Having featured the cello a couple of weeks ago, it is now the trumpet’s turn, to celebrate a successful audition by my son P (I'm so proud). Once again we’ll start with my version, at rest. If you can’t hear it anyway in a purely visual medium, you may as well just focus on the physical beauty of the shining brass tubes.
Taking that further is this abstraction on the theme of the trumpet by D.S. Wade. It’s a fairly large piece (30 inches) with a veritable rainbow of ink. Like the trumpet itself, it’s bold, even brash. Are the shapes around the sides valves, or quarter notes?
To give ourselves a bit of historical depth, here’s a trumpeter by Jost Amman. Clearly this trumpet is a somewhat different beast, much longer and without valves. Some early trumpets were actually held together with cords, so while the flag hanging from this is obviously decorative, it may also be part of the cords holding the different segments together. I would be greatly amused if the trumpets
in P’s band were adorned with flags… or if the trumpeters wore such fabulous hats! (Though I can’t see P appreciating the fashion.)
in P’s band were adorned with flags… or if the trumpeters wore such fabulous hats! (Though I can’t see P appreciating the fashion.)
It appears that, unlike cellos, I have featured only one previous trumpet, a beautiful jazz one by Eric Hoffman, here.
[Pictures: Trumpet, rubber block print by AEGN, 2009 (sold out);
A Mazing Trumpet, reduction woodcut by D.S. Wade (Image from DSWade Artist);
Trumpeter, woodcut by Jost Amman possibly from Das Ständebuch (The Book of Trades), 1568 (Image from here).]
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