kandinsky's writings and study of the less
abstract preparatory works, have determined that
Composition VII combines the themes of The
Resurrection, The Last Judgment, The Deluge and
The Garden of Love in an operatic outburst of
pure painting.
Kandinsky, Composition VII, 1913, Oil on Canvas,
200x300cm.
50Kandinsky, Composition VIII, 1923
51Kandinsky, Composition VIII, 1923
- Apocalyptic emotion of Composition VII replaced
with geometrical rhythm. - Painted ten years later in 1923, Composition VIII
reflects the influence of Suprematism and
Constructivism absorbed by Kandinsky while in
Russia prior to his return to Germany to teach at
the Bauhaus. - Kandinsky has moved from colour to form as the
dominating compositional element - He does however use different colours within the
forms to energize their geometry. - Design seems to be taking place in an undefined
space. The layered background colours - light
blue at bottom, light yellow at top and white in
the middle - define its depth. The forms tend to
recede and advance within this depth, creating a
dynamic, push-pull effect.
52Rayonism More abstract than either Cubism or
Futurism.
Suprematism Complete abstraction. A very pure
Geometric abstraction. Fine tuned response to
modern feelings.
RUSSIAN CONTRIBUTION TO DEVELOPING ABSTRACTION.
Russian Folk Tradition -Very strong colourist
tradition. -Mystical outlook. -Orthodox
Church. -Their art had always had an abstract
aspect.
Political Readiness to embrace the future.
-Highly developed culture.
53Quotes
"Colour is the keyboard, the eyes are the
harmonies, the soul is the piano with many
strings. The artist is the hand that plays,
touching one key or another, to cause vibrations
in the soul." Wassily Kandinsky"There is no
must in art because art is free." Wassily
Kandinsky
Why should we not succeed in creating colour
harmonies that correspond to our psychic state.
Wassily Kandinsky
54Franz Marc (1880-1916).
- He studied at the Munich Art Academy and
travelled to Paris several times where he saw the
work of Gauguin, Van Gogh, and the
Impressionists. - He became a member of the New Artists Alliance
and was introduced to the concept of expressive,
non-representational colour. He wrote - Their logiscla distribution of the plain, the
mysterious lines of the one and the colour
harmony of the other seek to create spiritual
moods which have little to do with the subject
protrayed but which prepare the ground for a
new, highly spiritualise aesthetic. - With Kandinsky, he founded the almanac "Der Blaue
Reiter" in 1911 and organized exhibitions with
this name. He was the groups organiser. - He and Auguste Macke began to work on a colour
theory together after the est. of the Blaue
Reiter group. - After a visit to meet Orphist Robert Delaunay
(Fr.) he began to create works with a more
crystalline form.
55- Robert Delaunay, Windows Open Simultaneously (1st
Part, 3rd Motif), 1912.
Delaunays cubism revolved around an intensive
study of the relationships of complementary
colours and simultaneous colours. where colour
becomes an object of the picture.
56The Dead Sparrow, 1905, Oil on wood, 13 x 16.5cm
57Marcs colour theories He wrote Blue is the
male prinicple, stern and spiritual. Yellow the
female principle, gentle, cheerful and sensual.
Red is matter, brutal and heavy and always the
colour which must be fought and vanquished by the
other two. If, for example, you mix the serious,
spiritual blue with red, then you augment the
blue to an unbearable mourning, and the
reconciling yellow, the complementary colour to
violet, will be indispensible (the woman as
consoler, not as lover). If you mix read and
yellow, you give the passive and female yellow a
sensual power, for which the cool, spiritual blue
-the man- will again be indispensable, and
certainly blue sets itself immediately and
automatically next to orange the colours love
each other. Blue and orange, a thoroughly
festive chord. But if you now mix blue and
yellow to green, you bring red, the material, the
earth to life. But here I, as a painter, always
feel a difference with green you never put the
eternally material, brutal red to rest, as you do
with the other colour chord (just imagine objects
decorated in green and red). Blue (the heaven)
and yellow (the sun) must always come to the aid
of green again, to subdue the material.
58Franz Marc, Dog lying in the snow, 1910/11. Oil
on canvas, 62 x 105cm.
59Franz Marc, Dog lying in the snow, 1910/11. Oil
on canvas, 62 x 105cm.
- 1910 he meets Macke.
- Snow pure white, hollows between it pure blue.
Dog, dull yellow. - Step by step, I now made the dog pure coloured
(light yellow) each time the colour became
purer, the coloured edges around the dog
disappeared a little more, until finally a pure
colour relationship was created between the
yellow, the cold white of the snow and the blue
within it Furthermore, the blue must not take up
too much space in relationship to the pure but
weak yellow if it is to remain complementary (ie.
justified).
60Franz Marc, Horse in a landscape, 1910. Oil on
canvas, 85 x 112cm.
61Franz Marc, Horse in a landscape, 1910. Oil on
canvas, 85 x 112cm.
- Red horse stands out against a predominantly
yellow background. - His back faces us, seemingly snubbing humanity as
he surveys and embraces the landscape. - The hills in the background repeat the forms of
the horse as if the same cosmic unity runs
through both. - Colours have changed from actual colours to
essence. Contrast red/green.
