Supreme Painting - 1916


Size (cm): 55x60
Price:
Sale price787,00 zł PLN

Description

The ** "Supreme Painting - 1916" ** of Kazimir Malevich is presented as an impeccable example of the suprematist movement that he founded. This work, which at a superficial glance may seem like a collection of random geometric shapes, reveals in its essence a radical displacement towards a new and more spiritual reality, moving away from the traditional confines of objective representation.

The composition of the "Supreme Painting - 1916" is characterized by an assembly of geometric figures: rectangles and colorful segments that float in a kind of white ethereal space. Malevich, in this work, plays with the balance and tension of forms that seem inserted in an infinite vacuum. The colors, ranging from red and green to black and gray, do not obey the rules of the traditional perspective, but are organized in a way that seem to try to achieve visual purity, an ideal of order and harmony.

The use of negative space in this composition is crucial. Not only does it serve in the background of geometric shapes, but it creates an effect of ungravation and movement, as if each form were suspended in continue transformation. In the absence of human figures or representational elements, Malevich invites us to a meditation on the pure essence of energy and spirituality. The tones of red and green, strategically positioned, manage to attract the viewer's view, guiding it through a non-linear narrative where the sensory experience is in the foreground.

Supremeism, as theory and practice, was a revolution in its time. Malevich proclaimed that art should not limit himself to imitating nature, but should arise from pure geometric elements to achieve a supreme sensation that was beyond the tangible. To this end, "Supreme Painting - 1916" not only reflects Malevich's theory, but puts it into practice in a way that was visionary for its time.

Each color in this painting It has its own meaning and seems to be in conversation with the other elements. Intense red can be seen as a symbol of passion and revolution, something that was very in tune with the tumultuous times in which Malevich worked. Black, a constant in his work, could be interpreted as the "zero of the form" symbol, a term that Malevich used to describe the starting point of his compositions.

The historical context of this work also deserves mention. In 1916, Russia was immersed in World War I and the first revolutionary seizures of 1917 were about to explode. Malevich, working in the midst of this agitation, creates a work that, although it seems devoid of direct references to these events, reflects a search for a superior order and spirituality in the middle of chaos.

To understand this painting, one must position itself on the threshold of a new perception. "Supreme painting - 1916" It is not simply a collection of forms. It is a declaration of principles, a visual manifesto that stands out in its purity and simplicity, and that continues to challenge our notions of what art can be and mean. Kazimir Malevich not only created a masterpiece of abstraction, but also left us a philosophical legacy that continues to influence the way we understand creativity and artistic perception.

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