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LEID S KUNSTHISTORISCH JAARBOEK<br />

<strong>BEELDEN</strong> <strong>IN</strong><br />

<strong>VEELVOUD</strong><br />

E VERMENIGVULDIG<strong>IN</strong>G VAN HET BEEL<br />

<strong>IN</strong> PRENTKUNST EN O GRAF<br />

PRIMAVERA PERS<br />

tm tr<br />

•<br />

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• '<br />

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LE1DS KUNSTHISTORISCH JAARBOEK • 12<br />

Beelden in veelvoud<br />

De vermenigvuldiging van het beeld inprentkunst<br />

en fotografie<br />

Redactie<br />

NKLKK BARTKI.<strong>IN</strong>GS<br />

ANTON W. A. BOSCHLOO<br />

BRAM DE KLERCK<br />

HANS UOOSEBOOM<br />

Primavera Pers • Leiden • 2002


Dcz.e uitgave is tot stand gekomen dankzij de<br />

financiële bijdragen van:<br />

-Fonds 1818<br />

- De Gijselaar-Hintzenfonds<br />

-M. A. O.C. Gravin van Bylandl Stichting<br />

- Dr. Hendrik Muller's Vaderlandsch Fonds<br />

-J. F,. Jurriaansc Stichting<br />

© De auteurs; Stichting Leids Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek,<br />

Primavers Pers, Leiden<br />

Alle rechten voorbehouden. Niets uit deze uitgave rnag<br />

worden verveelvoudigd, opgenomen in<br />

geautomatiseerde gegevensbestanden, of openbaar<br />

gemaakt, in enige vorm of op enige wijze, hetzij<br />

elektronisch, mechanisch, door fotokopieën, opnamen,<br />

of enige andere manier, zonder voorafgaande<br />

schriftelijke toestemming van de uitgever.<br />

Voor zover het maken van kopieën uit deze uitgave is<br />

toegestaan op grond van Artikel ree Auteurswet 1972;°<br />

het Besluit van zo juni 1974, St.b. 351, zoals gewijzigd bij<br />

Besluit van 23 augustus 1985, St.b. 471 en Artikel 17<br />

Auteurswet 1912, dient men daarvoor wettelijk<br />

verschuldigde vergoedingen te voldoen aan de Stichting<br />

Reprorecht (Postbus 882,1180 A\ Amstelveen). Voor<br />

het overnemen van gedcclre(n) uit deze uitgave m<br />

bloemlezingen, readers en andere compilatiewerken<br />

(artikel 16, Auteurswet 1912), dient men zich tot de<br />

uitgever te wenden.<br />

All rights reserved. No part of this publïcation may be<br />

reproduced, stored in a retricval system of any nature, or<br />

transmitted in any form hy any means, electronic,<br />

mechanical, photocopying, rccording or othcrwise,<br />

without the prior written permission of the publisher<br />

(copyright bolder), application for which should be<br />

addresscd ro the publisher.<br />

Red act ie-adres:<br />

Universiteir Leiden<br />

Kunsthistorisch Instituut<br />

Stichting Leids Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek<br />

Postbus 9515<br />

NL-13OORA Leiden<br />

Vormgeving binnenwerk: Titus Schulz<br />

Ontwerp omslag: Peter Koch<br />

Druk: AD Druk, Zeist<br />

Afwerking: Van Waarden, Zaandam<br />

Herkomst afbeeldingen op her omslag:<br />

Voorzijde;<br />

Alexis Gaudin et Frère (uitgever), HolLinde N. 28, Paklis<br />

de Guillaume U a. La Hayc (met het standbeeld van<br />

Willem van Oranje), 1858, stereofoto, gealbuminiseerde<br />

zoutdruk, 8,4x 16,7 crn, Rijksmuseum / Rijksprentenkabinet,<br />

Amstetdam (RP-F-FI2O9O); Firma Remondini,<br />

Juventus, ets en gravure, ingekleurd, 5,25 x 77,5 cm.<br />

Rijksmuseum / Rijksprentenkabinet, Amsterdam<br />

(RP-P-2OOO-75); Postzegel 3 cent Willem m, 1893;<br />

Schotel, circa 1735, diameter 22,9 cm, Chinees porselein,<br />

versierd in onderglazuur blauw, Groninger Museum,<br />

Groningen; Crispijn de Passé naar Maarten de Vos.<br />

l.uitspelende jongeman met Venus en Cupido, gravure, 9,1<br />

x 15 cm (Hollsteïnxv, nr. 8>i.[3l), De achtergrond<br />

wordt gevormd door een onversneden suffragia-vel van<br />

F. J. van Tctroode, kopergravure en boekdruk, 40,6 x 26<br />

cm, Museum Catharijncconvent, Utrecht (BMH g6Ö2>.<br />

Achterzijde:<br />

Firma Remondini, Aetas virilis, ets en gravure,<br />

ingekleurd, 52,5 x 77,5 cm, Rijksprentenkabinet,<br />

Rijksmuseum Amsterdam (RP-P-2OOO74); Schotel van<br />

chocoladekop-en-schotel, circa 1745, diameter schotel 13,7<br />

cm, Chinees porselein, versierd in ernailkleuren,<br />

Museum Sypestein, Loosdrcchr; Zonder titel, circa<br />

1850, patroon coll. Landwehr-Vogels, StadsarchicfTiel;<br />

Postzegel 60 cent Nederland, 2000.


