Color and Music
Color and Music
The relationship between colour and music as part of the complex consisting of music
and the visual arts has not yet been systematically investigated. Since Liszt wrote Lo
spozalizio from Années de Pèlerinage (1839), based on a painting by Raphael, compos-
ers have often taken pictures as inspiration for their works (Fink, 1988, lists 711 such
compositions). Conversely, painters have derived inspiration from musical composi-
tions or the abstract idea of music. The subject of colour and music encompasses the
relationships between colour and form, light and music, colour and tonal intervals, col-
our and sound, and indeed painting and music. Cosmological ideas pervade the history
of these relationships, from antiquity to the 20th century.
JÖ RG JEWANSKI
André Félibien, in 1666, was the first to establish yellow, red and blue as the basis of a
new colour system. At the same time Newton was making his first prismatic experi-
ments, and in 1672 he associated tonal intervals with the colour bands of the spectrum,
‘for the Analogy of Nature is to be observed’ (An Hypothesis Explaining the Properties
of Light, 1675). There are lingering remnants of cosmological thinking in Newton too
when he traces connections between colours, notes and planets. A relationship between
colour and musical intervals now seemed to have a physical foundation, and the idea
had Newton's authority to support it. Reaction to his Opticks (1704), in which he re-
turned to the analogy, can be observed in England, France, Germany and Russia. Under
the influence of Newton, ideas of the relationship between colour and music developed
in all these countries (see Jewanski, 1999).
The most intense discussion of the subject occurred in France. After 1772 Rameau's
writings constituted the point of departure in music theory: he regarded the individual
chord as the core of the harmonic system, and derived musical phenomena from the
harmonic series. Louis-Bertrand Castel, a French mathematician and philosopher, built
on these new ideas. He knew the colour theories of his day, the writings of antiquity and
those of the 16th- and 17th-century theorists. Reviewing the French translation of New-
ton's Opticks in 1723, he commented, with reference to Kircher's table of colours and
intervals, that ‘to all appearance the range of our senses is exactly the same, and nature
gives us as many sounds as colours’ (p.1450). After 1725 Castel developed his own sys-
tem of colours and notes, starting with C = blue. He adopted the colour theories of dyers
and painters, rejecting those based on Newtonian physics. He simplified the relationship
Castel's many articles gave rise to animated discussion. Weighty arguments for and
against the analogy of colours and notes, painting and music, were expressed by such
intellectual giants as Diderot, Mairan, Rousseau and Voltaire. It was pointed out that
colour harmonies depend on fashion while the definition of musical consonance always
remains the same; that a dissonance in colour leaves a less disturbing impression than a
musical dissonance; that colours mingle to create a unit incapable of analysis, as when
yellow and blue make green, whereas two notes combined do not create the note be-
tween them; that the perception of notes is always related to a tonic and is therefore
relative, while the perception of a colour is absolute; that the emotions aroused by music
and painting are not attributable to relationships between colours and notes; and that
sequences of colour cannot be retained in the memory like musical melodies.
