Guitar and Glass 1912 by Juan Gris
Guitar And Glass
The Birth of Cubist Still Life: Juan Gris’s 1912 Masterstroke
In the autumn of 1912, as Paris buzzed with avant-garde experiments, Juan Gris painted Guitar And Glass—a work that would redefine still life through the fractured lens of Cubism. This composition emerged during the movement’s analytical phase, where Gris, alongside Picasso and Braque, dismantled traditional perspective into interlocking planes. Unlike his contemporaries’ monochromatic palettes, Gris infused this piece with subtle ochres and umbers, creating a warmth that softened Cubism’s sharp edges. The painting’s restrained 30×40 cm dimensions belie its radical ambition: to depict a guitar and drinking glass not as objects but as a network of shifting relationships.
Historically, Guitar And Glass marked Gris’s transition from imitation to innovation. While Picasso’s 1912 still lifes often included newspaper collage, Gris achieved dimensionality through pure paint, as noted in MoMA’s analysis of his technique. The overlapping transparent planes—where the guitar’s soundhole merges with the glass’s reflection—demonstrate his unique approach to “passage,” a Cubist device where forms dissolve into one another. This print captures that delicate balance between structure and fluidity, making it a cornerstone for understanding Gris’s contribution to modernism.
Juan Gris and the Cubist Revolution of 1912
The year 1912 represented a turning point for Juan Gris, then 25 years old and fully immersed in Paris’s Montmartre circle. While Picasso and Braque had pioneered Cubism’s early phases, Gris brought a rigorous intellectualism to the movement, as Tate’s research highlights. His Guitar And Glass emerged during Cubism’s “high analytical” period, where the focus shifted from external reality to the painting’s internal logic. Unlike the fragmented chaos of Picasso’s contemporaneous works, Gris’s composition maintains a quiet order—each plane serves a structural purpose, whether defining the guitar’s curve or the glass’s cylindrical form.
This print reveals Gris’s debt to Cézanne’s dictum that nature should be treated “by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone.” Yet where Cézanne sought volume, Gris pursued ambiguity: the glass might equally be a void or a solid, its transparency rendered through overlapping browns and grays. The limited palette—dominated by earth tones with only hints of blue—reflects his Spanish heritage, distinguishing his work from the cooler hues favored by his French peers. By 1912, Gris had synthesized these influences into a style that, while unmistakably Cubist, remained distinctly his own.
Gris’s Guitar And Glass doesn’t merely depict objects—it constructs a visual philosophy. The glass isn’t empty; it’s a lens through which Cubism’s spatial theories come into focus.
The Geometry of Everyday Objects
Composition: Interlocking Planes
The painting’s structure revolves around two primary axes: the vertical neck of the guitar and the diagonal stem of the glass. Gris arranges these elements so they appear simultaneously behind and in front of one another, creating what art historian Christopher Green calls a “perpetual spatial oscillation.” The guitar’s soundhole, for instance, doubles as the glass’s base, while the strings morph into the table’s edge. This print faithfully reproduces those deliberate ambiguities, where negative space becomes as active as the painted forms.
Color: The Illusion of Transparency
Gris’s palette here is deceptively simple. By layering thin glazes of ochre, sienna, and umber, he suggests transparency without literal depiction. The glass “contains” nothing yet reflects everything—its surface mirrors the guitar’s strings as linear echoes. This technique, which The Art Story terms “chromatic Cubism,” allowed Gris to maintain Cubism’s fracturing while reintroducing color’s emotional resonance. The warm tones dominate, but cool blues in the shadows prevent the composition from feeling static.
Own This Cubist Landmark
Bring Juan Gris’s 1912 masterwork into your space with our gallery-framed print. Each piece arrives ready to hang, with free worldwide shipping and a 30-day return policy.
Add to Cart — $24999Where to Display Guitar And Glass
This print’s 30×40 cm dimensions and earthy palette make it remarkably versatile. In modern interiors, its geometric abstraction complements minimalist furnishings—try positioning it above a walnut sideboard or floating shelf to echo the wood tones in Gris’s composition. For traditional spaces, the warm ochres bridge old and new; consider hanging it in a study with leather-bound books or a dining room with terracotta accents. The key is contrast: let the print’s structured chaos stand against smooth surfaces or solid colors. Avoid overly busy walls; Guitar And Glass demands room to breathe, its interlocking planes inviting prolonged contemplation.
What framing and materials are included?
Each print arrives in a premium gallery frame with archival matting and UV-protective acrylic glazing. The frame’s profile is 2.5 cm deep, with a neutral finish that complements any decor. No additional assembly is required.
Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?
We offer free worldwide shipping to all countries, with no minimum purchase. Delivery typically takes 5–10 business days, depending on your location. All orders include end-to-end tracking.
How does the print maintain color accuracy over time?
Our prints use pigment-based inks on acid-free cotton rag paper, rated for 100+ years without fading. The UV-protective glazing blocks 99% of harmful light, preserving the original’s ochres and umbers as Gris intended.
What is your return policy?
You may return your framed print within 30 days for a full refund, no questions asked. We cover return shipping costs and provide a prepaid label. The print must arrive in its original packaging.
Sources & Further Reading
- MoMA. "Juan Gris: Guitar and Glass." The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
- Tate. "Juan Gris (1887–1927)." Tate Britain, London.
- The Art Story. "Juan Gris: Analytical Cubism’s Poet." The Art Story Foundation.
More Works by Juan Gris
Explore additional framed prints from Juan Gris’s Cubist period, each capturing his signature interplay of geometry and lyricism.
You May Also Love
Further Reading
Discover more about Juan Gris’s enduring influence and how to incorporate his art into your living space.
Ready to Bring Gris Home?
Own this framed 1912 Cubist landmark with free worldwide shipping and a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. Each print arrives gallery-ready, with archival materials to preserve its brilliance for decades.
Add to Cart — $24999