7 Voorwoord<br />

9 Inleiding<br />

17 Het gedrukte beeld als historische bron<br />

Enkele methodologische bedenkingen<br />

JAN VAN DER STOCK<br />

35 Tn het kiel water van de schilderkunst?<br />

De functie en de status van de prentkunst in het denken en schrijven over kunst<br />

vanaf de zestiende tot het midden van de achttiende eeuw<br />

NF.LKE BARTEL<strong>IN</strong>GS<br />

65 Michelangelo aan de Rijn<br />

Reprodiictiegrafiek naar Michelangelo in het Leidse Prentenkabinet<br />

JEF SCHAEPS<br />

109 'Veri disegni e gloriosc memorie'<br />

Ceremoniële prenten tijdens de Sede vacante in Barok Rome<br />

M<strong>IN</strong>OU SCITRAVEN<br />

127 Papier in de Nederlanden<br />

THEO LAURENTIUS<br />

137 De tegenstelling, de traditie en de paradox<br />

Relaties tussen tekst en beeld in twee reproducties van Crispijn de Passé de oude<br />

ELMER KOLF<strong>IN</strong><br />

159 Het gebruik van prenten op Nederlands volks aardewerk, circa 1580-1650<br />

FRANS LAUREN'IIUS<br />

167 Prenten op porselein<br />

CHRISTIAAN J. A. JÖRG<br />

177 Bidden voor een 'goede gestchcnissc van de ziel<br />

Suffragia in de Noordelijke Nederlanden<br />

EVELYNE VERHEGGEN<br />

205 De Remondini en hun publiek<br />

ANTON W. A. BOSCHLOO<br />

229 'The most amusing studies'<br />

Thomas Rowlandson en Nederland<br />

PAUL KNOLLE EN HARRIET STROOMBERG


251 Al die cdclvrouwen en goudsmidsdochters<br />

Negentiende-eeuwse kruissteekpatronen naar contemporaine schilderijen<br />

RUTH KRUL<br />

275 Met kunst gcïllnstrcerd<br />

De kunstreproductie in de eerste helft van de negentiende eeuw in Nederland<br />

ANKEMlhK OUXVKRKEHK<br />

295 'Une industrie toute entière'<br />

Over de serie Hollande (1858) en de ontwikkeling van de stereofotografie in<br />

Europa in de tweede helft van de jaren vijftig van de negentiende eeuw<br />

MATTIE BOOM<br />

317 Fotografie in oplage<br />

JAN VAN DIJK EN <strong>IN</strong>GEBORG LEIJERZAPF<br />

339 'Photogrammen in roode omslagen'<br />

Adolphe Eraun dr Cie in het Rijksmuseum<br />

SASKIA ASSER EN ROBERT VERHOOGT<br />

371 Een koningin voor iedereen<br />

Verschijningsvormen en verspreiding van de portretten van Wilhelmina<br />

in het jaar van haar inhuldiging<br />

HANS ROOSEBOOM<br />

389 De dokter en het meisje<br />

Klasse en sekse in de medische foto's van Louis Heijermans<br />

MARGA ALTENA<br />

409 Een foto als voertuig van de macht<br />

Gebruik en hergebruik van Chas Gerretsensportret vanAugusto Pinochet<br />

VERONICA HEKK<strong>IN</strong>G<br />

427 'Spiritus et materïa unum'<br />

De postzegel als tijdsbeeld<br />

PAUL HEFT<strong>IN</strong>G<br />

453 Kandinsky's completion of Eeonardo's Deluge<br />

PAUL VAN DEN AKKER<br />

471 Register<br />

480 Colofon


Kandinsky's completion of<br />

Leonardo's Deluge<br />

PAUL VAN DEN AKKER<br />

It would seem that storrns raged as furiously in the art of the early twentieth<br />

century as they did in that of the early sixteenth. Storms, the Deluge<br />

and the Last Judgemcnt were the central rhemes that inspired Wassily<br />

Kandinsky (1866-1944)to niake his fitst altnost completely abstract paintings,<br />

a development that occurred herween 1910 and 1913. Four centuries<br />

earlier the same themes had been depictcd by his famous predeccssor<br />

Leonardo da Vind (1452-1519) in an equally fascinating series of drawings.<br />

It is assumed that these were also produccd during the first years of the second<br />

decade of a century.1 Yet iconography and date are nor the only similarities<br />

between the deluges of both artists. There is also a striking visual resemblance<br />

(figs. i and 2). At first sight abstract patterns seem to prcvail over<br />

rccognizable, narradve motifs. Upon closer inspection, however, out of the<br />

chaos of forms-and of colours too, in Kandinsky's case —weseeanumber<br />

of figurative clements cmerging.<br />

The question is whether Kandinsky could have seen Leonardo's drawings,<br />

which had already belonged to the Windsor collection for a very long time.<br />

During the period around 1900-13 the drawings were ncvcr cxhibitcd outside<br />

England and Kandinksy never visited this country. As a matter of fact<br />

it seems unlikely that Kandinksy, who was famous for his non-figurativc<br />

art, drew inspiration from Leonardo's work. Did nor the latter's figurative<br />

illusions belong to an art-historical period which in Kandinsky's time,<br />

wirh the rise of abstract art and not least with Kandinsky's own work, was<br />

assumed to have come co an end once and for all?<br />

Similarities in art are seldom coincidences. Even though it is unlikely that<br />

Kandinsky ever saw Leonardo's original drawings, hè must have known<br />

them, as we will see later, from reproducdons. And even though hè seldom<br />

mentions Leonardo's name in his writings, when hè does so, it is positively.<br />

In Uber das Geïsüge in der Kunst (1912) hè called him 'der grosse, viclscitigc<br />

Meister' and his admiration for Leonardo fits in, as we will see, with the<br />

reevaluation of this artist that had been going on since the middle of the<br />

ninetcenth century.2<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S COMPLETION OF LEONARDO S DELUGE 453


454<br />

Paul van den Akker


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j. Wassily Kandinsky<br />

Deluge (smdy for<br />

Composition VI),<br />

circa 1912, palnrlng<br />

on glass, dimensions<br />

and location<br />

unknown.<br />

Kandinsky wanted his abstract paintings ro have a similar emotional effect<br />

to that of the purifying cosmic catastrophes hè anticipated, and hc uscd an<br />

asyetunfamiliar, veiled languageof forms to evoke the newworld that was<br />

yet tobecreated.5 He wasdelighted then with thepoem 'An Kandinsky' by<br />

the Dutch symbolist poet Albert Verwey, which is like a version in words<br />

of the experience hc wanted his art to evoke. In the German translation<br />

made by Karl Wolfskehl for Kandinsky, the poem opens with the words<br />

'Seele nun sieh gleich dem leuchtenden Morgen' (Look my soul: like the<br />

morning light). Among othcr things the soul sees 'The essence of all that is<br />

iiquid orvapour or mass', 'Cuttinglines thattear through the void', 'Circu-<br />

lar movement that sin^s in the air' and 'Eddics and swirlins of colours and<br />

o o<br />

lines'.6 In Verwey's terms at any rate Kandinsky seemed to have reached his<br />

goal and the poem was given an honoured place in Waldcn's study mentionedabove.<br />

