National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 

Warning: Requested record does not seem to exist.
Interpretation of organ music
Bařák, Hynek ; Daněk, Josef (referee) ; Malý, Břetislav (advisor)
In my diploma thesis I want to deal with another topic which is very interesting and important for me and that is organ and organ music in general and everything that belongs to them. From history, production, maintenance to play itself. In most of my previous works, not only at college but also earlier, fragments of this instrument appear in my paintings (mainly whistles, which are actually the most visible and their size determines the size of whole organs and is their precept) even though I have devoted myself on another topic, these fragments I had some need to plant there.  Organs are referred to as the royal instrument, they are the largest and mechanically the most complicated musical instrument. That is the complexity I would like to express in my pictures, I do not mean the complexity of the organ for the technical, construction, but especially the complexity of playing. The need for the right combinations of different registers with differently colored tones and tools. Swap pedal handbooks, etc. This is all about fascination for me.  In this diploma thesis I want to use the themes that appeared on the surface often as secondary or I did not put such emphasis or were the main topic for example only one semester, but in fact I continued to work with them subconsciously in the same way, Layers, Recycling, Reaction to Substrates, etc. It could be said that such organ compositions are such layers as Bach's or any fugues that are gradually being added, layers of new and new tones often result in the the full extent that the organ is able to administer.  The layer I used to work with before, and actually always appears in my works, has actually become an integral part of my paintings. I want to express the complexity of the organ compositions in my paintings, as I do. Not only by layering, but also by using different techniques, not just acrylic. I also used this in my previous work, and examined how they work with each other. I have responded to differently produced backgrounds.  Organ music can be considered complicated because all we hear is produced by one person. Who must play and cater everything else that is associated with it, except perhaps the bells pedaling.  This series of images will not, in the end, express myself visually, at first sight nothing concrete, over time I have come to a pretty abstract image. I do not mean to say that organ music is abstract, especially if I talk about Baroque or Classicism. Maybe in romanticism, for example, F. Liszt and his organ compositions are so complex and terribly crazy that I might consider them quite abstract. But just the organ music of Liszt, which I admire most, I think it is not possible to express it in abstract form. It's a mad, complicated tangle of different, tones, colors, games with registers, blinds, and so on, and I want to express it all on the canvas.

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.