In the early 19th century E.T.A. Hoffmann and Schumann further broke down the
barriers between the arts. Schumann's Eusebius claimed (c1833) that ‘the educated
musician will be able to derive as much usefulness from the study of a Madonna by
Raphael as will a painter from a Mozart symphony’, to which Florestan added, ‘The
aesthetics of the two arts are the same; only the material is different’ (Schumann,
Gesammelte Schriften über Musik und Musiker, ed. M. Kreisig, i, 5/1914, p.26). In his
Kapellmeister Kreisler, Hoffmann created the archetype of an artist who transcended the
frontiers between disciplines: ‘I find colours, notes and scents all coming together, not
so much in a dream as in that state of delirium that precedes sleep, particularly when I
have been listening to a great deal of music’. In 1844 D.D. Jameson propounded the
concept of ‘colour-music’, the translation of music into a play of colours. Later in the
century H.R. Haweis called for a form of ‘colour-art’ as a pendant to ‘sound-art’, and
William Schooling conceived a silent electric colour-organ. A.W. Rimington's ‘art of
mobile colour’ continued the ideas of the painter J.M.W. Turner, who had explored
colour's independent ability to represent subjects in such paintings as Light and Colour
(Goethe's Theory of Colour) of 1843. Rimington hoped to replace Turner's naturally
static colour shading by constant colour changes, that is by introducing movement into
colour. He produced several schemata: a theory of colour and music, a translation of
The first two decades of the 20th century saw many attempts to establish the free play
of form and colour as an independent art relating to music in various ways. Some artists
continued to explore the translation of music into colour in accordance with Castel's
ideas (see Klein, 1926; Scholes, 1938). Others developed the concept of the ‘absolute
film’ based on the formal patterns, rhythmics and dynamics of music. Ludwig Hirsch-
feld-Mack's Dreiteilige Farbensonatina, Hans Richter's Film ist Rhythmus and Viking
Eggeling's Symphonie Diagonale were among the works in this genre presented in Ber-
lin on 3 and 10 May 1925. Paul Klee translated elements of music into pictorial equiva-
lents. In his ‘polyphonic paintings’, such as Polyphon gefasstes Weiss (1930), differ-
ently structured areas are superimposed, with colour assuming particular significance.
Of Robert Delaunay's Les fenêtres sur la ville, première partie, premiers contrastes
simultanés (1912), Klee wrote in 1917: ‘Delaunay tried to transfer artistic emphasis to
the temporal aspect, on the model of the fugue, by opting for such a length that the
whole picture cannot be seen at once’ (Paul Klee: Tagebücher 1898–1918, ed. F. Klee,
Cologne, 1957, p.383). The idea of ‘kinetic painting’ (Diebold, 1921) was promoted in
both Germany and the USA, where W.H. Wright spoke of the new art that would use
the resources of a colour organ instead of canvas and paint: ‘The color-organ, in fact, is
the logical development of all the modern researches in the art of color’ (The Future of
Painting, 1923, p.49). From 1922 Thomas Wilfred performed silent ‘Lumia’ composi-
tions on his ‘Clavilux’, giving them opus numbers and sometimes musical titles. Many
colour organs were built with a view to creating kinetic art through plays of changing
colour (Goldschmidt, 1928).
Luigi Veronesi's Chromatische Visualisierung: J.S. Bach Kontrapunkt No.2 aus ‘Kunst
der Fuge’ (1971) was based on a physical parallel between colour and music. In Jakob
Weder's cycle of pictures Orchestersuite 3 in D-Dur von J.S. Bach (1980–81), each of
the five movements of the suite is associated with a colour that supposedly reflects its
character and subject. The separate colours are modulated with shading derived from
the structure of the music.
In the 20th century the temporal differences between colours and notes, or music and
painting, were no longer seen as irreconcilable. Painters such as Ad Reinhardt and Mark
In composition based on colours, and in music referring to pictures, the precise nature
of the stimulus provided by the colours or the painting may not be evident. If the com-
poser has given no other indication, analysis of the score will not even tell us whether
there was any extra-musical stimulus at all. Without knowledge of this programme, it is
impossible to link colours and music. Moreover, the character of individual colours is
variable; the term ‘red’, for instance, does not define the colour exactly. Only a small
number of colours can be chosen, usually limited to those of the 12-part colour circle,
and their expressive character has no more variety than such common descriptions of
musical movements as adagio, moderato or allegro. In Bliss's A Colour Symphony
(1921–2), each of the four movements bears the name of a colour: ‘Purple’, ‘Red’,
‘Blue’ and ‘Green’. The heraldic significance of the colours (green for instance, being
associated with emeralds, hope, youth, joy, spring and victory) is reflected in the char-
acter of the music. Palle Mikkelborg used the names of colours to describe the move-
ments of Aura (Sony 463351–2, 1989), while the singer Lauren Newton and bassist
Joëlle Léandre have translated painting techniques (for instance Frank Stella's mono-
chrome palette in Stella Black) into contemporary jazz (18 Colors, Leo LR 245, 1997).
