"Curve to the Point: Accompanying Sound of Geometric Curves", Wassily Kandinsky

"Curve to the Point: Accompanying Sound of Geometric Curves", Wassily Kandinsky

$116.00
{{option.name}}: {{selected_options[option.position]}}
{{value_obj.value}}

Wassily Kandinsky's Curve to the Point: Accompanying Sound of Geometric Curves is a 1925 ink on paper drawing that is a stunning and evocative work of art. The drawing depicts a series of geometric curves and shapes that are arranged in a dynamic and harmonious composition. Some art historians have interpreted the drawing as a representation of Kandinsky's own synesthesia, a neurological condition that causes people to experience one sense through another sense. Kandinsky claimed that he could see colors when he heard music, and he believed that art should be a synesthetic experience for the viewer. This interpretation suggests that Kandinsky was trying to create a visual representation of the sounds that he heard in his mind when he drew the geometric curves and shapes in Curve to the Point: Accompanying Sound of Geometric Curves. Others have interpreted the drawing as a more general representation of the relationship between art and music. Kandinsky believed that art and music were b

Show More Show Less