- 62
Wassily Kandinsky
Description
- Wassily Kandinsky
- Bindung (Binding)
- Signed with the monogram and dated '32 (lower left)
- Oil on canvas
- 27 1/2 by 23 5/8 in.
- 70 by 60 cm
Provenance
Nina Kandinsky, Paris (Acquired from the above)
Galerie Maeght, Paris (acquired by 1955)
Adrien Maeght, Paris (acquired from the above by 1977)
Sale: Christie's, London, March 28, 1988, lot 33
Acquired by the present owner circa 1990
Exhibited
The Oakland Art Gallery & San Francisco Museum of Art, Paintings by Wassily Kandinsky, the "Old Master" of Abstract Art, 1935
San Francisco Museum of Art, Paintings by Wassily Kandinsky: A Survey 1923 to Present, 1939
New York, Nierendorf Gallery, Kandinsky, 1941, no. 64
Paris, Galerie Maeght, Kandinsky, Derrière le Miroir, 1953, no. 37
Kunsthalle Bern, Gesamtausstellung Wassily Kandinsky, 1955, no. 74 (catalogue no. 71)
New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; The Pasadena Art Museum; San Francisco Museum of Art; The Portland Museum of Art; San Antontio, Marion Koogler McNay Institute; Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center; The Baltimore Museum of Art; The Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts; St. Louis, Washington University; Montreal Museum of Fine Arts & Worcester Art Museum, Wassily Kandinsky, A Retrospective Exhibition, 1963-64, no 48, illustrated in the catalogue (titled Connection)
Paris, Galerie Maeght, Kandinsky: Bauhaus de Dessau, 1927-1933, 1965, no. 51, illustrated in the catalogue (titled Liaison)
New York, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, Kandinsky, The Bauhaus Years, 1966, no. 48, illustrated in the catalogue
St-Paul-de-Vence, Fondation Maeght, Centenary Exhibition, 1966, no. 77, illustrated in the catalogue
Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Wassily Kandinsky, Gemälde 1900-1944, 1970, no. 124, illustrated in the catalogue
Zurich, Galerie Maeght, Kandinsky, 1972, no. 36
Tokyo, The Seibu Museum of Art, Kandinsky, 1976, no. 28, illustrated in the catalogue
Munich, Haus der Kunst, Wassily Kandinsky 1866-1944, 1976-77, no. 77, illustrated in the catalogue
Madrid, Fundación Juan March, Kandinsky, 1978, no. 18, illustrated in the catalogue
Literature
Will Grohmann, Wassily Kandinsky, Life and Work, New York, 1958, no. 579, illustrated pl. 418
Hans K. Roethel & Jean K. Benjamin, Kandinsky, Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil-Paintings, Volume Two 1916-1944, Ithaca, New York, 1984, no. 1024, illustrated p. 923
Catalogue Note
Kandinsky painted Bindung in May of 1932, only months before the National Socialists closed the Bauhaus headquarters in Dessau. The avant-garde art school briefly re-established itself as a private institution in Berlin by the end of the summer, but many of it🗹s left-leaning faculty could not escape the censure of the Gestapo and the school was ultiﷺmately shut down in October of 1932. Kandinsky's Russian origins in particular made him a target of the Gestapo's suspicion, and he feared for the future. "If the Nazis or Communists should come," Kandinsky confided to his friend Galka Scheyer, "I'll be immediately without a job." For the time being, he struggled to support himself amidst the dwindling German economy and looked towards the United States and France for potential purchasers of his pictures.
Clark V. Poling has written about the extraordinary pictures that Kandinsky produced during this particularly tense period of his career: "At the conclusion of his Bauhaus period, Kandinsky painted a number of major pictures that brought together elements of his work of the previous several years and exploited the range of visual effects and evocative values of abstract geometry and color.... In his last two years in Germany Kandinsky developed and intensified these characteristics through a somewhat denser use of the elements" (C. V. Poling in Kandinsky: Russian and Bauhaus Years, 1915-1933 (exhibition catalogue)ꦓ, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Ne🍬w York, 1983, pp. 81-82).
Kandinsky's years at Dessau were some of his most productive and his artistic development was strongly inf🍌luenced by his Bauhaus colleague Paul Klee, whose watercolors and oil paintings of these years demonstrate similar artistic predilections. When the Bauhaus was shut down officially at the end of 1932, Kandinsky left Germany for Paris. There he was influenced by the Surrealists and his oeuvre continued to evolve, but he held fast to his Bauhaus principles.