Art review: ‘Kandinsky’ at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
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Just over a year ago, New York’s Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum completed a three-year restoration project for its great landmark building by Frank Lloyd Wright. Among much else, the beautifully done project put a grayish white skin on the original corkscrew building, visually separating it from the undistinguished annex added in the rear in 1992.
The renovation was done in time for the Guggenheim’s 50th anniversary celebration -- and, happily, in time for the celebratory Vasily Kandinsky retrospective, on view now. Kandinsky (1866-1944) was among the small handful of authentic revolutionaries in Modern art. The big retrospective draws heavily on the incomparable Kandinsky collections at museums in Munich, Paris and New York, but the relationships between his achievements and Wright’s remarkable building are one of the unique pleasures of seeing the show at the Guggenheim.
I’ll have a full review of the Kandinsky retrospective in Sunday’s paper.
-- Christopher Knight