Does the omission or disguising of all figurative elements mean that<br />

Kandinsky's formal idiom was in fact the product of a visionary mind that<br />

could see what nobody had secn bcforc? In the art-historical literature on<br />

Kandinsky much attention is paid to the visual sources which inspired his<br />

development towards abstraction. Some authors have pointed out iconographical<br />

and stylistic similaritics bctwecn motifsin Kandinsky's work and<br />

Ülustrations in theosophical writings from the beginning of the twentieth<br />

century such as those of Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater with which<br />

Kandinsky was familiar.7 Others have pointed to connections with images<br />

456<br />

Paul van den Akker


ftom Russian folk art and ethnographicobjects,8 and with the works of Jugendstil<br />

and Symbolist artists living and exhibiting in Munich, the city to<br />

which Kandinsky had moved in 1896 from his native country Russia at the<br />

age of thirty-six and whcrc hè had received his first training as an artist.9<br />

Strangely however, the name of Leonardo da Vinci is never mcntioned.<br />

MEREZHKOVSKY<br />

Kandinsky was not the first to believe m a future Apocalypse and an inevitable,<br />

cultural revolution. In the nineteenth century more and more<br />

writers had discusscd these themes, convinced as they were that the course<br />

of human history was an evolution through a number of major clearly<br />

dcfined periods and that man wouid eventually reach a spiritual level. In<br />

keeping with Hegcl's ideas on the progress of human culture, philosophers<br />

and historians proclaimed that the spiritual epoch had already dawned or<br />

else was just round the corner. At the end of the century this belief in a spiritual<br />

progress had also become widespread among artists and poets.<br />

His years in Munich and his stay in Paris in igoó-'oy gave Kandinsky every<br />

opportunity to become acquainted with such eschatological and messianistic<br />

ideas. He also came into contact with notions of the role of the artist<br />

and poet as advocate and preachcr of the coming era. Just as his writer<br />

friends chose an Expressionist style of poetry to give voice to the new era,<br />

so hè and other artists became increasingly persuadcd that the artist's solution<br />

was to paint in a more abstract style, leaving out or disguising figurative<br />

forms.10 Kandinsky drew inspiration for this dcveloprnent not only<br />

from the Russian and French symbolist poets and writers, hut also from<br />

the theosophical ideas and the mystical writings of Joséphin Péladan, the<br />

spokesman of the Rosicrucians.11<br />

In Munich hè maintained close relations with the Russian Symbolists and<br />

would thereforc have known of their admiration for Leonardo, whom they<br />

hailed as a forerunner who had played a vital role in one of the great cultural<br />

revolutions. According to them, Leonardo was a seer of great genius, a mysticand<br />

a pioneer of what was then the new, modern mode of thought.12<br />

Among the Russian symbolists, it was Dmitry Merezhkovsky who was<br />

most eloquent in his admiration for Leonardo. In 1901 hè even wrote a historical<br />

novel about this Renaissance artist, The Rebirth ofthegods: Leonardo<br />

da. Vind.13 Merezhkovsky moreover srood out among the Russian symbolists<br />

with his conviction that history had always been characterized by greac<br />

upheavals and that the last of these was about to break out, leading to a<br />

third, new epoch.14 It was within the framework of this vison of history<br />

that hè presentcd Leonardo as a figure viewed by his contemporaries as an<br />

Antichrist.<br />

In his novel Merezhkovsky presents Leonardo's apprentice, Giovanni Bcl-<br />

KAND1NSKY S COMPLETION OF LEONARDO S DELUGE 457


affio [sic], as an admirer and witness of hls master's deviant and revolutionary<br />

ideas. The sixth chapter is entirely devoted ro h is diary in which hè<br />

jotted down Leonardo's pieces of artistic wisdom, and his recommendations<br />

and formulas. In one of his more extensive notes hè relatcs<br />

Leonardo's explanation of how one should depict the Delugc. In the<br />

English translation of 1931 this note reads as follows:<br />

'Discoursing of how an artist ought to compose the ideas for pictures,<br />

the master told us, by wayof an example, of a representation of the delugc<br />

that hè had conceived: 'Abysses and maelstroms, lit up by lighcnings.<br />

Branches of enonnous oaks, with people clinging to them, carried<br />

along by a waterspout. Waters, strewn with fragments of household<br />

furniture, upon which people seek to save themselves. Hcrds of<br />

quadrupeds, surrounded by water, on high table-lands, — some with<br />

their Icgs on the backs of others, crushing and trampling one another. A<br />

horde of people, defending, with arms in. hand, the last patch ofground<br />

from fcral beasts. Some are wringing their hands, gnawing them so that<br />

the blood runs; others stuff their ears so as not to hear the rumble of the<br />

thunder-sbocks; or else, not content with having shut their eyes, place<br />

one hand atop the other, pressing them to their eyelids, in order not to<br />

see their impending death. Some commk suïcide, suffocating, strangling<br />

themselves, impaling themselves upon swords, casting themselves<br />

into the raging deep from cliffs; and mothers, cursing God, seize their<br />

children to smash their heads against stones. Decomposed corpscs float<br />

up to the surfacc, colliding with and striking one another, and rebounding<br />

like little balls inflated with air. Birds perch on them; or,<br />

sinking down from exhaustion, descend on the living men and animals,<br />

finding no other place to rest.'15<br />

Kandinsky himself refers to a German transiation in U b er das Geestige.16<br />

Although hè does not mention the passage about the deluge, hè can hardly<br />

not have known it. Given Kandinsky's belief in past and future cultural<br />

revolutions, this passage must have sounded like a call to arms.<br />

Merczhkovsky's novel may have inspired Kandinsky to deal with the theme<br />

of the deluge, or at any rate stimulatcd his interest in it.17 Yet to what extent<br />

was the novel helpful to him in finding a suitable formal idiom? His<br />

earlier, paraphrased description of the origins of Composïtion VI proved<br />

that in around 1913 Kandinsky had already experienced a great deal of<br />

difficulty in depicting the story of the deluge. In the earlier littie painting<br />

on glass based on the same subject (fig. 3) hè stïll included 'various figurativeforms,<br />

partlycheerfulones (Igotalotof pleasureout ofcombining the<br />

serious forms with cheerful external images): naked figurcs, arks, animals,<br />

palm trees, lightning flashed, rain, etc.'.18 But with regard to more serious<br />

forms of art — hè had made the glass painting more for his own pleasure<br />

/icS Paul van den Akker


(zum meinen Vergnügen}- Kandinsky had learned in Munich that the figurative<br />

belonged to che past, rather than to modern art. In this regard then<br />

the novel could not have been of much direct use.<br />

Nevertheless the homage paid to Leonardo by Merczhkovsky and many<br />

other Russian and European Symbolists may weli have arouscd Kandinsky's<br />

curiosity about Leonardo's own texts and drawings of the delugc.19<br />

While we do not know which publications and reproductions hè consulted,<br />

we can discern a few likely candidates.<br />

TKXTS BY AND ABOUT LEONARDO<br />

Since the middle of the nineteenth century a new historica] and aesthetic<br />

image had emerged of Leonardo as aseer of genius, a sort of mystical magician.<br />

