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Posts Tagged ‘Georges Braque’

It’s a Clarinet - Our Walks Go Musical in London!

Monday, October 12th, 2009

In our London walks of Art blog earlier we began looking at a painting inside the States of Flux wing at Tate Modern that was painted in 1911 by the French painter Georges Braque.

From what, at first, seemed to be a meaningless jumble of lines and distorted shapes we were able to pull forth the shape of the bottle and show how the mantra we use time and again on our London walks - LOOK  ALL AROUND - can be used to really look closely at the painting in question Clarinet and Bottle of Rum on a Mantlepiece.

Today we are going to ease the shape of the clarinet from the painting.

As we explained in the earlier blog, on the body of the bottle can be seen the letters RH and the start of the letter U. These are the first three letters of the French word for rum.

A little way beneath these letters to the right you can see three small round dots to the right of which is the clearly distinguishable mouth piece of a musical instrument, in this case the mouth piece of the clarinet.

This stretched under the bottle of rum on the other side of which are two circular shapes that form the trumpet of the clarinet.

The musical aspect of the painting is further emphasised by the black curls, which could be musical clefts or notes.

Also quite the leters VALSE can be seen on the painting, the French word for Waltz.

So the second object, the clarinet, has now been teased from the painting. We shall return to the painting one last time on the morning to seek the mantlepiece, the final part of the title.

Meanwhile, you could have a look at our Jack the Ripper Tour that takes place seven chilling nights a week and which explores the East End of London. Or you could simply return to our main London walks page.

Walks, London and the Mantlepiece.

Friday, October 9th, 2009

We’re really getting into our Walks of London Art blogs. Hopefully you are too and hopefully you are starting to see that our London walks mantra of  - LOOK EVERYWHERE - especially makes sense when you look at a work of modern art.

Today we’re still in the States of Flux wing at Tate Modern teasing little bits out of Clarinet and Bottle of Rum on a Mantlepiece, painted in 1911  by the pioneer of the cubist movement Georges Braque.

We were talking earlier about how our various London walks really do make people look at London. Not just see London, but really look at it. Let’s continue this theme with a final look at Braque’s 1911 painting.

So far we have teased out the form of the bottle of rum and the clarinet from the painting.

Today we are going to find the mantlepiece!

Looking to the bottom left corner of the painting you find the start of two thick black lines that run diagonally from left to right across the painting and end towards its top right corner.

These form the shape of the mantlepice.

Furthermore, towards the bottom light corner, there is a curved shape that could be a corbel or a mantlepiece support.

So by looking at these lines we can now see that a clarinet and a bottle of rum do, indeed, sit on a mantlepiece and thus have managed to locate the three objects for items mentioned in the title of the painting.

But why did Georges Braque choose to depict his subjects in such a distorted and disjointed fashion?

Why, if he wanted to paint a clarinet and a bottle of rum on a mantlepiece didn’t he simply do so as a still life and paint them full on?

The solution lies in the era when the painting was done. In the early years of the 20th century cameras were starting to be mass produced and photographs were beginning to replace paintings as a means of showing reality and every day life to people.

Painters felt themselves freed from the constraints of the past. No longer did they have to be restrained by the need to present depth, shade and colour. Instead they could aim at bringing a new perspective to painting and this was the style that Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso pioneered.

They would dissect their subjects, analyse them and then re-assemble them in an abstract form that presented the viewer with multiple perspectives and views of the same object or subject.

So, in the case of Clarinet and Bottle of Rum on a Mantlepiece we are seeing the three objects from multiple angles. We are looking down at the mantlepiece from above, looking at it sideways on, or even looking up at it from below. We are being given the opportunity to view the objects from multiple angles all at the same time.

This was the style that Picasso and Braque Pioneered.

In 1908 the French art critic Louis Vauxcelles described one of Georges Braque’s paintings as “full of little cubes.” The phrase caught on and the movement that Braque and Picasso has pioneered became universally known as Cubism.

So we end out look at the painting by George Braque in Tate Modern.

This weekend you can join Richard on one of his London Ghost Walks, or you can join one of our hugely popular Jack the Ripper Tours that explore the darker recesses of London’s East End.