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Wassily Kandinsky

Wassily Kandinsky. Wassily Kandinsky was born in Moscow in 1866. He grew up in a bourgois, cultured family and learned to play the piano and the cello. In 1886 he began to study law and economics at the Moscow University. After passing his exams he started a teaching

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Wassily Kandinsky

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  1. Wassily Kandinsky • Wassily Kandinsky was born in Moscow in 1866. He grew up in a bourgois, cultured family and learned to play the piano and the cello. In 1886 he began to study law and economics at the Moscow University. After passing his exams he started a teaching career at the Moscow Faculty of Law. He had many interests and apparently a great gift to teach himself different skills. • In 1895 Kandinsky saw an exhibition of French impressionists in Moscow with paintings of Monet and others. He was, at first, confused and would later describe how upset he was about Monet's painting The haystack. He thought that the painter had no right to paint things in a way that made it difficult to recognize the subject. • In 1896, at the age of thirty, he decided to start a new career as an artist and went to Munich in Southern Germany. He enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts for four years until 1900. • Kandinsky became the theorist of abstract painting. In 1910 he created his first abstract work - a watercolor. In 1912 he published a book on the theory of abstraction. • In 1922 he came back to Germany to teach and work at the Bauhaus in Dessau until 1933. • When the German Nazis came to power in 1933, all modern art was considered as entartet (degenerated art) and the Bauhaus was closed in 1933. Kandinsky's works were removed from German museums and confiscated. • The artist's next destination was Neuiily near Paris where he remained until his death in 1944.

  2. A

  3. Wassily Kandinsky's "Composition VIII"1923; Oil on canvas; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

  4. Learning Target: I can classify angles and work with pairs of angles. Check your homework then review with your group members any questions you had wrong. If several members had difficulty with the same question, be prepared to discuss that question when we review. Next write down today’s Date and Learning target in your notebook. If you did not turn in your maintenance sheet on Friday, turn it in now.

  5. An angle is formed by two rays with the same endpoint. The rays are the sides of the angle. side The common endpoint is the vertex. side vertex

  6. Wassily Kandinsky – “Composition IX”, 1939

  7. Angles are measured in units called degrees. A protractor is a tool that measures angles Two angles are said to be complementary if they total 90°. Two angles are said to be supplementary if they total 180°.

  8. Wassily Kandinsky: "Schwarzer Fleck", 1921

  9. Adjacent angles share a vertex and a side but have no interior points in common. Vertical angles are formed by two intersecting lines and are opposite each other. Vertical angles have equal measure. Angles with equal measure are called congruent angles.

  10. Warm Up Turn to pg. 333 in your text and complete questions 6 – 20 evens only. When finished, take out your maintenance sheet and be prepared to present your answers to columns 4 and 5.

  11. Black and Violet 1923

  12. Learning Target: I can classify triangles by side and angle. I can find the angle measures of triangles. Black and Violet 1923

  13. Triangle – A closed figure made from three line segments. • Sides with the same length are congruent sides. • Equilateral Triangle – A triangle with three sides of the same length. • Isosceles Triangle – A triangle that has two congruent sides. • Scalene Triangle – A triangle that has no congruent sides.

  14. Yellow, Red, Blue1925; Oil on canvas, 127x200cm; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

  15. In order for three line segments to create a triangle, the sum of the two smaller segments must be greater than the larger segment. • Acute Triangle – A triangle with three acute angles • Right Triangle – A triangle with exactly one right angle • Obtuse Triangle – A triangle with exactly one obtuse angle

  16. Composition X1939 (160 Kb); Oil on canvas, 130 x 195 cm (51 1/8 x 76 3/4 in); Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf

  17. Learning Target: I can classify polygons and special quadrilaterals. Check your homework then review with your group members any questions you had wrong. If several members had difficulty with the same question, be prepared to discuss that question when we review. Next write down today’s Date and Learning target in your notebook. If you did not turn in your maintenance sheet on Friday, turn it in now.

  18. Polygon – a closed figure made of line segments • Regular polygon – a polygon in which all sides and all angles have the same measure • Irregular polygon – a polygon with sides or angles that are not all congruent • Quadrilateral – a four sided figure • Pentagon – a five sided figure • Hexagon – a six sided figure • Octagon – an eight sided figure • Decagon – a ten sided figure

  19. Just Kidding. You only need to know the ones on the previous slide.

  20. On White II1923; Oil on canvas, 105 x 98cm; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

  21. Trapezoid – a quadrilateral with exactly two sides parallel • Parallelogram – a quadrilateral with opposite sides parallel and opposite sides the same length • Rhombus – a parallelogram with all sides the same length, and opposite sides parallel • Rectangle – a parallelogram with opposite sides the same length and all angles 90° • Square – A square is both a rhombus and a rectangle. It has all sides the same length, and all angles 90°

  22. Contrasting Sounds1924; Oil on cardboard, 70x49.5cm; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

  23. means “is congruent to” • Congruent Polygons have the same size and shape. • A figure that can be folded into congruent halves has line symmetry. • A reflection is the mirror image of a figure that has been “flipped” over a line. An image and its reflection are always congruent.

  24. Wassily Kandinsky Title Unknown

  25. Rotation – the image of a figure that has been turned, as if it were on a wheel • Clockwise – when the top of a figure is turned to the right • Counterclockwise – when the top of a figure is turned to the left • Rotational symmetry – when a figure can be rotated less than full circle, and the rotation exactly matches the original image

  26. Artist: Wassily Kandinsky Title: Farbstudie quadrate mit konzentrischen ringen Image Size: 20 x 30 in

  27. Circle – Set of points in a plane that are all the same distance from a given point called the center, • Radius – segment that connects the center of a circle to the circle. • Diameter – segment that passes through the center of a circleand has both endpoints on the circle • Central angle – angle with its vertex at the center of a circle. • Chord – segment that has both endpoints on the circle. • Arc – a part of a circle • Semicircle – half of a circle

  28. Circle Graph • Circle Graph (pie chart) – a graph of data in which the circle represent the whole and each wedge is part of the whole. The total must equal 100%

  29. Learning Target: I can construct congruent segments and perpendicular bisectors.

  30. Compass – A geometric tool used to construct a circle or part of a circle. • Midpoint – point that divides a segment into two equal lengths. • Segment bisector – a line, segment, or ray that goes through the midpoint of a segment. • Perpendicular lines – lines that intersect to form right angles • Perpendicular bisector – a segment bisector that is perpendicular to the segment.

  31. Coordinate Plane Coordinate plane – a grid formed by a horizontal number line called the x-axis and a vertical number line called the y-axis. Ordered pair – give the location of a point written (x,y). The first number is the X-coordinate the second number is the Y-Coordinate. Origin – Where the axes intersect. Indicated by the letter O. The x and y axes divide the plane into four quadrants.

  32. Coordinate Plane Xylophone YoYo

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