Jackson Arn
The modern artists wanted to be musicians. So it seems, at least,
judging from the titles of their paintings. The “Nocturnes” painted by James
McNeill Whistler toward the end of the 19th century have as much, if not more,
to do with Chopin’s solo piano compositions of the same name than with the
night time scenes they depict. Paul Klee’s geometric abstraction, Polyphony
(1932), bespeaks a boundless passion for Bach’s polyphonic choral works. Later
avant-garde masterpieces gloried in the popular jazz music of the day, from
Stuart Davis’s Swing Landscape (1938) to Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie
(1942–43) to Henri Matisse’s Jazz Suite (1947). A list of modern-art milestones
almost reads like a timeline of Western music.
The visual arts have always been influenced by music, and vice
versa. From the late 19th century to the middle of the 20th century, however,
Western artists sought something more than the usual symbiosis between art
forms. They strained to evoke music’s rhythms, structures, and tones in their
work—in short, to transform oneart form into another. If the avant-garde
project of merging painting with music never quite achieved its goals or made
complete sense to begin with, so much the better—few quixotic quests have
failed so interestingly.
You can’t talk about music and modernism without mentioning Walter
Pater, the prolific 19th-century man of letters who is largely remembered for a
single sentence he wrote in 1877: “All art constantly aspires towards the
condition of music.” One interpretation of Pater’s observation is that music is
the only art whose form and content are not just inseparable, but the same.
This makes music fundamentally different from traditional Western painting, in
which the same content can take hundreds of forms. The reason painting and
music differ, Pater went on to argue, is that painting is mimetic (i.e., it
tries to approximate the appearance of the physical world), and music is not.
Pater was writing at the dawn of the modern art revolution when
literal representation was being purged from art and literature like pests from
an old, dirty house. Abstract painters, abandoning the notion of a subject in
favor of pure form, needed some rationale for their experiments. Small wonder
so many of them looked to music.
To study the modern canon closely is to discover a host of
ingenious solutions to an unsolvable problem: how to recreate visually what
music does sonically. Swiss-born Paul Klee had been a violin prodigy before he
turned to paint, but his knowledge of music animates virtually all of his best
work. A dense, kinetic composition like May Picture (1925) feels like the
oil-on-cardboard version of a Baroque counterpoint, with Klee’s bright squares
providing the same a-ha! moment as the voices of a chorus sliding above and
below one another.
In the 1910s, Klee was a loyal member of The Blue Rider, a group
that also included Franz Marc, Albert Bloch, and Wassily Kandinsky. Though
Kandinsky did not coin the word “synesthesia,” he helped popularize it by
arguing—passionately, if not always coherently—that the greatest art should
foster an overwhelming, multisensory experience in the viewer………..
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-music-motivated-artists-matisse-kandinsky-reinvent-painting?utm_medium=email&utm_source=17069078-newsletter-editorial-daily-05-31-19&utm_campaign=editorial-rail&utm_content=st-V
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