Graphic Notation and Musical Graphics

1 Precursors

Figural notations, precursors of graphic notation, were produced as early as around 1400. The lines are arranged in the shape of a heart, a circle, or a cross, and in addition to their decorative character, they often have the form of a puzzle canon.

Graphics on music paper, such as Moritz von Schwind’s (1804–1871) Die Katzensymphonie (The Cat Symphony, 1868),[1] were prevalent in the nineteenth century.[2] At this point in time, the score had already become autonomous as text and was available independent of the performance of the piece as an autonomous, time-independent foundation of the ideal form.

There were various attempts in the 1920s to overcome the boundaries between the art genres. At the same time, visual artists used music as a model for abstract art. In addition to Paul Klee’s graphic representation of a piece by Bach (Fugue in Red, 1921/22), in 1923, Wassily Kandinsky developed a graphic representation of music by translating the beginning of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony into dots.[3] Bauhaus student Karl Peter Röhl drew abstract graphics on music paper as early as 1926.[4]

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