Suprematism is a school of geometric abstractart, launched in Russia. Around 1914 russian artist Kazimir Malevich began to work in an abstract style, which he called Suprematism.It based on the principle that paintings should be composed only of rectangles, circles, triangles, or crosses. So the guiding
principle of Suprematism was “the supremacy of pure sensation in creative art”.
Malevich began by limiting himself in his Suprematist paintings to black,
white, gray, and red, but he expanded his palette as his compositions became
more complex. Malevich, like other artists of his time, believed that the
external world could no longer serve as the basis for art, which had, instead,
to explore pure non-objective abstraction in the search for visual analogues to
experience, both conscious and unconscious.
Suprematist ideas and his poetry perfect geometry will never out of fashion. I'd like to show a number of fine examples of modern furniture and decor with the mood of Suprematism.
“Sit On My Doudoune” from Moncler
Minotti Munch
Geodesic Shade by Duffy london
Walter Knoll coffee table
Molteni & C table
Buffet design par Le Corbusier, P. Jeanneret by
Cassina
Cole & Son wallpapers
PINTDECOR cofee table
Cassina Zig-Zag Chair by Gerrit T. Rietveld
Cassina, Red and Blue Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
Design garden chair VERTEX by Karim Rashid VONDOM
Zanotta Remida by Fortunato Depero
Design side table by Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
Kiss from Fornasetti
Brabbu Canyon Screen