KAZIMIR MALEVICH – THE BLACK SQUARE
> Idea and Content
– Camera-App: creativ photography with modifiable black square (snapshot) with an integrated image-portal community. Create modern selfies.
– Book written by Jeannot Simmen “The black square” of Kasimir Malevich. One picture monography – The Icon of Modernity
– The work and life of Kasimir Malevich, the background and epochal impact of the black square which was exhibited in 1915.
> How to Use the Malevich Camera-App
1. Choose your favorite motif with your camera
2. Scale and select a position of the black square
3. Take a photo, snapshot.
4. User name and password – title, place, description as option.
5. Save and share.
> Malevich Camera-App – Suprematistic Art
– Create your own photography with a “black square” utility
– Discover a new reality: get rid of the objective ballast in your picture and open your eyes! – Be a pioneer of antiselfie-culture!
– Make your own abstract landmarks, take an alternativ picture to the “Selfie-exposers”. Define a next level of photography with nothingness of black square. Use your iPhone or iPad as an Artistic Studio!
> Contents of the App: Monography The Black Square, Texts, Synopse
– Malevich Camera with individual adjustment options.
– Growing Photo Collection (snapshot).
– Picture monography: Kazimir Malvich, The Black Square. From Anti-Picture to Icon of Modernity – in German and in English – Author Jeannot Simmen.
– The book can be downloaded as an In App Purchase.
– The relevance of the Black Square, texts by Jeannot Simmen.
– Synopsis of the Black Square (pre- and posthistory).
The effect of the Black Square from 1915 on art and artists, including Camera app to make your own picture after 100 years.
> History: The Century Picture for Artworld and Artists.
– Jubilee: 100 years of Black Square and 100 years Non-Objective Art.
– December 1915 Kasimir Malevich reported: “Art criticism sighed, everything we have loved is lost. We are in a desert ... Before us is nothing but a Black Square on a white background.”
The Black Square frees the art. Images are no longer a representation of the world or an expression of psychological mood.