All Thinkers

Wassily Kandinsky

Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) was a Russian painter and art theorist usually credited as one of the pioneers of abstract painting in the European tradition. He was born in Moscow to a prosperous tea-trading family and spent his early childhood in the southern Russian port of Odessa. He studied law and economics at Moscow University and was preparing for an academic career when, at thirty, he decided to abandon it and become a painter. He moved to Munich in 1896 and trained at the city's art academy. Over the following decade he developed from a competent painter of folk-inflected landscapes into a theorist and practitioner of a new kind of painting that dispensed with recognisable subjects. In 1910 he painted what is often regarded as one of the earliest purely abstract works, a watercolour that broke decisively with representation. He co-founded the Blue Rider group in Munich in 1911, published his major theoretical work Concerning the Spiritual in Art that same year, and played a central role in the artistic ferment of the years before the First World War. He returned to Russia during the war, worked in the cultural institutions of the early Soviet period, and came back to Germany in 1921 to teach at the Bauhaus. When the Nazis closed the Bauhaus in 1933, he moved to Paris, where he lived until his death in 1944. He was married twice and had a long partnership with the painter Gabriele Münter during his Munich years.

Origin
Russia / Germany / France
Lifespan
1866-1944
Era
19th-20th century
Subjects
Art Abstract Painting Art Theory Modernism Aesthetics
Why They Matter

Kandinsky matters because he helped establish the possibility of a kind of painting that did not depict the visible world. Before the first decade of the twentieth century, European painting had always been, at some level, a picture of something — a landscape, a figure, an object, a story. The painting might simplify, stylise, distort, or abstract from what it depicted, but it remained anchored to a recognisable subject. Kandinsky and a handful of contemporaries working independently around the same time — Hilma af Klint in Sweden, Kazimir Malevich in Russia, Piet Mondrian in the Netherlands — broke that anchor. They argued that shapes, colours, and lines could be organised for their own expressive power, without reference to anything in the external world. Kandinsky's theoretical writing, especially Concerning the Spiritual in Art and Point and Line to Plane, explained why this made sense and how it could be done. His argument was that art could communicate inner states and spiritual truths directly, without the intermediate step of representing external objects. Whether or not one accepts his theoretical claims in full, the practical consequence was enormous. The entire history of twentieth-century painting — abstract expressionism, colour field painting, geometric abstraction, and much else — unfolded in a space that Kandinsky and his contemporaries had opened. He is also important for his insistence that painting could be studied with the rigour and clarity of a discipline, not merely practised as a craft or celebrated as a gift.

