Monthly Archives: February 2014

Suprematism: Art of the Square

In honor of the 2014 Winter Olympics that closed in Sochi, Russia, this past Sunday evening, I want to share that February 24 marks the anniversary of the birth of Kazimir Malevich (1878-1935; http://www.kazimir-malevich.org/), a Russian painter and theoretician who pioneered geometric abstraction and was the leading exponent of Suprematism, one of the first avant-garde movements of the 20th century.  The term implied the supremacy of new geometric art over past realistic styles.  Suprematism was purely aesthetic and concerned with form and shape (the square was paramount, though circles can found, as well), and was a movement that disavowed political and social commentary.  Rather surprising, perhaps, since much of Malevich’s work dates from the period between Russia’s revolutions of 1905 and 1917.  I like it so much that I have a Malevich image on my website.  Check it out on the ‘Contact’ page. And just for fun, here is another image, proving that the square in all its iterations was important to the artist.
april 2008
Suprematist Composition (blue rectangle over the red beam), 1916
Sold 2010 at Sotheby’s for $60 million

Welcome to AFP Art Consulting, Boston!

My newly established business, AFP Art Consulting, will allow me to use my extensive knowledge, culled from many years of experience in the arts, to serve my clients in a variety of ways.  From research and writing, to art appraisal and collections management, to assistance with the acquisition and disposition of artwork, I hope to provide excellent service.  In this blog, I will be adding news, information, trivia, and perhaps some images from time to time related to art history, collecting, art acquisition and sales, and things that may help make the mysterious and daunting world of art valuation, appraisal and ownership a bit more comprehensible.  What I hope my readership will discover from these posts is a little bit about my tastes and sensibility towards art and objects, and through that, find ways to formulate their own ways to see and experience art.  Perhaps it may lead you to want to build your own collection?  Visit galleries, museums, artist studios?  Attend auctions, both large and small, to get a sense of the vast array of material available to all sorts of collectors?  Whatever it may be for you, I hope I can literally open your eyes to new things, new ways of seeing…!  There is no way I could ever choose a favorite artist or artwork, but here are a couple that I am proud to share:

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Anselm Kiefer, The Unknown Masterpiece, 1982 (watercolour, gouache, graphite on paper)

 

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Wayne Thiebaud, River Sides, 2007 (oil on canvas)