Three by Jherek Bischoff from the album Improvisations
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Three by Jherek Bischoff from the album Improvisations
light improv stuff
Vasily Kandinsky, who was born on this day in 1866, advanced the development of abstract art in both his writings and paintings. His abstract compositions, which he called “improvisations,” are considered to be among the first nonfigurative paintings. Deploying amorphous shapes of lively color to convey emotional and spiritual content, these works evoke in name the qualities of music that Kandinsky sought to communicate visually. Created shortly before the outbreak of World War I, this canvas shows how the artist deliberately juxtaposed forms of contrasting colors, depth, rhythm, or weight to reveal the sublime turbulence of an ineffable force.
"Little Painting with Yellow (Improvisation)," 1914, by Vasily Kandinsky
Etienne Brunet & Fred Van Hove - Improvisations
Saravah
2001
improvisation #3
a thin layer conceals no small flaws— if only it were possible to stop putting on vaudeville acts for no one
a crow alights on a stage light
the eye never blinks it adjusts focus bending rays to sharpness, if only for a moment in close approximation
APPLAUSE...APPLAUSE...APPLAUSE
Ólafur Arnalds - improvisations
“Disharmony in the body [of Christ] can be overcome if we play the notes that Jesus wrote down, and not our own dissonant improvisations.”
~Homemadegospel.org
(Image via asu.edu)