Skip to main content
Zunehmen
Zunehmen

Zunehmen

Artist Vassily Kandinsky Russian, 1866–1944, active in Germany and France
Date1933
MediumOil, egg tempera, and ink on paper
Dimensions20 1/16 x 12 3/8 in. (51 x 31.4 cm)
Frame: 27 1/4 x 19 3/4 x 1 3/8 in. (69.2 x 50.2 x 3.5 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineBequest of W. R. Valentiner
Object numberG.65.10.29
On View
Not on view
ProvenanceCollection of the artist [1a]; consigned to J. B. Neumann, New York, by November 15, 1935 [1b]; consigned to Nierendorf Gallery (1937-1947), New York, between February 29, 1936 and 1947 [2]; W. R. Valentiner, Los Angeles, CA, by August 27, 1954 [3]; Valentiner Estate, Raleigh, NC, 1958 [4]; to NCMA, by bequest, 1965.

[1a] The Milan and Paris exhibitions are noted in Nina Kandinsky's notebooks, see catalogue raisonne introduction.
[1b] Neumann inventory 11/15/35, #16 "N 520, Accroissement." See also catalogue raisonne.
[2] Kandinsky changed dealers and Neumann sent inventory to Nierendorf. Neumann showed the work in February 1936. Nierendorf died in 1947. Nierendorf's last Kandinsky exhibition, however, was in 1944. See also catalogue raisonne.
[3] LACMA inventory, 8/27/54, #18 Kandinsky "Abstract."
[4] L.58.12.27-VE, "Zenehmen" (only work by Kandinsky listed).
Object Rights Statement

The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) makes images of its collection available online to support research and scholarship and to inform and educate the public. Certain works of art, as well as the photographs of those works of art, may be protected by copyright, trademark, or related interests not owned by the NCMA. The responsibility for ascertaining whether any such rights exist and for obtaining all other necessary permissions remains with the applicant. To request images and/or permissions from the NCMA, please complete our online request form.

Tragic Balance of Destiny
Margaret Tomkins
1945
Spring on the Missouri
Thomas Hart Benton
1945
Virgin and Child
Bernardino Pintoricchio (also Pinturicchio)
circa 1490–1495
The Adoration of the Magi
Simon Claasz. van Waterlant II
circa 1530