Harlequin's Song
Before you can fully appreciate what Anthony Armstrong has painted, it helps to know who the Harlequin is and why this character has captured the imagination of artists for centuries. The Harlequin originated in the Italian theatrical tradition known as Commedia dell'arte, a form of improvisational street performance that flourished across Europe from the 16th through the 18th centuries. The Harlequin was the troupe's comic servant, an acrobat, a trickster, and a clown who wore a distinctive diamond-patterned costume and a half-mask. But beneath the costume and the comedy lived something more complicated. The Harlequin was also a figure of hidden longing, unrequited love, and melancholy. His song, when he sang it, carried all of that complexity: the laughter on the surface and the ache underneath. Pablo Picasso was so drawn to this duality that he returned to the Harlequin repeatedly throughout his career, using the character as a vessel for themes of identity, performance, and the gap between the face we show the world and the one we keep to ourselves. Anthony Armstrong understood that tension intimately. And in Harlequin's Song, he makes it his own. The figure fills the canvas, a Black Harlequin dressed in the classic ruffled white collar and diamond-patterned costume of blue, gray, and pink, rendered in Armstrong's commanding Cubist style. The face is mask-like and serene, eyes barely open, lips slightly parted as if the song is still forming. One hand cradles a lute, a small, round-bodied stringed instrument that preceded the modern guitar and carried the music of courts and streets alike for centuries. The other hand reaches toward the strings with the practiced ease of someone for whom music is not a performance but a necessity. A second mask rests in the lower right corner of the composition, its blank face turned upward. It is a subtle but significant detail. The Harlequin wears one mask and holds another, a reminder that identity is layered, that what we perform and what we feel are not always the same thing. For African Americans, who have long navigated the space between public presentation and private self, this theme carries particular resonance. W.E.B. Du Bois named it "double consciousness" more than a century ago: the sense of always looking at oneself through the eyes of others while also knowing a deeper, interior truth. Armstrong's Harlequin holds both realities at once, playing his song anyway. The warm gold, brown, and amber tones of the background anchor the composition in the earthy palette Armstrong favored throughout his figurative work, while the blues and pinks of the costume add a lyrical softness that keeps the image from feeling heavy. The result is a piece that rewards close looking, revealing new details and new layers of meaning with each encounter. This is a limited edition of 1,500, produced as an offset lithograph on paper with an image size of 21 x 29 inches. It brings the scale, color, and complexity of gallery art into the home, and it carries the kind of cultural and artistic depth that makes a collection feel intentional.
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- Default Title — 399.99 USD — In stock
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