Kandinsky
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Added: 5 years ago
From: kvncbsk
Views: 48,853
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  • what a great idea, i love it

  • em..non so che dire..sono capitato qui per caso..sorry

  • kandinsky prize 2009

  • Intéressant et original. avec la musique...C'EST BEAU !

    Compliments

  • what illness?

  • Original!

  • .. great, =)

  • the best artist for me!!!

  • Words seem

  • Trully, I became your fan, now^^

    Very good job!

  • i will retouch this video in 2 weeks, it deserves a better quality of working.

    thanks for support

  • el mejor del expresionismo abstrakto.. lo amo T_T

  • Q BUEN VIDEO...

  • bellísimo...

  • He understood that color had resonance and pitch, and that the arrangement of colors can elicit, in those who are sensitive to it, an emotional response.

  • Arnold Schoenberg was already experimenting with musical abstraction, and the correspondence that he and Kandinsky had is a revelation. Kandinsky wasn't a synesthesiac. His representations of sound and color didn't happen because of a disease or a freak of nature. He knew exactly what he was doing.

  • That is what he sought to do with his music, and that is why he, with a few other artists of like mind, began what was to become "abstract art." It was his wish that visual art and artists might learn to do what musicians could already do -- elicit an emotional response, one that goes directly to the heart.

  • Kandinsky didn't have synesthesia at all. He had the first experience of seeing images -- not abstractions of color, but actual images from his own childhood in Moscow -- when he was an adult. It happened when he went to an orchestral performance of Richard Wagner's "Lohengrin." What he experienced in the music was something spiritual. His experience with the music in that concert transcended tbe subjective and went right to the emotional abstract.

  • anathema-childhood dream (from a natural disaster albume)

  • lovely...please, the name of the music that so complimented the work.....

  • Synesthesia, his two or more senses were coupled. For instance, a synesthesic person may see a sound with colors (so he could draw the sound of trombone). I think that's why abstract was his choice

  • Kvncbsk, thank you. I was thinking that you meant that, though it is not considered a psychiatric disorder/illness, more of a condition since it doesn't adversely affect a person's life. Either way, Kandinsky is a fascinating artist - one can check out Wikipedia for some good synesthesia information, too. I happen to have that painting on my wall.

  • that video was an assignment of my basic design lesson in architecture college. painting is one of my best paintings. fairly, i am not sure that i told what i wanted to express, but i think it wasn't bad for first year in college. thank you for comments.

  • @Grendelmonster8u Synesthesia is widely studied and it exists also as a neurological disorder, not only a "condition". I recommend the writings by John E. Harrison and Simon Baron-Coen.

  • @youvisst Wow, that's an old reply to my comment from 3 years ago! Thanks for the recommendation. It's a very interesting. I've read about it but it's hard to understand without experiencing it - they rely on people's experiences. Sound synesthesia is easier to understand rather than people seeing colors for alphabet letters. That isn't uncommon with non-synesthetes.

  • This is an interesting way to present Kandinsky's painting Farbstudie Quadrate Mit Konzentrischen Ringen(1913). What illness of his are you speaking of?

  • affedersiniz , ellerinize...

  • güzel olmuş , sağol...

  • one of my favorite artists. thanks for sharing!

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