Initially an invention of French authors, the 'new' Leonardo also<br />

made an appearance in the works of English and German writers from the<br />

late i86os onwards. Tn England Walter Pater in particular represemed chc<br />

new Europe-widc interpretation of Leonardo. In his famous and influential<br />

essay of 1869 hè dcscribed Da Vinci's art from a modern aesthetic point<br />

of view and the person of the artist in a historical, if somewhat unconvcntional<br />

fashion. According to Pater, Leonardo's artistry, which hè found<br />

both rnysterious and modern, could only have originated from chc brain of<br />

a profane genius far ahead of his time.20 Pater saw him as the personification<br />

of the greac upheaval that supposedly occurred in around 1500; hè<br />

was 'the sorcerer or magician, possessed of curious secrets and a hidden<br />

knowledge, living in a world of which hè alonc possessed the key'.21 This<br />

was the Leonardo for whom the Symbolists feit such admiracion.<br />

The veritable deluge of works on Leonardo all elaborated on this interpretation.<br />

Among them was a book of 1892 by Gabriel Séailles, that received<br />

great acclaim at the time, Léonard de Vind; l'artiste et ie savant. Essai de biographie<br />

psychologique. Séailles devoted a large part of the chapter, 'Le savanc<br />

et l'artiste: la science dans l'art. — Les procédés et les ceuvres' to Leonatdo's<br />

own remarks on the depiction of a deluge and the accompanying "Windsor<br />

drawings.<br />

Séailles accounted for the rnysterious power of the lacter by referring to<br />

Leonardo's exceptional combinacion of true obsetvation of nature and understanding<br />

of the spirit (I'esprit) that was present in all creation. He saw<br />

these drawings as outstanding examples of Leonardo's genius. Like Walter<br />

Pater, hè mentioned Leonardo's exceptional fascination with the movements<br />

of water, which hè had observed so intensely that his drawings of<br />

eddying whirlpools and rolling, buffeting and breaking wavcs suggest that<br />

Leonardo had done his deluge from direcc experience. Rather than a trueto-Ufe<br />

rendering, realistic chough the details are, one of the deluge drawings<br />

reminded him of the vision of a poet such as Dante.<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S COMPLETION OF LEONARDO S DELUGE 459


'Penetrating to the heart of nature deeper than nature itself- that is his<br />

dream. It is the ambition of a cold-blooded Prometheus, who instead of<br />

insultingjupiter, studies hisworkson hisbehalf to discover their secret.<br />

As an artist all hè asks of knowledgc is the power to create, to give life.'22<br />

Séallles' interpretation of Leonardo's drawings as the expression of a visionary<br />

dream would probably have appealed to Kandinsky. The samc goes<br />

for Eugène Müntz's ideas in hïs Leonard de Vind; l'artiste, lepemeur, Ie savantof<br />

1899. Müntz saw Leonardo's texts on storms and the deluge - to<br />

which hè however devoted less attcntion than Séaiiles — as proof of an exceptional<br />

poctic genius. Da Vinci might have been inspired by Petrarch<br />

and his texts also vied with Virgil's dcscriptions of nature in his Georgics;<br />

'lóth century Italian literature has produced nothing better in the field of<br />

descriptive poetry, the recording of landscapes, or of chc phenomena of the<br />

atmosphere and of light'.23 According to Müncz, these poetic descriptions<br />

'of the Zephyr and the storm' (de Zéphyr et de l'ouragan) demonstrated Leonardo's<br />

ability to go to the heart of divine nature (l'essence divïne); they also<br />

cestified to his sense of his affinity with God, who both creates and destroys.<br />

The prevailing image of Leonardo was thus expanded by Séaiiles and<br />

Müntz and this formed the framcwork for their analysis of his writings<br />

about and drawings of the deluge and storms. Moreover they could draw<br />

on recent editions of Leonardo's texts. The fashionable interpretation of<br />

Da Vinci's work had also created a dcmand for biiingual publications of his<br />

writings. There were successive editions in the i88os in Germany, England<br />

and France, all of them including the texts on the Deluge and on storms.24<br />

The extract in Merezhkovskv's later novel, the note that is in Beltraffio's diary,<br />

is just a very concise summary.<br />

Leonardo's original instructions for illustrating a storm and the Deluge are<br />

too numerous anddetailcd to quote here in full, so I will confine myself to<br />

itemizing the most salient motifs not mentioncd in Merezhkovsky's novel<br />

— the downfaü of cities whose walls and high buildings are shattered by the<br />

forces of nature; ships that capsize or are wreckcd by the fury of the waves;<br />

forests on fire; landslides; broken boulders that fall into the torrents,<br />

blocking thevalleys andcausing chcswollen rivers to break their banks;eddying<br />

whhipools; heavy downpours of rain in the atmosphere; waves<br />

brcaking against each other or against cliffs or rebounding off various drifting<br />

objects only to surge up as foam into the air before falling back; a sky<br />

full of scactered clouds and of the dust thrown up by horses as they panic<br />

and bolt and by the broken pieces of rocks and buildings, rendering the<br />

motion of the wind and currcnts of air visible.25<br />

Reading Ober das Geistige in der Kunst, one can hcar the echoes of Leonardo's<br />

account of the down fall of cities. If Kandinksy did indeed consult<br />

a translation of Da Vinci's Trattato della Pittura, it may have been the<br />

460 Paul van den Akker


German version by Heinrich Ludwig of 1882. Yet I thmk that more recent,<br />

French verslons of the beginning of the twcntieth century would have appcalcd<br />

