The Bauhaus, 1922–33
"The circle . . . is the synthesis of the greatest oppositions. [It] combines the concentric and the excentric in a single form, and in equilibrium. Of the three primary forms [triangle, square, cicle], it points most clearly to the fourth dimension." [21]
In 1922 Kandinsky was offered a teaching post at the Bauhaus School of Design. The school had been formed in reaction to many centuries of ornate decoration in Western art and adhered to revolutionary and unadorned styles such as Constructivism that used modern industrial techniques and materials. Kandinsky’s belief in art’s ability to transform self and society made him an ideal candidate for the post. There he discovered a more sympathetic environment in which to pursue his art. Even though his abstract painting sometimes put him at odds with the styles that took an increasingly industrial approach to art, teaching at the Bauhaus enabled him to pursue his work.
At the Bauhaus, Kandinsky continued to investigate color, form, and their psychological and spiritual effects and developed a theory of form based on geometry. He believed that the triangle embodied active and aggressive feelings, and the square represented peace and calm. The circle suggested the spiritual realm. Between 1926 and 1929, Kandinsky produced a series of ten pictures in which the circle is the only form, culminating in his cosmic and harmonious image Several Circles (Einige Kreise, January–February 1926). During the Bauhaus years, the circle’s mystical quality assumed the importance previously enjoyed by the rider motif during the Munich period: “I love circles today in the same way that previously I loved, e.g., horses—perhaps even more, since I find in circles more inner possibilities, which is the reason why the circle has replaced the horse.” [22]
In 1933 the Bauhaus came under pressure from the ruling Nazi party, and deprived of financial support, the school was forced to close. Kandinsky embodied everything that Adolf Hitler’s Germany considered undesirable. He was Russian, an abstract painter, and a Bauhaus teacher. His work was termed “degenerate” by the Nazi regime, which objected to virtually all modern art. Artists working in such styles were subject to sanctions, including dismissal from teaching positions as well as a ban on exhibiting or selling art and in some cases on producing art entirely.
Kandinsky once more became an exile, this time in Paris where he continued to work as an artist. In 1937 several of his earlier works were included in the Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art) exhibition in Germany, alongside other works of modern art that the Nazis removed from museums. The confiscated work was installed with defamatory slogans in order to present it as evidence of “cultural decline.” Designed to inflame public opinion against modernism, the exhibition traveled to major cities throughout Germany and Austria and was viewed by more than two million people.

