Black Square — Malevich, framed
Kazimir Malevich's 1915 abstraction that ended representation, taken from Wikimedia Commons CC0 scan, framed and ready to hang.
Painted in 1915, Black Square is the moment figurative painting ended and abstraction took over. A perfect black square on a white ground — no decoration, no reference, no compromise. Malevich called it "the zero of form." For decades the painting was scandalous, unreadable, a provocation. That provocation became canon. Museums dedicated walls to the void. What looked like nothing became everything.
This is reproduced from a Wikimedia Commons CC0 archive scan at full resolution, printed on archival fine art paper and framed in solid wood.
THE PRINT
- 30×30 cm / 12×12", 40×40 cm / 16×16", 50×50 cm / 20×20", or 70×70 cm / 28×28" in your choice of 4 solid wood frame colours, square format
- Archival giclée on 200gsm Enhanced Matte fine art paper, mounted under shatterproof acrylic glazing
- Printed and framed to order by our accredited partner
THE WORK
- Artist: Kazimir Malevich (1879–1935)
- Year: 1915
- Collection: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
- Source: Wikimedia Commons · CC0 archive scan
SHIPPING
- Free shipping worldwide
- Printed locally to you — no customs fees, no surprise charges at delivery
- Delivery estimate shown at checkout
Questions? Email us at theplainsight@hotmail.com.