Article #237015

The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

Title Masterpiece, fridge magnet, phone case … opera: how Hokusai’s The Great Wave hit the stage Source The Guardian - World News
Description

He survived a stroke, a lightning strike, a fire – and created one of the world’s most recognisable images. Now the Japanese artist’s ‘wild, fascinating’ life has inspired an opera

Opera has inspired many of the 20th century’s greatest artists to create extraordinary sets. Oskar Kokoschka designed a Magic Flute for Salzburg and a Ballo in maschera for Florence. Salvador Dalí produced a controversial Salome for London; David Hockney’s designs for Glyndebourne’s Rake’s Progress complement Stravinsky’s sound-world so miraculously that they are still in use 50 years after their creation. Marc Chagall’s ceiling fresco for Paris’s Opéra Garnier and murals for the New York Met testify to the intimate connection between opera and painting.

And yet remarkably few operas portray visual artists. Something about their painstaking work seems to resist representation in this most extravagant of artforms. Only two operas about artists are regularly performed: Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler, depicting the German Renaissance painter Matthias Grünewald, and Berlioz’s Benvenuto Cellini – and Cellini gave Berlioz a head-start with his rollicking memoirs about his scandalous adventures in 16th-century Florence.

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Link https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/feb/10/masterpiece-fridge-magnet-phone-case-opera-hokusais-great-wave Published At 2026-02-10 11:05:38 (21 hours ago)
Created At 2026-02-10 11:12:33 Updated At 2026-02-10 11:34:33