to him more. They were edited by the abovc-mentioned Joséphin<br />

Péladan who, like many other contemporary mystics and symbolists, had<br />

an exceptional aesthetic and historical admiration for Leonardo. He had<br />

shown this already in his earlier texts on art and mystical writings, in which<br />

hè also appearedas an advocate of the Ordre de la Rose + Croix+ Catholique,<br />

proposing Leonardo as its patron saint.26 Péladan was no stranger to Kandinsky<br />

who mentioned him in Ober das Geïsüge and who had paraphrased<br />

a statement by Péladan, 'Artist, thouartking' (Artiste, tuesroï) from atext<br />

of 1894 in which hè also rcferred to Leonardo.27<br />

Péladan followed up his small anthology of 1907 of Leonardo's texts including<br />

the passages on the depiction of the deltige and storms, by editing<br />

the first annotated French translatïons of Leonardo's treatise on painting<br />

and his discussion on landscape painting, that hè thought was a separate<br />

treatise.28 This was, incidentally, the year that Kandinskydecidcd to abandon<br />

the depiction of fairytale themes and turn instead to deluge and<br />

storms.<br />

The tone of Pcladan's introduction to Leonardo's treatise on landscape<br />

painting not only resembles that of Kandinsky's writings; it also comains<br />

similar aesthctic judgements. According to Péladan, no-one had summed<br />

up 'the l aws of the pure landscape' (les lois du paysage pur) as wel! as Leonardo<br />

had done in his treatise on landscape (includïng scènes of the deluge<br />

and storms), thus giving voice to 'clemental life and all that is cosmic' (la<br />

vie élémentaire et l'aspect cosmique). According to him Leonardo's treatise<br />

taught us to reaüze the mystery and divinity of natura! phenomena. In his<br />

short account of the aesthetics of landscape painting, hè thcn stressed that<br />

a landscape should always be imbued with a soul, praising the classical<br />

painters for this quality. In his view, they 'had such a deep understanding<br />

of nature, that they have given ït a soul and a person, pcopling it with invisible<br />

beings'.29 What rcally martered for Péladan was that each type of<br />

landscape gave rise to a different kind of emotion depcnding on the light,<br />

the colour range and the artist's sensïbility.30 Leonardo's text also demonstratcd<br />

how wrong it was to think that landscape was an easier genre than<br />

Tables et [...] histoires'. Kandinsky having toïled on his Composition VI<br />

would have applaucled this. And in his description of ïts creation Kandinsky<br />

too emphasized that making art is a matter of an effective organïzation<br />

of colours and tones rather than figurative representatïon.<br />

REPRODUCTIONS<br />

As said above. Kandinsky's curiosity must have concerned Leonardo's<br />

drawings just as much as his texts. Péladan's edïtions were nor much help<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY'S COMPLETION OF LEONARDO'S DELUGE A_6l


4-Jean Paul Richter,<br />

77j


). Leonardo da Vinci,<br />

Deluge, after 1513,<br />

black chalk,<br />

16.1 x 20.7 cm,<br />

Windsor Castle,<br />

Roval Librarv, no.<br />

vures of Leonardo's drawings, among them some of chc deluge and storm<br />

drawings (fig. 4). He secms to have aimed to reproduce them full-size and<br />

co imitate theoriginal paper coiour. Ie was from Richter's bookthatMüncz<br />

borrowed his illuscrations and Séailles and Péladan also rcfcrred to it in<br />

their texts on the drawings in qucstion. Whatever text about Leonatdo<br />

Kandinsky may have read, in his quest for reproductions hè was bound to<br />

have come across Richtcr's publicarion. The list of subscribcrs in Richter's<br />

book does nor include Kandinsky's name; other artists and che 'Royal Pinacoteca'<br />

in Munich, Kandinsky's city of resïdence are however inclu-<br />

ded.-54<br />

Not all of Leonardo's Windsor drawings of deluge and storms were published<br />

in Richter's book. Many years later, but still before Kandinsky embarked<br />

on his deluge and storm paintings, the French publisher Edouard<br />

Rouveyre changed all rhis. The appearance in 1901 of hïs 23-volume cdition,<br />

Feuillets inédits, repwduits d'après les originaux conservés a la Bibliotbèque<br />

du Chateau de Windsor, fuift lied a long-feit need for reproductions.<br />

With its facsimiles of a great number of chc Windsor drawings arranged<br />

according Co subject, it functioned as a mine of visual information. In his<br />

preface Rouveyre strcssed that his book was intended for a broad public as<br />

wcll as for scholars and artists. In mvview, it is in these Feuillets médïtsthat<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S C O M P L E T I O N OF LEONARDO S DELUGE 463


6. Wassily Kandinsky,<br />

Improvhatlon Deluge<br />

(Large Studyfor<br />

Composilion VI),<br />

1913, oilon canvas,<br />

95 x 150 cm,<br />

Stadtische Galerie<br />

ini Lenbachhaus,<br />

Munich.<br />

we find the most likely candidate for Kandinsky's final vïsual source —<br />

namely, the volume devoted to the deluge and storm drawïngs.35<br />

The title of Rouveyre's volume is Études et dessins sur l'atmosphère. The term<br />

'atmosphere' was already used in 1899 by Müntz to characterize Leonardo's<br />

drawings of the deluge and storms and it was therefore also adoptcd by<br />

Pcladan in 1910. Tt is remarkable that the same term often turns up in<br />

Kandinsky's Überdas Geisiigewho uses it to refer to the invisible realm of<br />

inner thoughts and emotions.36 As already said, Kandinsky thought hè<br />

owed it to his own time and to posterity to depict this spiritual atmosphere<br />

in a non-figurative way, thus abandoning the Renaissance tradition of<br />

which Lconardo was such an outstanding representative. The important<br />

thing to stress however is that: in comparison with his written texts, Leonardo's<br />

own drawings seem to testify ro a quite different, almost non-Renaissance<br />

approach towards the dcpiction of storms and the deluge (fig. 5).<br />

It is as if decorative patterns prevail in them over narrative details, making<br />

these drawings look like further evidence to support the notion that hè was<br />

an avant-garde artist long before this term was devised. In 1903, for example,<br />

