ABSTRACT

This collection of essays by musicologists and art historians explores the reciprocal influences between music and painting during the nineteenth century, a critical period of gestation when instrumental music was identified as the paradigmatic expressive art and theoretically aligned with painting in the formulation ut pictura musica (as with music, so with painting). Under music's influence, painting approached the threshold of abstraction; concurrently many composers cultivated pictorial effects in their music. Individual essays address such themes as visualization in music, the literary vs. pictorial basis of the symphonic poem, musical pictorialism in painting and lithography, and the influence of Wagner on the visual arts. In these and other ways, both composers and painters actively participated in interarts discourses in seeking to redefine the very identity and aims of their art. Also includes 17 musical examples.

chapter |21 pages

“From the Other Side”

An Introduction

chapter |24 pages

The New Paragone

Paradoxes and Contradictions of Pictorial Musicalism

chapter |15 pages

Seeing Music

Visuality in the Friendship of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Carl Friedrich Zelter

chapter |37 pages

Fingal's Cave and Ossian's Dream

Music, Image, and Phantasmagoric Audition

chapter |17 pages

Painted Responses to Music

The Landscapes of Corot and Monet

chapter |23 pages

In the Toils of Queen Omphale

Saint-Saëns's Painterly Refiguration of the Symphonic Poem

chapter |33 pages

Painting Around the Piano

Fantin-Latour, Wagnerism, and the Musical in Art

chapter |31 pages

Van Gogh in Nuenen and Paris

The Origins of a Musical Paradigm for Painting

chapter |17 pages

Music to Our Ears?

Munch's Scream and Romantic Music Theory