1972.34.1 Wassily Kandinsky, Kleine Welten VI (Small World VI)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
In 1921 Wassily Kandinsky took a teaching position at the newly formed school of modern design, the Bauhaus, in Weimar. A portfolio of twelve prints, Kleine Welten, or Small Worlds, was Kandinsky's first creation after joining the school. As a group, the images create a dialogue, although as the title suggests each also functions as a microcosm.

Small World VI represents Kandinsky's view that art should express an inner life through a vocabulary of cosmic forms. Within his oeuvre this woodcut is both retrospective and forward-looking, for it forges a link between the more representational works of the artist's earlier years and the new vision of the Bauhaus era.

Traces of readable imagery are found in the double sails that flank the scene and in the elemental landscape motifs scattered throughout. The impact of Russian constructivism is clear in the orchestration of geometric elements, although by infusing each element of the image with meaning, Kandinsky departs from the constructivists, who actively discouraged such expressiveness.

The dark circle at the center of the image serves as a visual anchor for the free-floating circles, triangles, and diagonals. There is an illusion of movement, as though each form pulsates with its own internal energy. Nondescriptive hues and abstract shapes are juxtaposed with representational forms. The opposition of black and white accentuates the sense of playful, fluctuating movement. In contrast, the circle, symbol of perfection and the cosmos, establishes a calm center and contributes to the spiritual aura of the owrk. This woodcut presents, perhaps, an image of the confrontation of the material world with the transcendental.

Excerpt from
Kristin Helmick-Brunet, "Kleine Welten VI (Small World VI)", in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Suzanne Kotz (Dallas, TX: Dallas Museum of Art, 1997), 126.

NOTES
Created 1922

Checked Piction

Text entry done for 1997 guide

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 
Place of origin: Weimar (Germany): TGN: 7012886

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 
  • Archive.com~Read Wassily Kandisnky's On the Spiritual in Art: First Complete English Translation, with Four Full Colour Page Reproductions, Woodcuts and Half Tones on the Guggenheim Internet Archives. 
  • Guggenheim, New York~Read a biography of Kandinsky from the Guggenheim.

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1972.34.1

Category
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General Description
 
In 1921 Wassily Kandinsky took a teaching position at the newly formed school of modern design, the Bauhaus, in Weimar. A portfolio of twelve prints, Kleine Welten, or Small Worlds, was Kandinsky's first creation after joining the school. As a group, the images create a dialogue, although as the title suggests each also functions as a microcosm.

Small World VI represents Kandinsky's view that art should express an inner life through a vocabulary of cosmic forms. Within his oeuvre this woodcut is both retrospective and forward-looking, for it forges a link between the more representational works of the artist's earlier years and the new vision of the Bauhaus era.

Traces of readable imagery are found in the double sails that flank the scene and in the elemental landscape motifs scattered throughout. The impact of Russian constructivism is clear in the orchestration of geometric elements, although by infusing each element of the image with meaning, Kandinsky departs from the constructivists, who actively discouraged such expressiveness.

The dark circle at the center of the image serves as a visual anchor for the free-floating circles, triangles, and diagonals. There is an illusion of movement, as though each form pulsates with its own internal energy. Nondescriptive hues and abstract shapes are juxtaposed with representational forms. The opposition of black and white accentuates the sense of playful, fluctuating movement. In contrast, the circle, symbol of perfection and the cosmos, establishes a calm center and contributes to the spiritual aura of the owrk. This woodcut presents, perhaps, an image of the confrontation of the material world with the transcendental.

Excerpt from
Kristin Helmick-Brunet, "Kleine Welten VI (Small World VI)", in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Suzanne Kotz (Dallas, TX: Dallas Museum of Art, 1997), 126.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
  • Archive.com~Read Wassily Kandisnky's On the Spiritual in Art: First Complete English Translation, with Four Full Colour Page Reproductions, Woodcuts and Half Tones on the Guggenheim Internet Archives. 
  • Guggenheim, New York~Read a biography of Kandinsky from the Guggenheim.

Notes
Created 1922

Checked Piction

Text entry done for 1997 guide

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 
Place of origin: Weimar (Germany): TGN: 7012886

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1972.34.1
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
%Archived
lines (geometric concept): AAT: 300056279
@Russell
#routed
*European Art
circles (plane figures): AAT: 300055627
abstract (general art genre): AAT: 300417511
black-and-white (colors): AAT: 300265434
Kandinsky_Vassily: ULAN: 500021093
Bauhaus: AAT: 300021432
woodcuts (prints): AAT: 300041405
Weimar (Germany): TGN: 7012886
sails: AAT: 300185694
source file
object_notes_1_d-0097.xml.nores