62Franz Marc, The Yellow Cow, 1911. oil on canvas,
140 x 190cm.
63- Painting of stark contrasts
- Brightness of the cow juxtaposed with the black
of the trees and mountains, and red fury that
pervades the landscape almost seems to threaten
the femininity of the cow. - Joie de vivre
64Franz Marc, The little Yellow Horses, 1912, Oil
on canvas, 66 x 104cm.
65Franz Marc, The Little Blue Horses, 1911, Oil on
canvas, 61 x 101cm.
66- Taking stock Franz Marc (so far)
- Marc never turned to animal paintings as a genre.
Rather, his horses and other animals are
substitutes for people in his art. Human
qualities. - For him, they embody everything that is pure,
true and beautiful. Features which he was
unable to find in his fellow human beings.
67Franz Marc, Tiger, 1912. Oil on canvas, 111 x
111.5 cm
68Franz Marc, Tiger, 1912. Oil on canvas, 111 x
111.5 cm
- Proves his colour associations are not dogmatic,
as yellow can neither be seen here as female, nor
as gentle, cheerful or sensual. - Soft, hilly landscape has been replaced by sharp
edged, bizzare angular shapes. Cubist influence. - Has Marc here truly expressed the feeling of the
tiger, or has he instead imposed on it human
sensibilities? - In 1912 with Macke, visits the studio of Robert
Delaunay. Sees his Windows series and is
impressed by them.
69 Marc, Deer in the Monastery Garden, 1912, Oil on
canvas, 75 x 101 cm.
70- Marc, Deer in the Monastery Garden, 1912, Oil on
canvas, 75 x 101 cm. - Dominated by abstract, in part bizarre forms
creating almost no impression of spatial depth. - Pantheism ie. pantheistic.
- The spirit of the universe in everything.
71- 1912/13 Marcs views on animals changes
- Marc no longer employing the animal as means of
portraying himself. - Another instinct led me away from animals
towards abstraction I found people ugly very
early on animals seemed to me more beautiful,
more pure but even in animals I discovered much
that was unfeeling and ugly, so that my pictures
instinctively became increasingly more
schematic, abstract.
72Franz Marc, Stables, 1913, Oil on canvas, 73 x
157 cm.
73Stables
- 1912/13 Sees in the flesh the work of the
Futurists for the first time. Is enthralled by
the capturing of light, illumination and
atmosphere in their work. - Stables is Marcs reaction to the work that the
Orphists were producing as well as that of the
the Futurists. - The horses are dismembered and abstracted as flat
shapes parallel to the picture plane. - It is argued that Marc sees the stables as a
metaphor for social decadence and mentions it in
a letter to Kandinsky shortly after war is
declared. - I am not angry at this war I am grateful to it
from the bottom of my heart. There was no other
avenue to the time of the spirit it was the only
way of cleansing the stables of Europe.
74- Giacomo Balla Speed of a Motor Car 1913.
75Franz Marc, Animal Destinies (The Trees show
their Rings, the Animals their Veins), 1913. Oil
on Canvas, 196 x 266 cm.
76Animal Destinies (The Trees show their Rings, the
Animals their Veins)
- It shows the political and artistic contexts just
before WWI via the Futurist lines of force,
Cubist fragmenting of structure, and Orphic
colour harmonies. - The painting is thought to represent the coming
of conflict and its effect on the natural world
that Marc had previously considered innocent. - Three red shards move from the upper left
diagonally into the tree which falls in an
opposing diagonalthis is counter-balanced by the
diagonal explosion of form from top right to
lower left. - At the time of the art work Marc wrote
- Today art is moving in a direction of which our
fathers would never even have dreamed. We stand
before the new pictures as in a dream and we hear
the apocalyptic horsemen in the air. There is an
artistic tension all over Europe.
77Franz Marc, Fighting Forms, 1914 Oil on Canvas,
91 x 131cm.
78Broken Forms, 1914
79Fighting Forms and Broken Forms
- These two works are a part of a series of four
works including Happy Forms (destroyed), and
Playing forms. - The works reveal conflicting nature of artists
inner emotions which can be seen as a battle of
spiritual forces against the material world. - In Fighing Forms the figure on the left can
perhaps be seen as an eagle (a bird of soaring
spirit), which is attacking a blue/black
otherwise undefinable being. - In the book of Revelation 813 it says, Then I
looked and I heard an eagle calling with a loud
cry as it flew in mid-heaven Woe, woe, woe to
the inhabitants of earth when the trumpets
sound
80Franz Marc - Tyrol (1914)
81Tyrol
- Completed after Marc had visited the Austrian
town. - The work began primarily as an abstract
landscape, which can be identified by the hint of
a town in the lower centre of the painting. Marc
had submitted it to the Autumn Salon in 1913 but
withdrew it to add the Madonna figure in the
upper centre of the painting, along with a scythe
that cuts across from the lower right portion of
the work.
- The scythe and Madonna on a crescent moon refer
Christian portrayals of the apocalypse as told in
the Revelation of St John. The scene is meant to
symbolise the rebirth of mankind after the
destruction of corrupt society. Examples of this
can be seen in work done by Durer around 1500.