We All Got Beautiful Your a Perfect Work of Art

"Every bit music is the verse of sound, so is painting the poetry of sight," James McNeil Whistler once wrote. He understood that when the art world joins forces with the music industry, everyone is a winner. Take Lady Gaga and Jeff Koons on her hit album ArtPop, for example; the duo seemed similar a perfect match, merging the Pop Fine art master with the pop music maven.

Related: Who Said This—Lady Gaga or Jeff Koons?

Encounter beneath which are the pinnacle 10 tracks every fine art lover should know (in no particular gild).

A still from Jay Z's video "Picasso Baby."

A still from Jay Z'southward video "Picasso Baby." Courtesy of YouTube.

1. Jay Z, "Picasso Babe" (2013)
Marina Abramović was just one of the many art earth figures to team up with hip hop mogul Jay Z for the music video for his 2013 single, which makes references to Art Basel, the Tate Modern, Jeff Koons, and Leonardo da Vinci, amidst artists and art institutions. Jay Z as well compares his ain fame to that of prolific painter and sculptor Pablo Picasso, rapping "What's it gonna have/For me to go/For y'all to see/I'm the modern day Pablo/Picasso baby."

Filmed at Chelsea's Pace Gallery, the video'due south popular culture/operation art mash-up attracted a crowd of celebrities and fans akin.Jay Z performed the song on loop throughout the six-hr-long shoot, inspired by Abramović'south 2010 performance, The Artist is Nowadays, where she sat silently at New York'due south Museum of Modernistic Art for 736 hours.

A controversy arose two years later, all the same, when Abramović claimed thatJay Z had never made good on his promise to donate to her institution in Hudson, New York, in exchange for her participation. However, information technology turned out that Jay Z keeps his receipts: The hip-hop mogul defended himself against Abramović's accusation with proof of his donation. For her part, the performance creative person blamed her staff for the misunderstanding.

Courtesy of YouTube.

Courtesy of YouTube.

2. The Creation, "Painter Man" (1966)
British band the Creation released this song, which chronicles the struggles of a man looking to make it as a painter, in 1966, a twelvemonth prior to their album,Nosotros Are Paintermen. Boney Yard. afterward did a magical cover of the song in 1978.

The tune is about an aspiring creative person, who "went to college, studied arts," but laments "studied hard, gettin' my degree/Merely no one seemed to discover me." Forced into advertizement and cartoons to make a living, the singer tin can't assistance just conclude that "classic fine art has had it'due south day." Every bit depressing equally the words are, it's best non to overthink the lyrics of this catchy tune and simply enjoy it.

Peter Zimmerman. Unforgettable (2010). Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

Peter Zimmerman. Unforgettable (2010). Courtesy of Flickr via Artistic Commons.

3. Nat King Cole, "Mona Lisa" (1950)
Nat King Cole ruled the charts in the 1950s and early '60s with a warm voice and a souvenir for the tedious songs, and this is no exception. In a piano ballad about the beauty of a woman and the dazzler of dear, Cole describes his appreciation of Leonardo da Vinci'southwardMona Lisa, known for her mysterious smiling. "Do you grinning to tempt a lover, Mona Lisa?/Or is this your way to hide a broken center?" Cole asks.

Lady Gaga's ARTPOP with cover art (partially) by Jeff Koons

Lady Gaga'due south ARTPOP with cover art (partially) by Jeff Koons.

4. Lady Gaga, "Adulation" (2013)
The Jeff Koons-designed cover was all the rage when Lady Gaga'due south album ArtPop came out in 2013. (It likewise secured a spot on artnet News'south Top 12 Anthology Covers Designed by Famous Artists in 2014.) The lead unmarried, "Adulation," a pumped-up and lively anthem, also features some fine art-inspired lyrics, with Gaga singing "One 2d I'thousand a kunst/And so suddenly the kunst is me/Popular culture was in fine art/Now, art's in pop culture in me."

Badgreeb Records. David Bowie, Hunky Dory (2011). Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

Badgreeb Records. David Bowie, Hunky Dory (2011). Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

five. David Bowie, "Andy Warhol" (1971)
This classic tribute to Andy Warhol immortalizes the artist's career equally a dedicated leader in the Pop Art movement. David Bowie'southward enigmatic lyrics prove to exist as mesmerizing as the vocal itself, such every bit the chorus "Andy Warhol, silver screen/Tin't tell them apart at all." The words reference Wahol'due south wide range of creative accomplishment, from music to art to film, and capture just what an important figure he was for the evolution of fine art.

