The Russian painter and graphic artist Wassily Kandinsky was one of the       great masters of modern art, as well as the outstanding representative of       pure abstract painting (using only colors and forms) that dominated the       first half of the twentieth century. 
Early years in Russia
Wassily Kandinsky was born on December 4, 1866, in Moscow, Russia. His         father was a tea merchant. When he was five years old the family moved         to Odessa, Russia. The young Kandinsky drew, wrote poems, and played the         piano and the cello. Because his family was fond of traveling, Kandinsky         got to see the Italian cities of Venice, Rome, and Florence as a young         boy. He was also influenced by the imposing Muscovite (from Moscow)         buildings such as the Kremlin.
Between 1886 and 1892 Kandinsky studied law and economics at the         University of Moscow. In 1889 he was a member of a team formed to study         the life of the people in the Vologda district in northwestern Russia.         He was highly impressed by their folk art and the interior decorations         of the village houses. The use of forms and colors became an influence         in his art. In 1893 he accepted a position on the university's         law faculty.
Born: December 4, 1866     Moscow, Russia         
Died: December 13, 1944 Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
Russian painter and graphic artist
Died: December 13, 1944 Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
Russian painter and graphic artist
Beginnings as an artist
         It was not until 1896, when Kandinsky was thirty years old, that he         decided to become an artist. His artistic development was shaped greatly         by an exhibition of French impressionist painters that was shown in         Moscow in 1895. The impressionists used values of color and light to         show their subjects rather than painting in fine detail. The works of         Claude Monet (1840–1926) attracted Kandinsky's attention.         In Monet's paintings the subject matter played a secondary role         to color. It was as though reality and fairy tale were intermixed. That         was the secret of Kandinsky's early work, which was based on folk         art, and it remained so even as his work became more complex.       
The year 1910 was crucial for Kandinsky and for the art world. Kandinsky         produced his first abstract watercolor. In that work all elements of         representation (the actual look of a subject) seem to have disappeared.         In continuing his early abstract works he used strong straight-line         strokes combined with powerful patches of color.       
Return to Russia
When World War I (1914–18; a war in which Germany,         Austria-Hungary, and Japan fought against Great Britain, France, Russia,         and the United States) broke out, Kandinsky returned to Russia. In 1917         he married Nina Andreewsky. During the Russian Revolution (1917), which         overthrew the czar, the ruler of Russia, the artist held an important         post at the Commissariat (government bureau) of Popular Culture and at         the Academy in Moscow. He organized twenty-two museums and became the         director of the Museum of           Pictorial Culture. In 1920 he was appointed professor at the University         of Moscow. The following year he founded the Academy of Arts and         Sciences and became its vice president. At the end of that year, the         Soviet attitude toward art changed, and Kandinsky left Russia.       
Years in Germany and France
In 1922 Kandinsky became a professor at the Bauhaus (a school of art,         architecture, and design) in Weimar, Germany. His art from about 1920 to         1924 has been called his architectural period because the shapes he used         were more precise than before. There are points, straight or broken         lines, single or in bunches, and snakelike, radiating segments of         circles. The color is cooler, and more subdued (softer, quieter).       
Kandinsky became a German citizen in 1928. In 1929 Kandinsky held his         first oneman show in Paris, France, and traveled to Belgium and the         French Riviera. In 1930 he had another exhibition in Paris. In 1931 he         produced wall decorations for a large architectural exhibition that was         held in Berlin, Germany. When the Bauhaus closed in 1932, Kandinsky         moved to Berlin. A year after that he moved to Paris.       
From 1927 to 1933, Kandinsky's paintings were characterized by         abundant use of pictorial (like real pictures) signs and softer color.         This is called his romantic or concrete period. It led to the last phase         of his art, spent in France, which was a synthesis (blending) of his         previous periods. The paintings of his Paris period have splendid color,         rich invention, and delightful humor. In 1939 Kandinsky became a French         citizen. He died on December 13, 1944, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. 
Kandinsky is still greatly admired today for his own paintings and for         being the originator of abstract art. He invented a language of abstract         forms with which he replaced the forms of nature. He wanted to mirror         the universe in his own visionary world. He felt that painting possessed         the same power as music and that sign, line, and color ought to         correspond to the vibrations of the human soul.










You have a Joan Miro painting shown on this page that you seem to be attributing to Kandinsky. It's "The Tilled Field".
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