Wassily Kandinsky: The Pioneer of Abstract Art and the Expression of the Invisible. Wassily Kandinsky is one of the most influential figures in the history of modern art. His work marked a before and after by moving away from figurative representation to focus on something much more intangible: emotion, spirituality and sensory experience. For Kandinsky, painting was not reproducing reality, but expressing the invisible. He believed that color and form had the ability to directly affect the soul, similar to how music does. In this article, we explore his key ideas and propose a series of practical exercises for experimenting with abstract art from a personal and creative perspective. Who was Kandinsky and why he changed the history of art. b] Born in Russia in 1866, Kandinsky developed his career in Europe and was a key figure in the emergence of abstract art. He was part of influential artistic movements such as Der Blaue Reiter, where he explored new forms of expression away from realism. His revolutionary approach consisted in understanding art as a universal language based on emotions. In his work and in texts such as Of the Spiritual in Art, he argued that color, lines and shapes could communicate without the need to represent recognizable objects. Kandinsky also established parallels between painting and music. Just as a melody can convey sadness or joy without words, a visual composition can generate a direct emotional response in the viewer. The power of form and color in Kandinsky's work. For Kandinsky, color was a language in itself. Each hue had a specific emotional resonance: blue evoked depth and spirituality, yellow conveyed energy and red represented strength and vitality. Shapes also played a fundamental role. The circle, for example, was associated with spiritual and infinity; the triangle, with tension and dynamism; and the square, with stability. His goal was to create compositions that "sounded" visually, where the elements would dialogue with each other as instruments do in a piece of music. This idea of visual rhythm, based on intuition and balance, is key to understanding his work.
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