Pictures at an Exhibition (or Pictures from an Exhibition; ) is a famous suite of 15 musical pieces, composed by Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky in 1874. Mussorgsky wrote the work for piano, but it is probably better known in the form of various orchestrations and arrangements that have been produced by other musicians and composers (see below). Mussorgsky composed the work in commemoration of his friend, the artist and architect Viktor Hartmann (Виктор Гартман), who was only 39 when he died in 1873; the original title for the suite was Hartmann.
It was probably in 1870 and through the highly influential critic Vladimir Stasov that Mussorgsky had met Hartmann, whose devotion to the cause of an intrinsically Russian art must have made him a congenial spirit. It was at Stasov's instigation that a posthumous exhibition of over 400 of the artist's works was mounted in the Academy of Fine Arts in St Petersburg, in February and March 1874, and Pictures at an Exhibition, composed a few months later, takes the form of an imaginary musical tour around such a collection. As the pictorial basis for his musical 'exhibition', Mussorgsky mostly selected drawings and watercolours that Hartmann had produced during his travels abroad; oddly enough, only three of the ten pictures represented in the music actually appeared in the 1874 Hartmann exhibition (These are: 'Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks', 'The Hut on Fowl's Legs' (Baba Yaga)', and 'The Bohatyr Gate (at Kiev, the Ancient Capital)'). Sadly, we cannot in all cases be certain which Hartmann work Mussorgsky was alluding to, because not all the paintings and drawings have survived.
Remarkably, Mussorgsky structures the suite in a manner that actually allows him to represent his own progress through the 'exhibition'. This he does by means of the opening 'Promenade' and the four interludes (only the last of which is also labelled 'Promenade') that are clear variations of its material: "My physiognomy can be seen in the interludes", he wrote in a letter to Stasov. More remarkable still, however, is the fact that by the end of the work the 'Promenade' theme has stopped functioning as a merely 'linking' device and instead started to appear within the actual 'pictures' themselves: the theme features prominently in the movements 'Con mortuis in lingua mortua' and 'The Bohatyr Gate (at Kiev, the Ancient Capital)' — mysterious in one, celebratory in the other.
The first musician to arrange Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition for orchestra was the little-known Russian composer and conductor Michael Touschmaloff (1861-96). However, his version (first performed in 1891 and possibly produced as early as 1886 when he was a student of Rimsky-Korsakov) does not include the entire suite: only seven of the ten pictures are present (no 'Gnomus', 'Tuileries', or 'Bydlo'), and all the 'Promenades' are omitted except for the last one, which is used in place of the first.
After him, the next orchestration was that undertaken by British conductor Sir Henry Wood in 1915. This too eliminated some of the appearances of the 'Promenade' theme.
The first person to orchestrate the piece in its entirety was the Slovenian-born conductor and violinist Leo Funtek, who finished his version in 1922 while living and working in Finland.
The version by Maurice Ravel (also produced in 1922, to a commission by Serge Koussevitsky) is a virtuoso effort by a master colourist, and has proved the most popular in the concert hall and on record. Ravel does, however, omit the fifth and last 'Promenade' movement.
Conductor Leopold Stokowski introduced Ravel's version to Philadelphia audiences in November 1929; he produced his own, very free orchestration (incorporating much that could accurately be called re-composition) ten years later. Stokowski revised his version over the years, and made three gramophone recordings of it (1939, 1941 and 1965). The score was not printed until 1971.
Many other orchestrations and arrangements have been created, and the original piano composition is also frequently performed and recorded. A brass ensemble arrangement was made by Elgar Howarth for the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble in the 1970s. There is even an adaption for solo guitar by Kazuhito Yamashita.
There have also been several very different non-classical interpretations: one incorporating progressive rock, jazz and folk music elements by the British trio Emerson, Lake and Palmer (1971; see Pictures at an Exhibition (album)), and an electronic music adaptation by Isao Tomita (1975). A heavy metal arrangement made by German band Mekong Delta also exists. Death Cab For Cutie has also released a track of the same title. In 2002, electronic musician-composer Amon Tobin paraphrased Gnomus for the track "Back From Space", from the album Out From Out Where. In 2003, guitarist-composer Trevor Rabin released his electric guitar adaptation of "Promenade," once intended for the Yes album Big Generator, but included with his demo album 90124.
In addition to the above, 'Pictures' has proven a very popular source of music for marching bands and drum & bugle corps for decades. For example, the Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps has often used Russian or Russian Themed music, and in 1987 their program was: Russian Christmas Music (Alfred Reed), Dance of the Tumblers (Rimsky-Korsakov), Lezghinka (from the ballet 'Gayaneh') (Khachaturian), Lullaby, Hut of Baba-Yaga (Mussorgsky), and Great Gate of Kiev (Mussorgsky); note that the program closed with pieces from Pictures at an Exhibition.
Quadres d'una exposició | Bilder einer Ausstellung | Cuadros de una exposición | Les Tableaux d'une exposition (Moussorgski) | Quadri di un'esposizione | תמונות בתערוכה | De schilderijententoonstelling | 展覧会の絵 | Obrazki z wystawy | Картинки с выставки | Näyttelykuvia
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It uses material from the
"Pictures at an Exhibition".
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