Description
Kandinsky Painting Watercolor Original Art 11*8 Abstract Artwork Kandinsky Flowers Style
On a sheet of paper illuminated by a ghostly light, as if woven from fog and dreams, a whirlwind of shapes and colors opens up, where the reality of the flower dissolves into a symphony of spiritual vibrations. In the center of the composition is a vase, but not as a household item, but as a geometric metaphor for stability. The contours of the vase frame the inner void. This vase does not contain, but resonates with space, its shape is an allegory of a vessel for the soul, not water.
A bouquet bursts out of her imaginary neck , but not of flowers — this is a miniature cosmos . The petals are transformed into vibrating circles, triangles and spirals, as if frozen at the moment of the explosion. Red, blue and yellow — the main chords of the palette — collide and merge, creating their own rhythm. Each “flower” is a rotation of energy: purple spots tremble like shadows on water, emerald lines snake like notes that have escaped from a score.
Watercolor technique gives this abstraction an airiness, as if the whole work is written in light. The blurred edges of shapes, the occasional glare of water on paper are not flaws, but symbols of incompleteness, a reminder that beauty is born in the movement between shapes. The background is not a background, but an active participant in the dialogue: it either shrinks into spheres of anxiety, or breaks up into points of hope.
The color theory of the spiritual triangle comes to life here: the lower part of the painting tends towards the material. Above, everything dissolves into abstraction: color becomes sound, form becomes emotion. In the left corner there is a note of silence, balancing the chaos; on the right there is a mysterious circle, flickering like the beginning and the end of everything.
This painting is not a bouquet, but a ritual: every look at it gives rise to a new interpretation. Today it’s a cry of despair in purple streaks, tomorrow it’s a dance of joy in lemon splashes. Watercolor, with its unpredictability, is ideal for such an idea: it forces the viewer to finish the painting in his mind, to become a co-author of an abstract miracle.
There are no flowers here. There is a movement of the soul caught on the canvas.
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