Abstract Head
Abstract Head | |
---|---|
Artist | Alexej von Jawlensky |
Year | c. 1921 |
Type | Oil |
Dimensions | 30.8 cm × 24 cm (12.1 in × 9.4 in) |
Location | Private collection |
Abstract Head (circa 1921) is an oil painting by Russian expressionist Alexej von Jawlensky.
At about the end of World War I (1918), von Jawlensky started to draw 'mystic heads' or 'faces of saints'. He gave them poetic titles like Moonlight or Inner Look. Like Claude Monet who worked in series', he ended up concentrating on a single theme. Its appearance remained more or less constantly the same, yet varied in the use of the brush, the colorings and in the drawing, in order to bring up new aspects of an until then still unknown transcendent spirituality.
Unlike Wassily Kandinsky, he never moved into pure abstraction and always based his forms on nature.[1]
References[]
- ^ Chilvers, Ian (2009) [1990]. "Jawlensky, Alexei von". The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Fourth ed.). Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-19-953294-0.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abstract head paintings by Alexej von Jawlensky. |
Categories:
- Russian art
- Expressionist paintings
- 1928 paintings
- Paintings by Alexej von Jawlensky
- 20th-century painting stubs
- Modern art stubs