Wassily Kandinsky
Wassily Kandinsky was a Russian painter and art theorist who pioneered abstract art and believed in using color and form to evoke spirituality and human emotion.
Painter
December 16, 1866
December 13, 1944
77
Wassily Kandinsky, a Russian-born abstract painter and art theorist, is widely regarded as the founder of abstract art. His most famous early work, “The Blue Rider,” showcases his belief that objects detracted from the essence of a painting, prompting him to embrace abstraction. Kandinsky viewed art as a deeply spiritual medium, using vivid colors to express emotions. As a successful theorist and writer, he authored notable books such as “Concerning the Spiritual In Art” and “Point and Line to Plane.” Kandinsky played a significant role in founding both the Blue Rider movement and the Bauhaus school of art and design. Some of his other renowned works include “Composition VII,” “Yellow-Red-Blue,” and “Improvisation 28.”