Louisiana Museum of Modern Art

Wassily Kandinsky – Painting with Red Spot (1914)

PRINTED | FRAMED IN DENMARK
$60.00 Regular price $75.00
SKU: LA-108019-FJ-OH
  • Specifications
  • Description
  • The Maker
  • Brand:Louisiana Museum of Modern Art Denmark
  • Country: Printed in Denmark
  • SKU: LA-108019-FJ-OH
  • Material: Printed on paper.
  • Dimensions:33.1" x 23.4" (A1)
Louisiana exhibition poster featuring the work, Painting with Red Spot (1914), by the Russian artist, Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944). The poster was printed in connection with the Louisiana exhibition in 1971 with Kandinsky and his close friend, German-Swiss, Paul Klee (1879-1940). The two friends had a decisive influence on modern, non-figurative painting and with the museum's exhibition in 1971 it was only the second time that the two artists' works were presented simultaneously.

Post-war art would have looked different without the fruitful experiments of Klee and Kandinsky. Kandinsky with his pure form and color expressionism, Klee with his poetic fantasy art. Klee and Kandinsky were of great importance for the development of Danish abstract art in both the 30s and 40s.

Together with a few other artists, the two created a painterly language whose syntax was new and unknown. Not least in the interaction between the two artists' works—which Louisiana's exhibition offered an opportunity to see—one could become familiar with parts of modern art history. Kandinsky's first, abstract watercolor from 1910 and Klee's last picture from 1940 mark important fixed points.

Kandinsky left Russia in 1922 and at the Bauhaus school in Weimar he had Paul Klee as a colleague. It became one of the most fruitful and enduring friendships in modern art, with the two working and exhibiting in parallel through some of the most defining years of their careers.
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art Denmark

From the beginning, the founder, Knud W. Jensen, intended for the museum to be a home for modern Danish art. But after only a few years he changed course, and instead of being a predominantly Danish collection, Louisiana became an international museum with many internationally renowned works.

Louisiana's close contact and collaboration with the international arts and cultural milieu has since been one of the museum's greatest strengths. And also one of the main reasons that it has been possible for Louisiana to present an exhibition program that has resonated so strongly with the public over the years. Louisiana has thus achieved a standing as one of the world's most respected exhibition venues, and in the future, it will be able to attract exhibitions and artists at a level that few other museums—either in Denmark or abroad—can match.

Knud W. Jensen put into action many of the period's visionary ideas about modern museum operation, including a desire for art to have a wide audience. It has always been the view at Louisiana that art is not just for an elite but includes experiences and visions for the many.


Why is it called Louisiana?

Many people wonder about the name of the museum. The short explanation is this—a nobleman and his three wives.

Knud W. Jensen chose to "take over" the name of the country house that he later converted to a museum. The property had been built and named in 1855 by Alexander Brun (1814-93), who was an officer and Master of the Royal Hunt and who married three women who were all named Louise.

Here at Louisiana, he was a pioneer in beekeeping and the cultivation of fruit trees.

From the beginning, it was Knud W. Jensen's vision to create a museum with soul, where the public could encounter artwork—not as something pretentious, but rather something that spoke directly to the viewer. And he emphasized the need for "supplementary content" that could help bring alive and enrich the environment: The more opportunities for experience that the program offers, the more Louisiana lives up to its idea—to be a 'musical meeting place' and a milieu that is engaged in contemporary life. —Knud W. Jensen

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