
Striped by Wassily Kandinsky Exhibition
In this portrait-format exhibition piece, Kandinsky arranges bands of colour in a vertical field that encourages the eye to read the composition like text — sequentially, from top to bottom. The striped structure is deceptively simple: what appears as flat pattern reveals itself as a carefully tuned sequence of chromatic weights and tensions. Each horizontal layer carries a distinct temperature and value, and their stacking produces a meditative visual rhythm rooted in his Bauhaus-period thinking. Gesture is absent; precision and intention take its place entirely.
Presented as an archival fine art print, the clean boundaries between each colour field reproduce with full accuracy and sharp definition. The matte surface lets the colour relationships speak without interference.
In this portrait-format exhibition piece, Kandinsky arranges bands of colour in a vertical field that encourages the eye to read the composition like text — sequentially, from top to bottom. The striped structure is deceptively simple: what appears as flat pattern reveals itself as a carefully tuned sequence of chromatic weights and tensions. Each horizontal layer carries a distinct temperature and value, and their stacking produces a meditative visual rhythm rooted in his Bauhaus-period thinking. Gesture is absent; precision and intention take its place entirely.
Presented as an archival fine art print, the clean boundaries between each colour field reproduce with full accuracy and sharp definition. The matte surface lets the colour relationships speak without interference.
Original: $20.93
-65%$20.93
$7.33Description
In this portrait-format exhibition piece, Kandinsky arranges bands of colour in a vertical field that encourages the eye to read the composition like text — sequentially, from top to bottom. The striped structure is deceptively simple: what appears as flat pattern reveals itself as a carefully tuned sequence of chromatic weights and tensions. Each horizontal layer carries a distinct temperature and value, and their stacking produces a meditative visual rhythm rooted in his Bauhaus-period thinking. Gesture is absent; precision and intention take its place entirely.
Presented as an archival fine art print, the clean boundaries between each colour field reproduce with full accuracy and sharp definition. The matte surface lets the colour relationships speak without interference.























