Georges Braque

The Clarinet

Summer–Fall 1912

The Clarinet was probably executed in the late summer of 1912, during the waning moments of Analytic Cubism. Characteristic of this period are the oval format, which frees the canvas from the stringencies of corners, the appearance of letters within the image, and the use of imitation wood grain as trompe l’oeil (a technique Georges Braque introduced into the Cubist repertory). The image is paler and less strongly articulated than that of Pablo Picasso’s The Poet of the previous summer; the structure of planes is more compact and produces a shallower picture space. The planes, because they are more consistently parallel to the picture plane than before, suggest the flat surfaces of papier collé. Braque’s incorporation of sand into certain areas of his pigment, an innovation of this transitional period, enhances the differentiation of surfaces created by the variations of brushstrokes and increases the subtleties of coloration. The use of sand accords with Braque’s conviction that tactile qualities define space. Despite this emphasis on materiality the image remains evanescent.

On view

Artist Georges Braque
Original Title La Clarinette
Date Summer–Fall 1912
Medium Oil with sand on canvas
Dimensions 91.4 x 64.5 cm
Credit line Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice (Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York)
Accession 76.2553 PG 7
Collection Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Type Painting

Copy caption

On view


Other artworks

Claire Falkenstein

Untitled

ca. 1956

Not on View