Key Ideas
1
A painting does not have to picture anything
Kandinsky's most famous contribution was to argue and to demonstrate that a painting need not be a picture of something recognisable. A painting could be an arrangement of shapes and colours that worked as music works — not by showing a scene but by producing an effect directly through its own elements. This sounds obvious now because abstract painting has been part of the art world for more than a century. In 1910 it was a genuinely new claim. Most people assumed that if a painting did not show you something you could identify, it had failed. Kandinsky argued that what a painting shows you can be its own internal world rather than a reproduction of the external one.
2
Colour and shape have their own expressive power
Kandinsky believed that each colour carried its own particular feeling, and so did each kind of shape. Yellow was active and warm, blue was cool and inward, red was solid and strong. A sharp triangle felt different from a soft curve. These associations were not arbitrary, he thought; they came from how human beings respond to visual experience at a level deeper than habit or training. His paintings used colours and shapes for their direct effect on the viewer. You did not need to know what a particular painting depicted because it did not depict anything. You needed to let the colours and shapes do their work.
3
Painting and music can be compared
Kandinsky often compared painting to music. A piece of music does not usually represent any specific object in the world — it is a pattern of sounds that affects the listener directly. Kandinsky thought painting could work the same way: a pattern of visual elements that affects the viewer directly, without needing to stand for anything external. He even borrowed musical terms for some of his paintings, calling them Compositions, Improvisations, and Impressions. The comparison helped audiences understand what abstract painting was trying to do. If you accepted that music did not need to describe an object, you could more easily accept that painting did not either.
Key Quotations
"Colour is a power which directly influences the soul."
— Concerning the Spiritual in Art, 1911
This is one of Kandinsky's clearest statements of his core conviction about colour. A painting's colours act on the viewer directly, not through the intermediate step of describing any particular object. The claim can be tested against ordinary experience: most people will agree that different colours feel different to look at, and that a blue room and a red room produce different moods. Kandinsky is building on this shared experience to argue that painting can organise colours for their direct expressive power. Whether the word soul should be taken in a strong metaphysical sense or a milder psychological one is a real question, and different readers have taken it differently.
"Of all the arts, abstract painting is the most difficult. It demands that you know how to draw well, that you have a heightened sensitivity for composition and for colours, and that you be a true poet."
— Interview, 1934
Kandinsky is pushing back against the common idea that abstract painting is easy because it does not require the skills of representation. He argues the opposite: without the scaffolding of a recognisable subject, the painter has to carry the whole weight of the work with composition and colour alone. The painter still needs to know how to draw; she simply uses the drawing for different ends. The claim about the difficulty of good abstract painting has been widely debated. What cannot be debated is that many people who attempt abstract work without first developing skill in representation produce results that suffer from the lack.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Creative Expression When introducing what abstract painting is and why it matters
How to introduce
Show students one of Kandinsky's early abstract compositions alongside a representational painting from the same period. Ask: what do you see in each? What does each picture seem to be doing? Most students will struggle to find a subject in the Kandinsky. Introduce his idea that a painting does not have to be a picture of something. Shapes and colours can work the way music works — by having an effect directly rather than describing an external thing. Ask: what is the first feeling the Kandinsky gives you? Does it matter that you cannot name what it is of?
Creative Expression When discussing how different art forms relate to each other
How to introduce
Introduce Kandinsky's comparison between painting and music. Ask students: does a piece of music usually describe a specific object? Most will say no — music is not usually about a thing you could point to. Then ask: does that make music less meaningful than a painting of a scene? Discuss the comparison. If music can affect us deeply without depicting anything, perhaps painting can too. Play short pieces of music and ask students to describe the feelings they produce. Then show abstract paintings and ask the same question. What is similar, what is different?
Further Reading

For an accessible starting point

Kandinsky's own Concerning the Spiritual in Art (1911, widely available in translation) is short, clear, and central to his thought.

For biographical orientation

Hajo Duchting's Wassily Kandinsky: A Revolution in Painting (2007, Taschen) is well illustrated and suitable for general readers. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York holds a major collection of his work and provides online materials.