Bernard Berenson dcscribed them as being full of'poetic force and<br />

decorative beauty'.37 Kandinsky himsclf must have seen them as the expression<br />

of a kindred artist, one who was concerned above all with the<br />

composition of abstract patterns of repetitive and parallel curving Unes and<br />

of overlapping or juxtaposed amorphous forms, rather than with creating<br />

illusions. This must surely have been the decisive reason for him to embrace<br />

Leonardo's drawings with such fervour.<br />

464 Paul van den Akker


7- Detail of fig. i.<br />

8. Detail of fig. 5.<br />

Like his grcat predecessor, Kandinsky confronted the viewer in the first instance<br />

with a composition compietely filled with abstract patterns, colours<br />

and lines that overlap or clash with each other. AJthough depth is suggested,<br />

it seems impossible to jndge the discance between the different<br />

forms. Kandinsky's Improvisation Deluge from 1913 {fig. 6) is virtually a<br />

colour translation of Leonardo's drawings of the deluge (fig. 2). It is as if in<br />

the lighter parts of Composition VI (fig. i) hè had followed Leonardo's advicc<br />

to depict mist and to make the air less dark at places where the sun's<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S COMl'LETION OP LEONARDO S DEIUGE 465


ays break through. Kandinsky himsclf distinguished three centres in this<br />

composition, of which the middlc and most important one, 'floats in the<br />

air rather and looks as though it is surrounded by vapours*.38 Some of the<br />

waveüke patterns in this painting (fig. 7) resemble abstractions of Leonardo's<br />

already fairly schematic clouds or waves (fig. 8). There are also striking<br />

iconographical similarities. Kandinsky's compositions are full of reminiscences<br />

of the kind of figurativc clcments that on closer inspection cmerge<br />

out of Leonardo's drawings — thimderbolts, panic-stricken figures, trees<br />

bendine o to the o°round<br />

and devastated cities. And even the addition of the<br />

recurrent motif of the boat with oars, which does not occur in the Biblc<br />

story of the Delugc or in the Apocalypse, suggests that Kandinsky was following<br />

Leonardo's recommendations.<br />

The similarities bctween Kandinsky's and Leonardo's dcluges and storms<br />

then are not merely iconographical, but above all visual. During the epoch<br />

when Kandinsky was producinghis compositions, Leonardo wasvicwedas<br />

a rich and prestigious source of inspiration for many; it was within this tradition<br />

that Kandinsky followed the cxample of the 'grosse, vielseitige<br />

Meister', as hè had called him. Like Merezhkovsky's Leonardo, hè acted as<br />

the champion of new ideas that were quite unfamiliar to most of hts contemporaries.<br />

And just as Da Vinci's drawings were treated by art historians<br />

as a group, so Kandinsky presented his first seven Compositions as a coherent<br />

series based on the theme of purifying catastrophes, completing the series<br />

in 1913 with Composition Wand Composition VIL<br />

Richter, Merezhkovsky and Péladan had all pointed out that Leonardo<br />

must have planned a painting of the deluge and one of a storm. They also<br />

added however that this project was never carried out, so that only Leonardo's<br />