In 1996, Bowie would keep to play Warhol, donning the artist's signature silver wig, for Julian Schnabel's Jean-Michel Basquiat bio movie,Basquiat.

Irina Raquel. Vincent Van Gogh, The Starry Night (2014). Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

Vincent Van Gogh, The Starry Night (2014). Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

6. Don McLean, "Vincent (Starry Starry Night)," 1971
Written as a tribute to Vincent van Gogh'due south tragic life and the artist's nearly famous painting,The Starry Nighttime, the vocal as well includes a clarification of a few other paintings by the Dutch mail-Impressionist, such every bit his self-portrait without beard. "Frame-less heads on nameless walls/With optics that lookout the globe and tin't forget" sings Don McLean, best-known for the hit melody "American Pie," in one haunting passage. The singer goes on to romanticize van Gogh's tragic death, singing"You took your life, as lovers often practise/But I could've told you Vincent/This world was never meant for/One as cute as you lot."

7. Kanye Westward, "Famous" (2016)
Ah, Kanye. The human is clearly no stranger to controversy. His latest stunt, a music video for his new vocal "Famous," was inspired by American artist Vincent Desiderio's Slumber, a 24-foot-long painting of nudes on a bed with tangled sheets. For his version, West replaced the anonymous nudes with digitally-rendered bodies of famous celebrities, including vocalist Taylor Swift.

Lena Dunham railed against the video, proverb that its depiction of women brand them experience unsafe. Swift also protested the song, which includes an insulting line virtually her, but West's married woman, Kim Kardashian, subsequently leaked a phone call in which Swift appears to requite the vocal her blessing. (Due west is used to existence all anyone can talk about, and then he probably didn't listen the uproar.)

Pablo Picasso at his studio in front of "La Cuisine" 1948. Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Commons.

Pablo Picasso at his studio in forepart of "La Cuisine" 1948. Courtesy of Flickr via Creative Eatables.

viii. Paul McCartney and Wings, "Picasso'southward Concluding Words (Potable To Me)," 1973
Paul McCartney can practice no wrong with this serenade to pioneering Cubist master and all-around art not bad Pablo Picasso. At his death in 1973, Picasso's final words were said to be "potable to me, drinkable to my heath, you know I tin't drink anymore," which class the chorus of the song.

16585618042_b24f47ea32_o

Frida Kahlo. Viva la Vida, Watermelons (1954). Courtesy of Frida Kahlo Museum.

9. Coldplay, "Viva La Vida"  (2008)
Coldplay front end-man Chris Martin was inspired to write the vocal by a Frida Kahlo painting titledViva la Vida. The vocalizer-songwriter was inspired by Kahlo's perseverance in the face up of polio, spinal injury, and chronic hurting, he told Rolling Stone, saying, "She went through a lot of pain, of grade, and then she started a big painting in her firm that said Viva la Vida; I only loved the boldness of it."

what-i-saw-in-the-water

Frida Kahlo. What I Saw in the Water (1938). Courtesy of Elise Bernatchez via Flickr Creative Eatables.

10. Florence and the Machine, "What the Water Gave Me" (2011)
Another Frida Kahlo painting inspired this song off the 2011 Florence and the Machine anthology Ceremonials.

"At lot of the fourth dimension when I'm writing, things will just appear. I was writing the vocal and this book on symbolism was lying around, and it had the painting in it. Information technology'southward nice to mix the ordinary with extraordinary," lead vocalizer Florence Welsh, who penned the melody, told NME. The painting's disturbing scene of people drowning in a bathtub are reflected in the vocal's lyrics, which reference children being swept out to body of water.

Follow Artnet News on Facebook:

Want to stay ahead of the art world? Subscribe to our newsletter to get the breaking news, eye-opening interviews, and incisive critical takes that drive the conversation forrard.

ritchierile1996.blogspot.com

Source: https://news.artnet.com/art-world/music-for-art-lovers-548078

0 Response to "We All Got Beautiful Your a Perfect Work of Art"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel