I was mucking around with a 3D model of a Buran spacecraft, when I switched all the objects to display as bounding-boxes. Result - instant Suprematist composition.
In "From Cubism and Futurism to Suprematism: The New Realism in Painting", written in 1915, Malevich wrote the following:
"If all artists could see the crossroads of these celestial paths, if they could comprehend these monstrous runways and the weaving of our bodies with the clouds in the sky, then they would not paint chrysanthemums"
In the Suprematism Manifesto, he speaks of a pure expression of visual abstraction, just as the form of a plane is determined as a pure expression of its purpose.
"It was nothing other than a yearning for speed ... for flight ... which, seeking an outward shape, brought about the birth of the airplane. For the airplane was not contrived in order to carry business letters from Berlin to Moscow, but rather in obedience to the irresistible drive of this yearning for speed to take on external form."
Kasimir Malevich is a fascinating character, prone to making bizarre proclamations about the nature of space and time, that seem ever more prescient in the technological imperative of modern society. Malevich's Suprematist painting are a search for imagery and composition which does not seek to represent, but create new forms. The paintings and constructions ("Architectons") are manifestations of a multi-dimensional spatial composition, and speak of a new language of non-objective form-making.
"The new art of Suprematism, which has produced new forms and form relationships by giving external expression to pictorial feeling, will become a new architecture: it will transfer these forms from the surface of canvas to space. The Suprematist element, whether in painting or in architecture, is free of every tendency which is social or other wise materialistic."
Inevitably marginalised during his own lifetime, Malevich emerges today as the epitome of the avant grade artist - dense, often unfathomable, and bending space, time and language to his will.
"I have destroyed the ring of the horizon and stepped out of the circle of things."
One of my favourite photographs shows Malevich at the Vkhutemas, surrounded by his students, and like Alan Partridge, holding a big plate.
This is actually great. Both Buran and Suprematism show how the force of human will can be enough and not enough at the same time.
Posted by: Cargueconcuidado.blogspot.com | August 11, 2011 at 02:59 AM
Wow, that's pretty profound. But it's true, Buran and Suprematism are both examples of hubris, of dreams reaching beyond capabilities.
Posted by: kosmograd | September 05, 2011 at 06:24 PM
I don't know about hubris. But I thought of this when I was reading Reyner Banham on the Futurists. He pointed out that the birth of the Futurists was related not to the first development of mechanical speed but the day it came within the scope of Italian artists, namely in the form of the motor car. The Buran is interesting because it signposts towards a time when artists will be able to experience escape velocity.
Posted by: Cosmopolitanscum | October 21, 2011 at 06:31 PM