A Moving Still Life, from The Blue Guitar

Description

Since the early 1960s, David Hockney has sought ways to meld his modern aesthetic style with highly personalized subject matter. He started by inserting fragments of poems into his paintings, as, for example, in We Two Boys Together Clinging (1961), which integrates two lines from a Walt Whitman poem of the same title. Fifteen years later, inspired by Wallace Stevens’s “The Man with the Blue Guitar” (1937), with its themes of representation and imaginative transformation, Hockney made 10 drawings in colored inks and crayons. With the aid of master printer Aldo Crommelynck those drawings were converted into 20 mixed intaglio prints using a color-etching process initially developed for Pablo Picasso.

While not a literal illustration of Stevens’s poem, the print series The Blue Guitar interprets its themes in visual terms, and most of the images show Hockney’s love of Picasso. The print Old Guitarist juxtaposes the Art Institute’s famous painting of 1903–04 (1926.253) with later Picasso iconography. Other sheets likewise contrast Picasso’s different phases within the same image; throughout the series, Hockney distinguishes the disparate styles by using different colors.

It is perhaps Hockney’s Blue Guitar that has perpetuated the idea that Wallace Stevens was similarly inspired by Picasso’s Old Guitarist. Although Stevens was familiar with modern art and no doubt saw the painting when it was exhibited at the Wadsworth Atheneum in 1934, he insisted that no one picture inspired his famous poem.

A Moving Still Life, from The Blue Guitar

David Hockney

1976–77

Accession Number

131315

Medium

Color etching and aquatint from two copper plates on white wove paper

Dimensions

Plate: 34.5 × 42.5 cm (13 5/8 × 16 3/4 in.); Sheet: 52.5 × 46 cm (20 11/16 × 18 1/8 in.)

Classification

etching

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Mrs. Solomon B. Smith Memorial Fund

Background & Context

Background Story

David Hockneys A Moving Still Life from The Blue Guitar suite of 1976-77 is a color etching and aquatint that takes one of the oldest genres in Western art and sets it in motion, literally and conceptually. The title itself is a paradox: a still life that moves violates the very definition of the genre, which takes its name from the stasis of its objects. Hockney resolves the paradox through the Cubist-derived multiple viewpoints that characterize his work of this period, showing the objects on the table from several angles simultaneously so that they appear to rotate around their own axes. The still life elements are rendered in the flattened perspective and rich colors that Hockney had developed through his engagement with Cubism and his study of Chinese scroll painting, both of which offer alternatives to the single-point perspective that had governed Western still life since the Renaissance. The two-plate color etching and aquatint technique produces areas of saturated color alongside areas of delicate tonal gradation, allowing Hockney to suggest the texture and weight of fruit, ceramics, and fabric with an economy that painting would require many more layers to achieve. The paradox of the title echoes the central paradox of Wallace Stevenss poem The Man with the Blue Guitar, which asks whether art should depict things as they are or as they are changed by the act of representation.

Cultural Impact

A Moving Still Life is one of the most conceptually witty prints in Hockneys Blue Guitar suite, demonstrating that still life could be renewed as a genre by applying Cubist multiple viewpoint techniques. The suite as a whole expanded the philosophical and technical possibilities of contemporary printmaking.

Why It Matters

A color etching from Hockneys Blue Guitar suite that sets the still life genre in visual motion through Cubist multiple viewpoints, resolving the paradox of a moving still life while illustrating Wallace Stevenss theme of art as transformation.