Key Ideas
1
The inner necessity: why an artist makes a specific work
Kandinsky wrote that the only legitimate basis for an artist's choices was inner necessity — the sense that a particular work had to be made, and had to be made in this particular way. The artist should not paint what the market wanted, what critics expected, or what teachers had taught. Each work should arise from the artist's specific inner engagement with their materials and their feelings. The principle applies both to the decision to make a work at all and to each detail within it. It is a demanding principle because it places the weight of responsibility on the artist's own judgment rather than on external standards.
2
Concerning the Spiritual in Art: the book
In 1911 Kandinsky published Concerning the Spiritual in Art, his central theoretical book. In it he argued that the visible world was only one part of reality and that art's proper task was to communicate the deeper spiritual realities behind it. Nineteenth-century art had become too concerned with surfaces — with how things looked. A new art was needed that could reach what lay beneath. The book was widely read in its time and has remained a foundational text of modernist aesthetics. Not everyone accepts its metaphysical claims, but its argument that painting has resources beyond the representation of external objects has been enormously influential.
3
The Bauhaus years: teaching the elements of art
From 1922 to 1933 Kandinsky taught at the Bauhaus, the radical German school of art, design, and architecture that aimed to unite these disciplines in a common modern practice. He taught the basic course that introduced students to the elements of visual form — points, lines, planes, colours — and how they combined. His book Point and Line to Plane, published in 1926, came out of these classes. It is an attempt to treat the elements of painting with the systematic attention of a natural science. The attempt is not fully successful — painting does not quite submit to this kind of analysis — but the attempt itself, and the tradition of thinking about art in this way, has shaped how art has been taught ever since.
Key Quotations
"There is no must in art because art is free."
— Concerning the Spiritual in Art, 1911
Kandinsky is arguing against the idea that art must follow particular rules — that a painting must depict a subject, must use particular techniques, must conform to an established style. He thought each work should arise from the artist's inner necessity rather than from external prescriptions. The remark is not a licence for anything whatever; Kandinsky held himself and his students to high standards of craft and care. What he rejected was the idea that the standards could be specified in advance. An artist had to earn the freedom to make a particular work by the seriousness of their engagement with it.
"The artist must be blind to distinctions between recognised or unrecognised conventions of form, deaf to the transitory teaching and demands of the particular age."
— Concerning the Spiritual in Art, 1911
Kandinsky is describing the specific discipline the serious artist requires. The artist must not be distracted by whether a particular form is currently in fashion, whether it is what the market wants, or what critics praise. These distractions will pull the artist away from the inner necessity that is the only legitimate basis for their work. The remark is strong, perhaps too strong — most artists do in fact work within and against the traditions of their time — but it captures a real problem. How does an artist keep their independence while still being responsive to the world? The question does not have an easy answer.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When examining how new forms of art find their audiences
How to introduce
Present the fact that when Kandinsky first showed fully abstract paintings around 1910-1911, most viewers did not know how to look at them. Many thought the paintings were failed attempts at representation or simply nonsense. A century later, abstract painting is accepted as a major form. Ask: how does a new form of art win acceptance? Who decides? Discuss the role of critics, museums, galleries, and other institutions. Consider contemporary cases: street art, digital art, AI-generated images. How are these new forms being received, and what will determine whether they are remembered as serious art?
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining who is credited with the origins of a movement
How to introduce
Introduce the standard story: Kandinsky invented abstract painting around 1910. Then introduce the complication: the Swedish painter Hilma af Klint was making fully abstract paintings several years earlier, but she kept them private. Other artists — Malevich, Mondrian, Kupka — arrived at abstraction by different routes at roughly the same time. Ask students: who was first, and why does it matter? Discuss how history tends to name a single inventor for a development that was actually the work of many. Connect to Mary Anning's fossils and to the broader question of how credit is distributed in intellectual and cultural history.
Scientific Thinking When discussing whether art can be studied systematically
How to introduce
Introduce Kandinsky's Bauhaus course and his book Point and Line to Plane, which attempted to treat the basic elements of painting — points, lines, colours, shapes — with the systematic attention of a natural science. Ask students: can art be taught this way, with a systematic approach to its elements? Does it help to break down a painting into its components, or does something essential get lost in the analysis? Discuss the parallel with music, where systematic study of scales, rhythms, and harmonies is common. Where do the analogies work, and where do they break down?
Further Reading

For the full scope of his writings: Kandinsky: Complete Writings on Art, edited by Kenneth Lindsay and Peter Vergo (1982, Hall), collects his major essays. Point and Line to Plane (1926), his Bauhaus textbook, gives the most systematic version of his formal theory. Peg Weiss's Kandinsky and Old Russia (1995, Yale University Press) explores the Russian and spiritual roots of his work. Rose-Carol Washton Long's Kandinsky: The Development of an Abstract Style (1980, Clarendon) remains an important scholarly study.

