The representation of an object, in itself (the objectivity as the aim of the representation), is something that has nothing to do with art, although the use of representation in a work of art does not rule out the possibility of its being of a high artistic order. For the Suprematist, therefore, the proper means is the one that provides the fullest expression of pure feeling and ignores the habitually accepted object. The object in itself is meaningless to him; and the ideas of the conscious mind are worthless. Feeling is the decisive factor.... and thus art arrives at non-objective representation – at Suprematism.


In: Artists on Art; from the 14th – 20th centuries, ed. by Robert Goldwater and Marco Treves; Pantheon Books, 1972, London, pp. 452


The representation of an object, in itself (the objectivity as the aim of the representation), is something that has nothing to do with art, although ...

The representation of an object, in itself (the objectivity as the aim of the representation), is something that has nothing to do with art, although ...

The representation of an object, in itself (the objectivity as the aim of the representation), is something that has nothing to do with art, although ...

The representation of an object, in itself (the objectivity as the aim of the representation), is something that has nothing to do with art, although ...