dcscriptions and drawings remain. Perhaps it was this remark that<br />

prompted Kandinsky to recreate the storms that Leonardo had foreseen,<br />

unleashing them fourcenturies later even more powerfully — and incolour.<br />

(Translated by Donald Gardner)<br />

466 Paul van den Akker


NOTES<br />

r In about 1910 Leonardo's drawings were dated as<br />

around 1510-13. Currenrly rhey are darcd as af ter<br />

1513: C. Pedrctri, exh. cat. Zürich (Kunsthaus<br />

Zürich), Leonardo dn Vind: Natur und Landschaft;<br />

Naturstudien aus der Königlichen Bibliothek in<br />

Windsor Caslle, Zürich 1983, p. 47-50, cat. nos.<br />

30-508.<br />

2 W. Kandinsky, Ober das Geistige in der Kunst,<br />

Munich 1912, p. 85.<br />

3 'Mït der "Komposition" Kandinskis sind wir nun<br />

tatsachlich an den Grenzen angclangt, die der Titel<br />

dieses Buches uns steekt: zu sehen vermogen wir<br />

noch, aber nicht mehrzu erkennen.': P. Brandt,<br />

Sehen und Erkennen; eine Anleïtung zu<br />

vergleichender Kunstbetmchtimg, Stuttgart 1921,<br />

p. vi-vi!,p, 333.<br />

4 W. Kandinsky, 'Komposirion 6', in: Kandinsky<br />

1901-1913, Berlin, p. xxxv-xxxviii.<br />

5 See forinscance S. Ringbom, Thesoundingcasmos;<br />

a stuely in the spirituatism of Kandinsky and the<br />

genesis of abstract paiming, Hclsingfors 1970,<br />

p. 162-185.<br />

6 'Ursinn von Feuchtc und Dampf und Grund',<br />

'Linien die schneïdend den Abgrund zerreisscn',<br />

'Rïngclndes Weben das Lüfte dnrchzucki', 'Wirbel<br />

und Wurl von Farb und Gezack': P. Wciss,<br />

Kandinsky in Munich; theformatïveyears, Princeton<br />

NJ 1979, p. 82-83,151,192, note 27.<br />

7 See for insrance Ringbom, op. c/t. (note 5); idem,<br />

'Transcending the visible: the generation of the<br />

abstract pionecrs', exh. cat. Los Angeles (County<br />

Museum of Art), Chicago (Museum of<br />

Contemporary Art), The Hague (Haags<br />

Gemeentemuseum), The spiritual in art; abstract<br />

painting 1800-1985, New York 1986, p. 131-153; R.-C.<br />

Washton Long, Kandinsky: the devdopment of an<br />

abstract styie, Oxford 1980, esp. p. 13-41.<br />

S Washton Long, op. dl. (note 7), p. 75-87; Eadem,<br />

'Expressionism, abstraction, and the scarch for<br />

Utopia in Germany', The spiritual in art, op. cit.<br />

(note 7), p. 201-217; P- Weiss, Kandinsky and old<br />

Russia; the artistas ethnographer and shaman, New<br />

Haven, London 1995.<br />

9 Weiss, of. cit. {note 6).<br />

jo Weiss, op. cit. (note 6); R. Heller, 'Kandinsky and<br />

Lraditions apocalyptic'. Art Journal (Spring 1983),<br />

p. 19-26.<br />

ii Washton Long, op, cit. (note 7), p. 13-41; John E.<br />

Bowlt, 'Vasilii Kandinsky: the Russian connection',<br />

in: J. E. Bowlt, R.-C. Washton Long (eds.), Thelife<br />

of Vasilii Kandinsky in Russian art; a study of On the<br />

spiritual in art, Newtonvillc Mass. 1980, p. 2-41;<br />

Ringbom, op. cit. (note 5), chapter v; M. Dabrowski,<br />

exh. cat, New York (The Museum of. Modern Art),<br />

Los Angeles (Gounty Museum of Art), Kandinsky;<br />

compositions, New York 1995, p. 17.<br />

12 E. Hüttinger, 'Giorgione- und Lconardo Kult', in:<br />

R. Baucr et al., Fin de siècle; zu Literdtur und Kunst<br />

der Jahrhundertwende, Frankfurtam Main 1977,<br />

p. 143-169; I. Gerards, E. van Uitcrt, 'JanToorop;<br />

een "fabuleuze bevatrdijkheid": het symbolistische<br />

scheppen', Jong Holland) (1:989), i, p. 8-9; R. A.<br />

Turner, Inventing Leonardo, Berkeley, Los Angeles<br />

1994, p. 100-149.<br />

13 D. Merczhkovsky, Voskressie bogi: l.eonardo Da<br />

Vind, 1901.<br />

14 Ringbom, op. cit. (note 5), p. 175; Heller, op. cit.<br />

(note 10), p. 22-23.<br />

15 The English quotation is froni D. Merejcovski,<br />

The romance ofl.eona.rdo da Vind (translated by<br />

B. Guilbert Guerney), New York 1931, p. 172-173.<br />

In the German translat-ion used by Kandinsky this<br />

note read as follows: 'Er sprach davon, wie der<br />

Kiinsrlcr die Kompositionen zu seinen Bildern<br />

entwerfen soll, und führte uns als Beispiel die von<br />

ihm geplante Darstellung der Sintfiuc an:<br />

"Von Bliezen erleuchrete Wirbel und<br />

Wassers c rudel. Von einer \Vasserhosc fortgerissenc<br />

Aste rïesengrosser Eichen, an die sich Menschen<br />

festldammern. Schwimmende Trümmer von<br />

Hausgeraten, auf denen sich Menschen zu retten<br />

stichen. Herdcn von Vierfüsslern aut hochcbenen,<br />

von allen Seiren von Wasser bedroht; die Tierc<br />

steigen aufeinander, crdrücken und zerstampfen<br />

eïnander. Ein Hauren von Menschen, die den<br />

Ictzten Elecken Erde mie Waffcn gegen Raubtiere<br />

verteidigcn; die eincn ringen die Ha'nde und<br />

heissen sie so, dass Blut m'esst, andere halten sich<br />

die Ohren zu, um das Gedröhneder Donner nicht<br />

zu horen, wahrend andere die Augc schliessen und<br />

noch obendreln beide Ha'nde übercinanderlegen<br />

und sie so gcgen die Augcnlider pressen, um den<br />

nahcnden Tod nicht zu sehen. Andere begehen<br />

Selbstmord: sie erdrosscln sich, erstcchen sich mit<br />

den Schwettcrn, oder springen von den Klippen in<br />

die Hut. Mütter crgreifen, Gott verfltichend, ihre<br />

Kinder, und zerschcllcn ihre Köpfc an den Felsen.<br />

Derwescnde Leichen schwimmen auf der<br />

Oberflachc; sic stossen zusammen und prallen<br />

voneinander ab, wie mie Luft gefüllte Balie. Vogel<br />

lassen sich auf den Leichen nïeder, oder fallen<br />

etschöpfe auf die noch lebenden Menschen und<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S COMPI. F.TION OF I. E ON AH DO S DELUCÏE 467


