Kupka seems to have arrived at this and similar composition gradually, beginning in 1907–8 with a drawing of a girl holding a ball in her hand, as if she were about to play or dance with it. He then developed progressively more diagrammatic images of her circular motion, ultimately arriving at a series of fully abstract drawings. In a limited palette of red, blue, black, and white, ribbons of color morph across the page. The radically fluid relationship they establish between foreground and background, line and plane, signals Kupka’s prescient renunciation of the aesthetic conventions of perspective. He made these studies for his manifesto painting Amorpha, fugue a deux couleurs (Amorpha, fugue in two colors), which when it was shown at the 1912 Salon d’Automne, a watershed event in the history of modernist abstraction, was one of the very first abstract paintings to be publicly exhibited in Paris.

Gallery label from

Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925, December 23, 2012–April 15, 2013.

Medium Gouache and ink on paper
Dimensions 12 7/8 x 14 1/2" (32.7 x 36.8 cm)
Credit Gift of Mr. and Mrs. František Kupka
Object number 569.1956.3
Department Drawings and Prints

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František Kupka

František Kupka

Czech, 1871–1957 51 works online

Shortly before he died in 1957, František Kupka sold Mme Kupka among Verticals , a work he had stored in his studio for nearly 45 years after its completion in 1910–11, to The Museum of Modern Art.

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