Pablo Picasso
Spanish, 1881-1973
Three Musicians, Fontainebleau, summer 1921
Oil on canvas, 6' 7" x 7' 3 3/4"
Mrs. Simon Guggenheim Fund
Gallery label text, 2006:
The three musicians and dog conjure a bygone period of bohemian life,
enjoyed here by Picasso in the guise of a Harlequin flanked by two
figures who may represent poetfriends of the artist's: Guillaume
Apollinaire, who was recently deceased, and Max Jacob. The patterned
flatness of the work is derived from cutandpasted paper, and stands
in stark contrast to the sculptural monumentality of Picasso's Three
Women at the Spring, also painted in the summer of 1921.
Publication excerpt, The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA Highlights, New
York: The Museum of Modern Art, revised 2004, originally published
1999, p. 101:
At the left of a bare and boxlike space, a masked Pierrot plays the clarinet. At the right, a singing monk holds sheet music. And in the center, strumming a guitar, is a Harlequin, in Picasso's art a recurring stand-in for the artist himself.
Pierrot and Harlequin are stock characters in the old Italian comic theater known as commedia dell'arte, a familiar theme in Picasso's work. The painting, then, has a whimsical side, epitomized by the near-invisible dog: its head is about halfway up the canvas on the left, one of several subtle browns, and we can also make out front paws, a hind leg, and a jaunty tail popping up between Harlequin's legs. Overall, though, the work's somber background and large size make the musicians a solemn, even majestic trio.
The intricate, jigsaw-puzzle-like composition sums up the Synthetic Cubist style, the flat planes of unshaded color recalling the cutout and pasted paper forms with which the style began. These overlapping shapes are at their most complex at the center of the picture, which is also where the lightest hues are concentrated, so that an aura of darkness surrounds a brighter center. Along with the frontal poses of the figures, this creates a feeling of gravity and monumentality, and gives Three Musicians a mysterious, otherworldly air.