Tiere herab, da sie keinen andern Platz zum<br />

Ausruhen finden können."' Alihough I have not<br />

been ablc ro asccrcain the exact date of die first<br />

edïtïon of this German translation, it must have<br />

been published before 1910. The quotanon here is<br />

from the unaltered 1912 edition: D. Mereschkowski,<br />

Leonardo da Vind; historischer Roman<br />

(übersetzt von A. Eliasberg), Mutiich 1922 (33. bis<br />

37. Auflage), p. 169.<br />

16 Kandinsky, op. cit. (note 2), p. 85.<br />

17 According to Washton Long, op. cit. (note 7),<br />

p. 95-90, Kandinsky was inspired to deal with this<br />

theme by Steiner and by an article of Ivanov about<br />

the païntings of Curlionis.<br />

18 'Hier sind verschiedene gegensiandliche Formcn<br />

gcgcben, die teilweise lustig sind {es machte mir<br />

Spass, die ernsten Formcn mit lustigen ausseren<br />

Ausdrücken zu vermengen): Akte, Arche, Tiere,<br />

Palmen, Blitze, Regen usw.'; Kandinsky, op. cit.<br />

(note 4), p. xxxv.<br />

19 Odilon Redon, for example, also feit a gteat<br />

admiration for Leonardo; Gerards and Van Uitert,<br />

op. cit. (note 12), p. 8. For the relationship between<br />

Redon and Kandinsky, sec Washton Long, op. cit.<br />

(note 7), p. 45-46.<br />

zo Turner, op. cit. (note 12), esp. p. 140 ff. and<br />

K. Clark, Catalogus of the Leonardo drawings at<br />

Windsor, 2 vols., Cambridge 1935, p. 14-15.<br />

21 W. Pater, The Renaissance studies in art andpoetry,<br />

I.ondon 1912, p. 97 (first edition: Studies in the<br />

h/story of the Renaissance, London 1873).<br />

22 'Aller dans Ie sens de la nature plus loin que Ia<br />

nature mcmc, voila son rêve. C'est l'ambition d'un<br />

Prométhée de sang-froïd qui, au lieu d'ïnsulter<br />

Jupiter, étudie ses ceuvres ponr lui en de'robct Ie<br />

secret. Artiste, il ne demande a la scïence que la<br />

puissance de crécr, de donncr Ia vie': G. Séailles.<br />

1452-1510: Léonard df Vind; l'artiste etlesavant;<br />

essai de biographie psychologtqiie. Paris 1892,<br />

p. 457-462.<br />

23 'comme poésie descripnve, comme tendu des<br />

paysages, oti des effets d'atmosphère et de lurnSère,<br />

la littcrature italienne du xvie siècle n'a rien<br />

produit de supérieur': L. Müntz, Léonard de Vind;<br />

l'artiste, lepenseur, lesavant, Paris 1899, p. 286-88.<br />

24 K. Trauman Steinitz, Leonardo Da Vincis Trattato<br />

della Pittura = Treatise onpainting: a bibliography of<br />

theprintededitions, 1651-1956[...], Copenhagen<br />

1958.<br />

25 Jcan Paul Richter, The literary works of Leonardo da<br />

Vind, compiled and editedfrom the orïginal<br />

manuscript!, 2 vols., London 1883, vol. I, p. 305-314.<br />

26 The order was founded in 1890 after Péladan had<br />

rctired from the Ordre de ia Rose + Croix -+•<br />

468 Paul aul van oen Akkei<br />

Kabbatistiqife, of which hc was the cofoundct in<br />

1888; see G. Imanse, J. Steen, 'Achtergronden van<br />

het Symbolisme', exh. cat. The Hague (Haags<br />

Gemeentemuseum), Kunstenaren der idee.<br />

Symbolistische tendenzen in Nederland,<br />

ca. 1880-1930, The Hague 1978, p. 26-28; R. Pmcus-<br />

Wittcn, Occult symbolism in France;Joséphin<br />

Péladan and the salons de ia Rose+Croix, New York,<br />

London 1976.<br />

27 Kandinsky, op. cit. (note 2), p. 136. See also<br />

Wasliton Long, op. cit. (note 7), p. 29-30,163-164.<br />

28 J. Péladan (ed.), Léonard de Vind; ïextes choisis.<br />

Pensees, théories, préceptes, fables etfacéties, Paris<br />

1907; idem, Traite de lapeintare, traduit<br />

mtégralementpour la premiere fois en francais [...]<br />

parPéladan, Paris 1910; idem, Traite du paysage.<br />

Iraduit pour L: première fois en francais [...] par<br />

Péladan, Paris 1910.<br />

29 'Les anciens sentalent si profondément la nature,<br />

qu'ils l'ont animée, personifiée et peuplée d'êtres<br />

invisibles': Péladan, Traite du paysage, op. cit. (note<br />

28), p. 8.<br />

30 'Tout paysage est susceptible de signifier le.s<br />

gradations sentimentales, qui descendent de<br />

l'allégresse la plus solairc au dcscspoir Ie plus<br />

sombre: ce n'est qu'une qnestion de lumière, de<br />

tonalitcs et de sensibilité chez l'artiste': Péladan.<br />

Traite du paysage, op. cit. (note 28), p. 9.<br />

31 Richter, op. cit. (note zj).<br />

32 Ibidem, p. xiii-xïx.<br />

33 For a discussion of Kandinsky's Composttions, see<br />

Washton Long, op. cit. (note 7), p. 108-122 and<br />

Dabrowski, op. cit. (note n). Kandinsky could also<br />

have come across the term 'composition' in the text<br />

editions by Péladan, who had translatcd the<br />

sectïons concerned nnder the headingof'De la<br />

Composition'. Dabrowski (p. 19-20) follows othet<br />

authors in stating that the word 'Composition<br />

tefcrs to the musical term. My interpretation does<br />

not necessarily conflicf with this.<br />

34 The list of subscribers includcs amongst othcrs the<br />

name of the Dutch pain ter AlmaTadema; Richter,<br />

op. cit. (note 25), p. vii-xn.<br />

35 E. Ronveyre (ed.), Études et dessins sur l'atmosphère,<br />

vol. 5 of Feuillets inédits, reproduit! d'apr'es les<br />

originaux comervés a la B/blwThèqm' du Chateau de<br />

Windsor, 23 vols., Paris 1901. Frorn the catalogue of<br />

1899 by Müntz, op. cit. (note 23), p. 529-542, it can<br />

be deduced that therewere 110 reptoductions of the<br />

deluge and storm drawings prior to 1899, exccpt for<br />

a few in Richter, op. cit. (note 25), ills. xxxiv,<br />

xxxv, xxix (and related drawings, ills. xxxvixxxvni,<br />

xi., i.xiv).They werc not included in the<br />

reproductions published in 1879 on the occasion of


the Windsor drawing exhibirion (1878-1879) in the<br />

Grosvenor Gallery (London), or in Leonardo da<br />

Vinci, 60 Handzeichnungen, Dornach (Braun &<br />

Cic; undated), or in tbc Vasari Society's<br />

Reproductions published betwecn 1910-191). Even in<br />

1911 reproductions could still only bc found in<br />

Rouveyre's publicatioo as can be concludcd from<br />

the fitst complete, hut not illusirated catalogue of<br />

all the Windsor drawïngs published by W. von<br />

SeidHtz, 'l discgni di Leonardo da Vinci a<br />

Windsor', L'arte; rivista di storia dell'arte medioevale<br />

e moderna e d'arte decorativa, xiv (1911), p. 269-2.89.<br />

Berenson roo did not include reproductions in The<br />

Drawings of the b'lorentine Painters, vol. 2, London<br />

1903, p. 67. It was only at the beginning of the<br />

1930$ that one comes across new reproductions, for<br />

instance in A. E. Popham, Jtalian drawings<br />

exhibïted at the Royal Academy, Burlington House,<br />

London 1950, Oxford 1931, p. 18-28, and Clark, op.<br />

cit. (note 20).<br />

36 Kandinsky, op. cit. (note 2), for instance p. 43 and<br />

p. 106-107.<br />

37 Berenson, op. cit. (note 35), p. 165.<br />

38 'Sie Ssr vielmchr in der Lufr schwebend und sieht<br />

wie von Dampt umgeben aus': Kandinsk}', op. cit.<br />

(note 4), p. xxxvii. For Leonardo's text, sec Richter,<br />

op. cit. (note 25), p. 310-312.<br />

KAND<strong>IN</strong>SKY S COMPLF, TION OF LEONARDO S DEL U G F. 469

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