Besides the general association of colour and music, colour has been equated with indi-
vidual musical parameters. Messiaen employed his subjective association of colours
with chords, forms and themes in such works as Sept Haïkaï (1962). In the fifth move-
ment of this work he wrote into the score the colours to be associated with the chords,
In Bartók's opera Bluebeard's Castle (1911, first performed 1918), the composer inte-
grated the coloured light of the seven rooms with the prevailing keys. At about the same
time, Granville Bantock advocated the use of coloured light in the concert hall for per-
formances of his Atlanta in Calydon (1911), but no lit performance is known to have
been given. Mary Elizabeth Hallock-Greenewalt gave piano recitals in Philadelphia ac-
Colour, or coloured light, has also been employed in many works composed since 1945.
Shchedrin added a luce part to Poetoria (1968) to illustrate the form of the music and
the symbolism of the text by different colours. Xenakis linked light, colour, music and
architecture in Polytope (1967), Persépolis (1971), Polytope de Cluny (1972) and Le
diatope (1978). In Gubaydulina's Alleluja for chorus, boy solo and orchestra, with col-
our, organ ad libitum (1990), colour is a basic rhythmic element in the formal develop-
ment of the music. (Rihm added a part, ‘Das Licht’, to his opera Die Eroberung von
Mexico of 1992, with dynamic indications, but as suggestions rather than actual instruc-
tions.) Stockhausen's seven-part operatic cycle Licht (1977–) seeks to achieve a unity of
music, light, words, movement and stage design, referring to esoteric traditions and
aiming to create a ‘cosmic world theatre’ (M. Kurtz, Stockhausen, 1988, p.275). In 1993
the painter Hans Werner Berretz (Ha Webe) began working with Gubaydulina, Denhoff,
Galina Ustvol'skaya, Violeta Dinescu, Winfried Maria Danner and Bernd Hänschke on
a series of works in which the score becomes part of the picture. Primary colours illus-
trate the musical parameters (red for pitch and duration, blue for rhythm, yellow for
melody, green for harmony) and mingled colours accompany such non-musical ele-
ments as the text.
4. Synaesthesia.
Although any association of colour and music may be described as synaesthesia, it most
frequently takes the form of ‘colour-hearing’, the involuntary perception of colours by
someone hearing sounds or listening to music. Until the late 18th century colours and
notes or intervals were associated by a process of analogy accepted as scientific method
(see §1 above). Not until the turn of the 19th century did writers use verbal metaphors
linking colour and music to express the new spirit of the times, with music promoted to
the top of the artistic hierarchy.
Four congresses devoted to colour and music, directed by Georg Anschütz, were held in
Germany between 1927 and 1936. In 1962 the Prometheus Studio was founded at the
Technical University of Kazan in the former Soviet Union to study the artistic signifi-
cance of synaesthesias. Research on synaesthesia has also been carried out at the Mediz-
inische Hochschule, Hanover. The International Synaesthesia Association has its head-
quarters in the UK.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
L.-B. Castel: ‘Traité d'optique … par M. le Chevalier Newton; traduit par M. Coste’,
Memoire (de Trévoux) pour l'histoire des sciences et des beaux arts, xxiii (1723),
1428–50
L.-B. Castel: ‘Clavecin pour les yeux, avec l'art de peindre les sons, et toutes sortes de
pièces de musique’, Mercure de France (Nov 1725), 2552–77
J.G. Krüger: ‘De novo musices, quo oculi delectantur, genere’, Miscellanea Berolinen-
sia ad incrementum scientiarum, vii (1743), 345–57
D.D. Jameson: Colour-Music (London, 1844)
A.W. Rimington: Colour Music: the Art of Mobile Colour (New York, 1911)
B. Diebold: ‘Farbenmusik’, Melos, ii (1921), 256–8
A.B. Klein: Colour Music: the Art of Light (London, 1926)
R.H. Goldschmidt: ‘Postulat der Farbwandelspiele’, Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger
Akademie, vi (1927–8), 1–93