Kandinsky 'Composition8' abstract Art print on vintage feel cotton T shirt.

Kandinsky 'Composition8' abstract Art print on vintage feel cotton T shirt.

Carolina Blue / S
$30.00
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Kandinsky 'Composition8' abstract Art print on vintage feel cotton T shirt.

Kandinsky 'Composition8' abstract Art print on vintage feel cotton T shirt.

$30.00
Color
Size
A soft, vintage-feel cotton tee printed with an abstract, artful composition. The artwork blends playful geometrics, drifting lines, and warm color pops to create a wearable piece of contemporary art. Lightweight enough for layering, yet substantial in feel, this shirt carries a lived-in look from the first wear. It sits naturally in everyday life — worn to gallery openings, coffee dates, or afternoons sketching in the park — and reads as a quiet statement for anyone who loves modern art and subtle style. The natural cotton and slightly flecked “Natural” option add character while the clean crew neckline and tubular construction keep the silhouette simple and unfussy.

Product features
- Thicker vintage-feel cotton for long-lasting comfort
- Runs slightly larger for relaxed, roomy fit
- Seamless tubular knit reduces waste and smooths the silhouette
- Ribbed knit collar and shoulder tape keep shape and prevent stretching
- OEKO-TEX® certified, tear-away label, and ethically sourced US cotton

Care instructions
- Machine wash: cold (max 30C or 90F)
- Non-chlorine: bleach as needed
- Do not tumble dry
- Do not iron
- Do not dryclean

About This Print

Kandinsky. Composition 8. 1923. Wassily Kandinsky believed that colour could make you feel the way music does. Not represent something. Not illustrate a story. Just — feel. A triangle could be aggressive. Yellow could be anxious. Blue could pull you inward, toward something quiet and deep. Composition 8 is the theory made visible. Painted at the Bauhaus in 1923, it's a collision of circles, lines, and angles that shouldn't work — and absolutely does. Every element is deliberate. Every relationship between shapes is a calculated emotional argument. Kandinsky called this kind of painting 'inner necessity.' The idea that art isn't decoration. It's transmission. He was the first person to paint a purely abstract work. Everything that came after — every abstract expressionist, every minimalist, every designer who ever chose a colour for a reason — owes him something. For those who feel colour.

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