Key Ideas
1
Theosophy, spirituality, and the context of early abstraction
Kandinsky's abstraction was not only a formal development; it was bound up with the spiritual and esoteric currents of his era. He read widely in Theosophy, a movement that claimed to offer synthetic insight into the hidden spiritual structure of reality. Other early abstract painters, including Hilma af Klint and Mondrian, were also deeply engaged with these traditions. For them, abstract painting was a way to picture realities that were not visible to ordinary sight. Taking this spiritual context seriously complicates a view of early abstract painting as purely formal experimentation. For its creators, it often had a metaphysical purpose that does not fit neatly into later accounts of the movement.
2
The question of priority: who painted the first abstract work
Kandinsky is often called the first abstract painter, but this claim is now disputed. The Swedish painter Hilma af Klint was producing fully abstract work several years before Kandinsky's 1910 watercolour, but she kept her paintings private and specified that they should not be shown for twenty years after her death. Several artists working independently around the same time — Malevich, Mondrian, Frantisek Kupka — arrived at abstraction by different routes. The question of priority is complicated and probably not settlable. What is clear is that abstraction was not the invention of any one person; it emerged from a broad cultural movement in which Kandinsky was a major but not unique figure. Recognising this complicates the heroic narrative without diminishing his importance.
3
Exile and the political meaning of abstraction
Kandinsky spent much of his career in exile. He left Russia for Germany, returned to Russia during the First World War, left again when the Soviet cultural climate shifted against modernism, taught at the Bauhaus until the Nazis closed it in 1933, and moved to Paris where he lived through the German occupation until his death. The Nazis declared his work degenerate art and removed or destroyed many pieces. His abstraction was taken, by regimes on both the political right and the political left, as a threat. This is worth pausing over. The paintings themselves do not depict any particular political programme, but the freedom they represented — freedom from external dictation, from required subject matter, from imposed standards — was sensed as political by governments that tried to control artistic expression. Abstraction in its historical moment had political meaning even when its subjects seemed to be only shapes and colours.
Key Quotations
"Every work of art is the child of its age and, in many cases, the mother of our emotions."
— Concerning the Spiritual in Art, 1911
Kandinsky is making a double claim. On one side, every work of art is shaped by the time in which it was made — its concerns, its materials, its techniques, its conventions. No artist works entirely outside history, however much they may try. On the other side, great works shape the emotional lives of those who encounter them. A work that is truly felt by its audience does not leave them as they were before. The two claims together produce a more complex picture than either alone: art is historical in its formation and formative in its effect. Neither reducing art to its historical context nor treating it as timeless captures what it actually does.
"Lend your ears to music, open your eyes to painting, and stop thinking! Just ask yourself whether the work has enabled you to walk about into a hitherto unknown world."
— Interview, 1930s
Kandinsky is giving a practical rule for encountering art. The question to ask is not whether the work means something specific, or whether it conforms to rules, or whether the artist is famous. The question is whether the work has opened a world you did not have access to before. If it has, it has done its job. If not, no amount of explanation will make it do so. This is a demanding but generous criterion. It places the burden on the work itself, not on the viewer's prior training or on the artist's reputation. Many works fail by this standard. The ones that succeed are worth the time of engagement.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When examining the political meaning of artistic freedom
How to introduce
Tell students that the Nazi regime declared Kandinsky's work degenerate art and removed many of his paintings from German museums. Stalin's Soviet Union also rejected abstract art as decadent and bourgeois. Ask: why would two such different regimes both target abstract painting? What threat did it pose? Discuss the idea that abstraction represents a kind of freedom — freedom from required subject matter, from imposed meaning — that authoritarian regimes find threatening even when the specific paintings do not seem political. Connect to the broader question of why authoritarian governments often worry about apparently non-political art forms.
Research Skills When examining the spiritual and metaphysical context of early abstraction
How to introduce
Introduce the fact that Kandinsky and several other early abstract painters were deeply engaged with Theosophy and other esoteric traditions that claimed to describe hidden spiritual realities. For them, abstract painting was partly a way to picture what could not be seen with ordinary eyes. Ask students: does this context change how the paintings should be understood? Can one appreciate the paintings without sharing the metaphysical assumptions? Discuss how to study historical artists whose worldviews differ significantly from our own — Kandinsky with Theosophy, Newton with alchemy, Tesla with electromagnetic mysticism. Connect to the broader skill of historical understanding.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Kandinsky invented abstract painting.

What to teach instead

Kandinsky was one of the first painters in the European tradition to produce fully abstract work and to publish a theoretical defence of it, but he did not invent abstract painting alone. Hilma af Klint was producing fully abstract paintings several years earlier, though she kept them private. Kazimir Malevich, Piet Mondrian, and Frantisek Kupka arrived at abstraction independently around the same time. Abstraction was the product of a broad cultural movement rather than any single artist's invention. Recognising this does not diminish Kandinsky's importance; it corrects a misleading heroic narrative that has been shaped partly by his own vigorous self-promotion and by art historical habits of naming a single originator.

Common misconception

Abstract painting is easier than representational painting because you do not have to make things look like anything.

What to teach instead

Kandinsky himself rejected this view strongly. He argued that abstract painting is in fact more difficult because the painter cannot lean on the scaffolding of a recognisable subject. Without a subject to give the painting its coherence, the work has to cohere through composition, colour, line, and balance alone. A bad representational painting may still be saved by the interest of what it represents; a bad abstract painting has nothing to hide behind. Most serious abstract painters in the tradition Kandinsky opened trained rigorously in representation before moving into abstraction, because the skills of composition and visual judgment that abstraction demands are developed through such training.

Common misconception

Kandinsky's theories about colour are scientifically proven.

What to teach instead

Kandinsky made strong claims about the specific emotional effects of particular colours — yellow active, blue inward, red solid — but these claims are better understood as his own working hypotheses than as scientifically established facts. Research in colour psychology has produced mixed and often culturally specific results; the associations Kandinsky claimed are not found universally across cultures. This does not invalidate his paintings or his artistic judgments, which were based on his own refined sensibility. But treating his colour theory as a scientific discovery overstates the case. He was articulating a view that worked for him and could be tested by other artists in their own work, not reporting findings from controlled research.

