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Study for the cover of der Blaue Reiter Almanac, 1911 is the paiting Libby used to track down Nicholas Parsons.

As I recall, that Kandinsky was a minor oil sketch -- likely borrowed for the film from a private collection. Scanning the film's credits might clue you in a bit more, but that's not a sure bet.

Because it is not a substantial oil, you probably won't have luck tracking down the name or location. Thousands of Kandinsky paintings and sketches are owned by private collectors all over the world -- therefore the information about those works is kept private.

The character of Nick did state that the painting was from Kandinsky's Blue Rider period.

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Study for the cover of der Blaue Reiter Almanac, 1911 is the painting Libby Parsons used to track her husband Nicholas to New Orleans.

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14y ago
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der Blaue Reiter Almanac

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12y ago
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Q: What Kandinsky painting is in the movie Double Jeopardy?
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Who was the artist that Nick Parsons collected in the movie Double Jeopardy?

Kandinsky -- especially the Blue Rider period.


What movie made the Fifth Amendment famous?

Double Jeopardy


Where was the movie Double Jeopardy filmed to Widbey Island?

it was filmed on the island


What character does Tommy Lee Jones play in the movie Double Jeopardy?

In the movie Double Jeopardy, Tommy Lee Jones plays the parole officer under the character name Travis Lehman. He starrs alongside Ashley Judd and Bruce Greenwood.


In the movie Six Degrees of Separation what was Sutherland's quote from Kandinsky?

It's not a quote from Kandinsky; it's just a description of the Kandinsky painting, which sets up the main theme of the play (chaos and order, two sides, two faces, of the same thing). And it's actually Paul who says it (Will Smith's character), not Flan (Sutherland's character), although Flan/Sutherland may have repeated it during the course of the play/movie. Anyway, the line is "The Kandinsky! -- that's a double. It's painted on either side," during the scene in which Paul bursts into their apartment, all bloodied up. And then again at the very end of the play: "The Kandinsky's painted on two sides." Sutherland's character does claim to quote Kandinsky during a cocktail party and I've been looking for the exact verbiage myself. It goes something like this: "It is clear that the choice of object that is one of the elements in the harmony of form must be decided only by a corresponding vibration in the human soul."