The crossover between visual and performing arts is not
uncommon. But in his championing of Cubism, Picasso found his inspiration to
paint in violins.
Art historians know all about Picasso. They
understand his oeuvre (“Cubism,” primarily), his various periods (Blue, Rose,
Analytic Cubism, Synthetic Cubism), and the fact he frequently incorporated
violins and guitars into several of his paintings.
But not everyone is a student of visual
art. If that’s your jam, or more accurately a lack thereof, this article is for
you.
First, why all the disjointed faces and
objects in his Cubist works? Well, in simplest terms it’s as if his eye took a
picture of things (faces, violins, grapes, bottles, etc.) from different
angles, then he pasted those pictures into a collage. The idea is to represent
something in a more complete, multidimensional way – from different
perspectives – within the confines of the two-dimensional medium of a canvas.
Next question: Where do violins, and more
broadly, music fit into this? The fine
stringed instruments are variously depicted with guitars, humans, bottles, and
grapes in several Picasso works. But don’t expect to see a complete violin – he
really only painted parts, usually the f-holes, sometimes the headstock, the
curved body, and parallel lines meant to represent the strings. This is of
course part of how Cubism works. Art historians say his use of violins are to
evoke less about the instrument and more about the sounds, the movement of
music that brings a type of life to the painting.
It bears noting that this then disqualifies
Picasso’s work from being considered abstract. It might require study to find
the objects, or parts of objects, in his work. But those violin parts are
there, not some splotches of paint that evoke more of a mood than an actual
Stradivarius.
Some of the most recognized Picasso works
featuring imagery of fine violins
are:
Violin (1911-1912), now in
the Kroeller-Muller Museum in Otterlo, Netherlands
Man with a Violin (1911-1912),
now in the Philadelphia Museum of Art
Violin (1912), now in the
Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow, Russia
Violin and Grapes (1912),
now in the Museum of Modern Art, New York
Guitar and Violin
(1912-1913), now in the State Museum of New Western Art, Moscow, Russia
Three Musicians (1921), now
seen in the Philadelphia Museum of Art: the other two musicians in the painting
seem to be holding a clarinet or recorder, and a keyboard instrument, perhaps a
version of an accordion.
It should be noted that Violin and Candlestick (1910), now in
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, was painted by fellow Cubist, Georges
Braque, whose work is very similar to that of Picasso. The two considered
themselves colleagues. Another Cubist who incorporated musical instruments was
Jean Metzinger in his Violon et Flute
(1918).
So if you’re more oriented to music, there
is some indication that Cubism presaged or is otherwise represented in jazz
phrasings (see Parker, Coltrane, and Monk). The balletic composition of Erik
Satie, Parade (1917), is arguably a
Cubist work. Some types of architecture from the 20th century – from
Le Corbusier to Libeskind to Gehry – trace to Cubism. The iconic Gehry concert
halls in Los Angeles (Walt Disney) and Chicago (Prizker Pavilion) easily relate
to Picasso’s work.
The crossovers between art forms are
interesting to consider. It’s interesting to consider how violins seem to be a
string that runs through much of it.
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