Common misconception

Kandinsky's paintings are purely formal experiments with no deeper meaning.

What to teach instead

This reading, common in some mid-twentieth-century art criticism, misses how Kandinsky himself understood his work. For him, abstract painting was bound up with spiritual and philosophical concerns — the effort to represent realities that could not be seen with ordinary eyes, the communication of inner states, the rejection of materialism. Whether or not one accepts his metaphysical claims, treating his work as pure formal play misrepresents his intentions and the intellectual context in which the work was produced. The formal analysis of his paintings is valuable, but it does not exhaust what the paintings are.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Marshall McLuhan
McLuhan argued that the form of a medium shapes what can be communicated through it — the medium is the message. Kandinsky's work can be read as an early, intuitive version of this insight applied to visual art. By making painting that was not about a subject, he forced attention onto painting as a medium with its own resources rather than as a transparent window onto a world. Both figures, in different decades, directed attention to the often-invisible frame within which communication happens. Reading them together helps explain why abstraction in painting, radical at the time, has proved so lasting an influence.
Complements
Rabindranath Tagore
Kandinsky and Tagore were near-contemporaries working in very different contexts — European modernist painting and Bengali literary and cultural renewal — but both drew on spiritual traditions to argue that art had a deeper purpose than decoration or entertainment. For Tagore the spiritual came through a philosophically inflected Hinduism and Bengali literary tradition; for Kandinsky it came through Theosophy and Russian Orthodox roots. Both believed that art had the power to communicate realities beyond the surface of things. The comparison reveals how the spiritual concerns of early twentieth-century artists crossed cultures, even when the specific traditions differed.
In Dialogue With
Sigmund Freud
Kandinsky and Freud were contemporaries whose work pointed in related but distinct directions. Both argued that what was visible in everyday life was only a small part of the larger reality; below the surface of ordinary experience lay powerful forces that shaped conscious life. Freud investigated these through the method of psychoanalysis; Kandinsky through painting that attempted to communicate inner states directly. The two projects never fully met, but they belong to the same moment in European thought, when the inward turn was being developed across many fields. Reading them together reveals shared preoccupations of the pre-war European intellectual world.
Complements
Pablo Neruda
Kandinsky and Neruda worked in different art forms — painting and poetry — and different continents, but both believed that the artistic work could reach realities that ordinary description could not. Neruda's sensuous imagery and political lyricism are very different in texture from Kandinsky's spiritual abstractions, but the underlying conviction that art is a form of knowledge, not only a form of expression, is shared. Both trusted the artwork to tell the truth about things that essays or arguments could not reach. The comparison resists a narrow view of what serious art does.
In Dialogue With
Hannah Arendt
Kandinsky's experience of exile under both fascism and communism — leaving Russia for Germany, then Germany for France, then working in occupied Paris during the Second World War — places him in the same mid-twentieth-century landscape that Arendt analysed in her studies of totalitarianism. His abstract work was declared degenerate by the Nazis and decadent by Stalin. Arendt's analysis of how totalitarian regimes try to control not only actions but thoughts, forms, and imaginations illuminates the political pressures Kandinsky's generation of artists faced. The connection is not one of direct engagement but of shared historical experience understood through different disciplines.
Anticipates
Toni Morrison
Kandinsky's insistence that the artist must work from inner necessity, refusing to conform to external demands for what a proper painting should be, anticipates arguments that Morrison would make much later about African American literature. Morrison argued that Black writers should not write for a presumed white audience or according to the expectations that audience imposed; they should write from their own necessity. The content and context differ enormously, but the underlying commitment to artistic independence from dictating institutions is shared. Reading them together extends the principle across centuries and continents.
Further Reading

For the spiritual and metaphysical context

Maurice Tuchman's The Spiritual in Art: Abstract Painting 1890-1985 (1986, Abbeville Press) places Kandinsky within the wider esoteric currents of the period. For the comparison with Hilma af Klint and the question of abstraction's origins: Iris Muller-Westermann's Hilma af Klint: A Pioneer of Abstraction (2013, Hatje Cantz) and Julia Voss's recent biography of af Klint provide essential context.

For the Bauhaus years

Magdalena Droste's Bauhaus, 1919-1933 (2019, Taschen) is the standard introduction.